Twitter Raising New Venture Round at $3 Billion Valuation

Twitter is mulling over raising a new round of financing, we’ve heard from multiple sources, and a variety of venture firms are frothing at the mouth to lead the round. The valuation is likely to be in the $3 billion range, and they’ll likely raise more than the $100 million they took a little over a year ago at a $1 billion valuation. To date Twitter has raised around $160 million.

Who are the likely investors? Russian firm DST, which has invested in Facebook, Groupon and Zynga, is certainly trying to lead the round. But we hear that they are just one of many twisting arms to get in.

We recently reported that some funds set up to buy Twitter shares from employees were closing sales at $1.6 billion for larger transactions. Smaller transactions have apparently been closed at much higher prices.

We’ve also recently heard from a single source that Google was in talks with Twitter to acquire them for up to $5 billion, but other sources seemed to think those discussions never happened, or were extremely preliminary at best. Sometimes these types of acquisition rumors get started simply because investment banks attempt to jump start deals.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Soovox Wants To Help Brands Connect With Online Influencers

The measurement of online influence is a hot topic these days. For example, Klout is a popular app that helps users determine how much influence they wield on Twitter and Facebook. Soovox is launching to help users determine their social influence and aid marketers in connecting to the influencers for particular brands. Soovox, which is launching tomorrow, is offering TechCrunch readers an early look at the site if you use the code “soovoxtcvip” here.

Called the Social IQ, Soovox’s tool promises to measure a user’s ability to sway others’ opinions and actions. The startup uses an algorithm that tracks the user’s social web influence by measuring three main criteria to score their social influence: Reputation (authenticity, behavioral),
Connections (passive, active), and Knowledge Authority (consumer, professional). Social IQ tracks Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and MySpace to determine influence.

As an incentive for consumers to sign up for Soovox, the company offers contests where users can win prizes. Users can also earn cash for participating on the site which can be used in a marketplace (which has not been launched yet).

For marketers, Soovox offers access to influencers/ambassadors of their brand or products. Social IQ allows brands to identify their brand Ambassadors (those with a high Social IQ score) and the Soovox marketplace will allow the brands to engage the influencers to participate in their marketing campaigns.

For now, the only feature that Soovox has available is the ability to measure your Social IQ and the startup is hoping to incentivize consumers to sign up with a contest to win a Macbook Air. In theory, Soovox sounds like a great way to match up brands with influencers. But in reality, the startup is going to need more than a laptop giveaway to get users to participate in the site. And if Soovox doesn’t manage to find influencers, then marketers won’t see any value in the site.

It’s also worth mentioning that a number of other apps out there help brands identify influencers on Facebook and Twitter, including Viralheat and PeopleBrowsr.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Zynga To Sell Candy Cane Seeds To Help Build Children’s Hospital

The UCSF drive to build a children’s hospital just got a little help from Zynga. Starting December 1 Farmville players will be able to purchase Candy Cane seeds for their farms, and 100% of proceeds will be donated to the UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital. It’s an excellent cause that we are participating in an well – see details here.

This is a proven way for Zynga to raise cash for charity. They have, for example, raised $3 million for Haiti over two campaigns. And our understanding is that Zynga has ditched their occasional and controversial policy of keeping a percentage of proceeds from sale of charitable virtual goods.

We’ve also suggested to Zynga that they consider building a virtual children’s hospital as well to deal with childhood obesity, diabetes and other medical issues that may pop up from all of this candy cane growing. They didn’t seem to think that joke was funny.

The winner of the challenge will be given the right to name “The Link,” a children’s activity space for learning play and discovery in the new Hospital. I asked Zynga what they’ll name it if they win. I don’t think they’ve decided.

If you’d like to donate to this amazing project you can play Farmville and buy the seeds from December 1 to December 15. Or you can donate via Team TechCrunch, and I’m matching the first $10,000 in donations personally.

Update: Facebook confirmed to us that they will be donating their 30% Facebook Credits fee as well.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Dscover.me: You Browse, You Share. Question Is, Why?

Dscover.me is launching today as a way to share and recommend what you are reading or watching on the Web. Using a Chrome or RockMelt add-on, you can share pretty much any link – sorry, “Discovery” – with friends and followers.

