andy giefer

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We're only beginning to realize the possibilities of Facebook, et al

chart2

Facebook reached a milestone a few weeks ago when it surpassed Google as the most visited site. The site now claims 400 million active users worldwide. Some think it could reach 1 billion by 2012.

Connectivity on this scale is something never seen before and the implications are not entirely obvious. But as digital natives come of age and take control of businesses and institutions, we're going to see some very interesting things take shape that weren't even conceivable in the past.

As it stands, Facebook is still primarily a place to connect with friends and brands, share content, and play games. But what else could Facebook become?

Thomas Power, Chairman of Ecademy.com, thinks Facebook could become a bank that harnesses the power of peer-to-peer lending (think Zopa on a massive scale), and might wipe out the big banks some day. Or it could be used to attain unprecedented collective buying power (think Groupon on steroids).


Via Emergent by Design

Add that to ongoing developments like geolocation and the intention web and you realize we've only begun to tap the potential of social networks.

For that to happen, the dust has to settle and the victors of the social networks have to fully emerge.

As Clay Shirky says, things don't get socially interesting until they're technologically boring. I can't wait.

Google Ubiquity: Should We Be Worried?

Google homepage

I confess I'm a bit of a Google fanboy. I'm the last one to get paranoid about privacy concerns even as the GOOG becomes ever-more pervasive.

But then I read The Onion article Google Responds to Privacy Concerns with Unsettlingly Specific Apology, a brilliant piece of satire that shines a light on the fears some people have. Do we have good reason to feel unsettled?

Here's a summary of the things Google "knows" about you if you use their services. I use quotes because it really means Google stores or has access to this information.

Google "Knows"
- What you're searching for (Google.com).
- What your search history is (Chrome, Google Toolbar).
- Where you live (Google Maps).
- What your house and neighborhood look like (Google Maps Street View).
- Where you are now (Google Maps Mobile).
- What local businesses/places you might visit (Google Local).
- Who and about what you email (Gmail).
- Who and about what you chat (Gchat).
- What your phone usage is (Droid and Google Voice).
- What you're thinking (Google Buzz).
- What your plans are (Google Calendar).
- What you buy plus credit card info (Google Checkout).
- What you're selling (Google Adwords).
- What's in your personal documents (Google Docs).
- What photos you view and post (Picasa).
- What videos you view and post (YouTube).
- What your interests are (Blogger).
- What's on your hard drive (Google Desktop).
- What your medical history is (Google Health)

In reality, of course, Google is not tracking your every move. I believe it when they say they only use the data they collect to improve and personalize search results and to serve relevant ads. It's not in their business interests to be viewed as big brother.

For me, it's more a sense of awe than worry. I'm in awe of how all-encompassing Google has become in a relatively short time. And I'm in awe of the huge responsibility they have to keep our personal data private and stored safely in the cloud.

Still, maybe it's all too much and you want to opt out of Google. The Onion shows how Google can help you with that too:

Miniatureapolis - 1st Ave & 5th St by Andrew Vickers

This dreamlike time-elapsed video feels like you're watching a miniature model-sized recreation of Minneapolis.

Andy Giefer

Andy Giefer

Strategic PR/marketing guy with a love for all things digital. Passionate about connecting remarkable brands + people.

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andy@andygiefer.com

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