Using Facebook Connect, you can sign in to Dscover.me and start sharing websites with friends via a so-called “Discoveries Stream.” A Whitelist feature allows you to check which sites you’d like to share and which sites you’d like to keep private. With these settings, Dscover.me will automatically add Whitelisted sites that you’ve visited to your stream.

After setting up an account, users can follow friends and people with similar interests, as determined by their browsing behavior. Dscover.me says that in the future it will provide content recommendations to users as they browse the Web.

Privacy is an issue here because essentially Dscover.me will share whatever you are browsing (if it’s on the Whitelist). But the company says that the Whitelist allows users to specify what they are comfortable sharing when it comes to browsing. Dscover.me also allows users to remove posts from the system and modify their Whitelists at any time.

Here’s the biggest issue Dscover.me faces, though: sheer indifference and puzzled potential users.

Honestly, there are so many ways to share interesting links these days (from bookmarking to Facebook likes, posting links on one’s blog or Twitter account to good old emailing and whatnot) that the unique proposition of this service completely eludes me. The majority of links I visit in any given day isn’t worth sharing at all, let alone “automagically”.

Your mileage may vary – give it a peek and tell us what you think.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Yipit Nation Rolls Up National Daily Deals

First came the local daily deal sites: Groupon, LivingSocial, BuyWithMe. There were so many it was hard to keep up. Then came the daily deal aggregators like Yipit and 8coupons. Even Yahoo is starting to aggregate daily deals. Then the daily deal sites started to expand from local deals to national deals, like Groupon’s Gap promotion which brought in $11 million in one day. There are now at least 30 daily deal services focussed on national or brand deals, including Amazon’s Woot!, UrbanDaddy, Lot18, and Cinderalla Wine.

So you know what that means. Yup, the daily deal aggregators are going national. Yipit just launched Yipit Nation, which filters out the national deals from the local ones. At sign-up you mark what kinds of deals you want to hear about, and then you get a daily email or can visit the site. Some national deals on the site right now include discounts on organic coffee, a smokehouse tailgating package (sausages!), men’s dress shirts, wine, and power tools. I’m sure they have other stuff, but that’s what was tailored for me. I do love me some power tools at a tailgating party!

Yipit, which is based in New York City, raised a $1.3 million A round earlier this year from SV Angel, RRE Ventures, IA Ventures, Michael Yavonditte, and Peter Hershberg.


Google No Longer Claims Facebook Will “Trap” Users. Or Do They?

There’s a new twist to the Facebook-Google contact data export brouhaha. It looks like the warning Google issued last week to Facebook users who tried to export their Gmail contact to the network has been removed. If you try to import your contacts from Gmail now on Facebook, Google’s warning to you that your contacts information will be effectively trapped inside Facebook without the ability to re-export the data, no longer appears. But the warning still exists on the web. Weird, huh?

So several things could be taking place here. Facebook either found a way to workaround this warning or Google and Facebook came to an agreement over this. Or Google decided to stop showing the warning without an agreement with Facebook.

For background on the whole issue, Google blocked Facebook API access to download Google contacts. Facebook hacked its way around that, and Google subsequently issued a statement that they were “disappointed”. Facebook Platform engineer Mike Vernal then responded in the comments of one of our blog posts about the slap fight, defending Facebook’s policy and calling it – cough – “consistent”.

Last Friday, Google started posting the warning to users who tried to import their Gmail contact to Facebook. They still allowed users to export the data but the warning was very clear. Not it’s not there.

One thing is for sure. If Facebook did find a workaround, this will surely escalate the battle between the two companies.


RSS Is Dead, But Reeder For Mac Makes It A Beautiful Corpse [Preview]

For a long time after the launch of the iPhone, despite thousands of apps for just about everything you can imagine, there was no killer RSS reader app. That changed when the 2.0 version of Reeder arrived earlier this year. It’s so good that I often prefer using it to reading feeds in Google Reader, long my go-to RSS reader. And the iPad version is even better. And now it’s about ready to launch in beta for the Mac.

While the blog Macstories did a preview back in September when the software was in early alpha, it has come a long way since then. And developer Silvio Rizzi has given me permission to do a short preview of what you can expect when the beta hits (sometime in the next couple of weeks, he hopes). I’ve been using the app for months now, and it’s finally feeling rock-solid. And it has completely replaced Google Reader for me.

Of course, users of Reeder on the other platforms will know that it is built on top of Google Reader. You log in with your Google credentials and all of your feeds (and starred items) are transfered over. But Reeder makes the experience look roughly a million times better.

The app uses a 3-pane view similar to the iPad version of the app. In the left pane, you’ll find your feed folders — but they don’t look like folders, they look like bundled icons. Hitting the arrow in the lower left square on this bundle will drop down individual feed items. Or you can click on the bundle to read all of the items in there. (You can also drag this left panel out to make it larger, and this will give you a more traditional folder/drop-down view.)

The second pane contains the feed of stories by a particular site (or bundled folder of sites). This area shows you the title of the post as well as a short preview of the content. There’s also a check-box at the bottom to mark all items as read (or you simply hit “A”).

The third (right) pane is where the content is actually shown. Again, with all the proper Mac styling, it just looks a lot nicer than Google Reader does in the browser. And here you can easily do things like star, share, make a note (tied to Google Reader), send to Instapaper (or Delicious, Pinboard, etc), and post to Twitter. The last bit opens a nice little tweet box that allows you to easily insert the title of what you’re reading and/or a link. This third pane can also be used to view the items as they appear on the web itself — and it’s actually a pretty nice way to browse. Or you can hit the “B” button and open any item in Chrome.

There are at least a couple dozen other subtle great things about the app. For example, the dock icon can be made to show you the unread count on the side of its filing box (instead of an ugly red badge that almost all other apps use).

And because it uses Google Reader as the backend, everything stays in sync between your various devices. And with Reeder for Mac, all read items can be kept locally on your machine so you can easily reference them later. The one thing missing, sadly, is search. You’ll have to open Google Reader for that.

Rizzi notes that he’s just working on feed subscription management now and then the app should be good to go. When it is, you’ll likely be able to find it here. I’ll be interested to see if Rizzi also makes the final version available in the Mac App Store. It seems like a natural fit.

Will this beautiful app be enough to save the doomed RSS reader method of consuming news? Long-term, no. But it does make it a great-looking corpse.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Did Tumblr Just Reverse Take Down 4Chan?

Today was supposed to be the day that 4Chan took down Tumblr. Instead, it looks like 4Chan itself is down. Could Tumblr be behind it?

As you can see, 4Chan is down for everyone, not just me. And it has been that way for at least the past 15 minutes. The timing is interesting since it was supposed to be 5 PM ET when the 4Chan DDoS attack was to begin — that was roughly 15 minutes ago. It is possible that Tumblr users, which had been planning a counterattack for tomorrow, moved it up to today to break 4Chan?

Tumblr, by the way, is still very up.

More to come, I’m sure.

Update: It seems quite a few people are seeing various Tumblr sites down as well (though it’s still up for others).

Update 2: And the 4Chan boards are up, but appear full of Tumblr users and a ton of things are 404ing.

Update 3: Says Tumblr founder David Karp:

As always, we’re aggressively suspending any accounts encouraging DoS attacks or other illegal behavior.

Karp also noted that the hacked downtime image I had posted above was fake, so I removed it.

[via Anthony De Rosa]

Information provided by CrunchBase


How Email Apps Will Help You Learn To Love Your Inbox Again

Email has taken over our lives, and most of us hate it. But a new generation of email apps are changing how we interact with the inbox, and on Monday Facebook might even join the party. The inbox of the future is going to look a lot more like Facebook than the one you’re using today—but it’s also going to do a lot more. Thanks to these apps, you’ll learn to love your email again.

Here are four ways your inbox is changing, with some of the services that are making it better:

1. Rich Desktop of Apps

New APIs are making it easier for companies to transform your inbox from an ordinary list of messages to a rich desktop of apps that act on the fertile information in your email. These apps make your life easier by letting your inbox do more. For the most part, these apps take advantage of the biggest trend in email innovation today: Gmail. Gmail is already eating into Outlook’s dominance as the number one mail client in the world. But Facebook might also join the fray, and we all know they can develop an app ecosystem. Either way, app developers win, and you win.

Take a look at some of today’s email apps to see what the next generation inbox looks like:

  • Boomerang: Lets you control when you send and receive emails via a button it installs in Gmail.
  • Sanebox: Automatically filters and labels your important and unimportant mail in Gmail.
  • Rapportive: Displays social data for your contacts in the Gmail sidebar.
  • Priority Inbox in Gmail: Automatically identifies and separates your important email from the rest. (Email innovation isn’t just for startups.)
  • Google Voice via Google Talk: Allows you to make phone calls from Gmail.

2. Better Notifications Display
One of the worst pollutants of your inbox is Bacn: the email notifications from Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and other services. But the problem with these messages isn’t the content—if it were, you would turn all notifications off (and some people do). The problem is that some of these are helpful (e.g., a Google Calendar reminder), but they overshadow emails from actual human beings you need to respond to.

Here’s where your inbox can learn from Facebook. One solution: a mail client that handles these transactional emails better. Don’t put them in my inbox, but instead throw them in a sidebar with an icon and display the number of new notifications. I couldn’t find any apps solving this problem today, but I’m sure they are around the corner.

3. A UNIX-like Shell

Thanks to one group of apps, your email is becoming a UNIX-like shell to run commands and interact with services via the compose window. You don’t have to visit the apps’ websites to use their services.  You can now get things automatically done just by sending an email. Will Facebook let us do this? Let’s wait and see.

These startups are riding two major trends. First, thanks to email delivery services like SendGrid, these companies don’t have to manage their own mail servers to receive incoming commands. Also, the increasing proliferation of smartphones today gives us email wherever we go. Once a company launches an email-as-an-interface service, voilà! They already have a mobile app.

A few apps to keep your eye on:

  • FollowUp.ccAttach a reminder to an email by putting FollowUp.cc in the Cc or Bcc field. The service will ping you via email when your reminder is due and give you the chance to one-click Snooze the email.
  • Hashable: Post meaningful connections to Twitter, make introductions, and track your social capital by Cc’ing or Bcc’ing their service.
  • TripIt: Just forward your flight confirmation emails to TripIt, and TripIt will build your itinerary and manage your travel plans.

4. Convenient Publishing and Editing

Your inbox is the world’s most underrated text editor. Format text, add colors, change fonts, attach photos and videos in your compose window. Thanks to smartphones, email is the text editor that’s always with you. (This article you’re reading was composed and formatted in Gmail.)

Posterous, which makes blogging easier by letting you post from your inbox, was one of the first apps to recognize the power of email as a text editor.

This is where your inbox will surpass Facebook for your professional life. Soon you’ll be able to edit spreadsheets, make presentations and access your other work documents from your inbox. In other words, you’ll get more things done with the interface you already use all day and are familiar with.

Loving your Inbox Again

Our inbox is over-worked and under-appreciated. It’s central to most of our communication with the world and where we keep track of contacts and tasks. Smartphones lessen our separation anxiety with our inbox, letting us take our email wherever we go (even when you gotta go to the bathroom). CEOs and grandmothers worldwide send emails. It’s about time we stopped fighting it and learned to love it.

With email apps like these, our inbox is becoming our hub of personal productivity, much like Facebook is already the platform for social interaction. Whether or not Facebook can impress enough to replace your current mail client is the zillion-dollar question. Either way, our inbox is coming back and apps that help us filter and manage all the incoming messages are the only thing that will keep us sane.

Editor’s note: Ajay Kulkarni (@acoustik) is the CEO and Co-Founder of Sensobi, a service that lets you manage your personal relationships from your inbox and smartphone (currently in private beta). Sign up for their beta invite waiting list at http://www.sensobi.com/.


NSFW: I’m Some Random Tech Entrepreneur and I Approve This Confusing Message

Last month, the world raised a quizzical eyebrow towards a new advertising campaign for Stolichnaya vodka, starring two Biz Stones, hanging out with each other in a bar. This month it’s the turn of Foursquare’s Dennis Crowley and Naveen Selvadurai, posing in chunky knitwear  (and with only the merest hint of homoeroticism) to promote Gap.

To say the thinking behind the ads is muddled is to use comical understatement. As I write these words, millions of Gap shoppers and Stoli drinkers are staring blankly at the over-airbrushed, bizarrely ill-conceived advertisements, thinking “yeah, I’ve heard of Twitter but who the hell is that dude? And what’s a Foursquare? Is it a Facebook thing?”

In fact, if I were a cynical man I might draw a few appropriately cynical conclusions from corporate America’s new-found obsession with tech entrepreneurs whom 99.9999% of the population couldn’t pick out of a police line-up.

I might, for example, suggest that the commercials are what happens when some the world’s biggest brands realise that they know jack-all about the media habits of their target customers and so, rather than admitting defeat, simply throw a burlap sack of money at a dick-headed gaggle of 20 year old sub-junior creative directors who form their entire concept of what constitutes ‘celebrity’ from the pages of Gawker and their friends’ Facebook walls. I might also bandy around phrases like “cringeworthy”, “embarrassingly ill-conceived” and “should be lined up against the stark white walls of their painfully minimalistic Madison Avenue offices and shot twice at close range”.

Fortunately, though, I’m not a cynical man. And as such I’m able to appreciate the true brilliance of the commercials. I mean, sure, maybe only fifty people in Silicon Valley and Manhattan will understand the ads… will appreciate why a photo of Biz Stone, getting slowly drunk with only himself for company is actually a brilliantly arch comment on the media’s obsession with Evan Williams and Jack Dorsey. Or will comprehend why choosing the founders of Foursquare to model clothing from the official uniform supplier to unemployed hipster wannabes is a piece of pitch-perfect commercial satire, worthy of Adbusters.

…but, while the number of people who truly grok the ads might be small, those fifty people also happen to have a frightening level of disposable income, along with the commensurate level of youthful naivete required to blow it all on mid-range vodka and woolen beanies. After all, the cash they just raised to build their awesome new “Groupon for Q&As” platform isn’t going to spend itself.

With the banks in ruin and Bernie Madoff in jail, these kids are America’s new highest-spending demographic and the further advertisers can dig into the Internet’s navel to find spokesmodels, the more likely these new-new-new rich kids are to respond. With that in mind, look out for the following Silicon-Valley-themed product endorsements this holiday season…

  • Tesla’s Elon Musk for Geico: Given the billionaire’s propensity for crashing high-powered sports cars before he’s got around to insuring them, who better than Musk to remind you that 15 minutes can save you 15% on your car insurance?
  • Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg for Nikon Binoculars: Cavalier attitude to the privacy of strangers? Him too! Nikon binoculars: because involuntary sharing is caring.
  • Tumblr’s David Karp for Trader Joe’s: Tumblr: for when, amazingly, you’re too painfully white, tedious, middle class and hipstery for Twitter. Trader Joe’s: for when, amazingly, you’re too painfully white, tedious, middle class and hipstery for Whole Foods.
  • Groupon’s Andrew Mason for Maxim and Kleenex: Because nothing says “I’m just not that into you” like paying for your date with a Groupon, and nothing says “I am incapable of maintaining an adult relationship” like a subscription to Maxim and a box of Kleenex.
  • Wikipedia’s Jimmy Wales for Fox News: “Well, it’s says here that Obama was born in Kenya and the moon is made of apple pie. We report, you decide.”
  • Aol’s Tim Armstrong for Old Spice: Because your grandfather used to use it, and now it’s on Twitter.


The Phone Call Is Dead

OUT OF ORDER payphonephoto © 2008 mike | more info (via: Wylio) In the tech industry saying that something is dead actually means “It’s on the decline.” And yes, the phone call is on an inexorable decline.

My original title for this post was “The Phone Call Will Be Dead In __ Years” but as consumer inertia is somehow still keeping our parent company Aol in the dialup business,  I thought it might be prudent not to include an ETA on the death of the call.

Less obsolete but more annoying than a handwritten letter, the phone call is fading as a mode of communication even if the nostalgic will be singing its praises for awhile. We reached a breaking point in 2008 when text messaging topped mobile phone calling in usage, and we’ve been living in a world dominated by text based communication ever since (Thanks Twitter).

If old media has taught us anything, it’s that it takes most industries at least a generation to be completely disrupted, especially something as powerful as Big Telco.

But we are definitely on our way there. According to Nielsen data, voice usage has been dropping in every age group except for those past the of age of 54. Text is just easier.

Now, 78 percent of teens recognize the functionality and convenience of SMS, considering it easier (22 percent) and faster (20 percent) than voice calls (though still fun). Voice activity has decreased 14 percent among teens, who average 646 minutes talking on the phone per month.”

Interest in voice calling is now sharply differentiated by age, and few technological advancements have ever survived while failing to capture the interest of 22 year olds.

Mike likes to rub it in MG’s face that the iPhone can’t actually make calls due to terrible AT&T reception, but the truth is that we iPhone users (and to greater extent smartphone users in general) are not primarily using our phones to make calls. We may carry around things we call “phones” but to us they’re just pocket-sized computers.

MG’s response to Mike, “It doesn’t need to. I use the phone mostly for apps and browsing, not calls.” On background: MG is in his 20s and Mike is around 40. As if we needed more proof, MobileCrunch editor Greg Kumparak’s AT&T usage data is indicative of the voice habits of an entire generation.

Sorry Telcom industry, we are increasingly provided with reasons to not use your voice services. While still not exactly mainstream, we now have access to a plethora of free, internet-based calling options like Google Voice. When I’m interviewing startups and ask to “get on a call” they usually direct me to their Skype usernames.

When I do cold call someone for information (and am more often than not directed to an automated message) companies send back their responses via email. And I have countless times declared a fatwa on PR people who think it’s cool to cold call me, especially before 9 am.

It’s not just job related calls that are annoying. The other day somebody from my bank called me to talk about my 401K. Fair enough. The problem is I wasn’t exactly expecting the call as I only get 3 or 4 a week now. And I picked up right as I was trying to write a post breaking news (One thing a phone call does signify is EMERGENCY). I ended up mumbling something rude and hanging up on the person. I still don’t even know what a 401K is even though I’m sure I’ll eventually get around to Googling it.

The saddest thing is that since I became a millionaire in the TC/Aol sale (not) it really is about time I started to do stuff with my money other then pray that I’ll still have a paycheck tomorrow. That phone call might have actually provided me with useful information had its unabashed interruption not been so abhorrent.

Ideally, here’s how that interaction should have gone down: Chase Bank should have sent me an EMAIL about the fact that it noticed I had more money in my account, with a link directing me to my 401K option plan. There I could decide BY READING and not listening to some customer service rep’s scripted drivel on what plan was right for me. Now, as it stands, I’ve got a random phone number in my Stickies that I will never call back. I won’t give a second thought to my 401K until I’m up late at night surfing the Internet and find out it’s like important five years from now.

What’s maybe sadder than the 401K episode is what this phone call generational schism means for people who are older than you. Much like Mike thinks his mom is silly for using chain emails to get in touch, I dread the inevitable Sunday phone calls from relatives I have to return lest they think I’m dead.  I wish they would just @reply me on Twitter or something. Instead I’ve now got 18+ voicemails I have no desire to deal with.

Maybe I should start making people write me handwritten letters?

Teaser image: Alexandre Dulaunoy


Who Breaks A Twitterer Upon A Wheel?

In recent days Britain has started to resemble an earlier era of intolerance. People are using social networks like Twitter and Facebook to be themselves, but the Police, the judiciary and the Establishment are showing worrying signs of not understanding this shift in society. Two recent cases, the “Twitter Joke Trial” and the “#welovebaskers” case currently exploding on Twitter serve to highlight this. And there is a direct comparison to an earlier era.

In 1968 William Rees-Mogg, as editor of The Times newspaper, quoted Poet Alexander Pope, for an editorial about the “Redlands” court case brought against the Rolling Stones. The Stones had been partying at a house, whereupon they’d been busted by the Police for possessing a small amount of drugs. The case resulted in prison sentences for Rolling Stones members Keith Richards and Mick Jagger.

But Rees-Mogg’s Times editorial came to the Stones defence, concluding “If we are going to make any case a symbol of the conflict between the sound traditional values of Britain and the new hedonism, then we must be sure that the sound traditional values include those of tolerance and equity. It should be the particular quality of British justice to ensure that Mr. Jagger is treated exactly the same as anyone else, no better and no worse. There must remain a suspicion in this case that Mr. Jagger received a more severe sentence than would have been thought proper for any purely anonymous young man.”

Swap out “new hedonism” for “the new social networking” and you find that the public nature of social networks is causing a disconnect in British society which has implications for our freedom of speech.


How Durable Are Information Monopolies On The Internet?

Does the Internet tend towards natural monoplies? Columbia Law professor Tim Wu makes a strong argument that it does in an Op-Ed in this weekend’s Wall Street Journal. While there is plenty of diversity on the Internet and few barriers to setting up shop, he points out that category after category is dominated by a single firm: Google, Facebook, Amazon, Skype, Twitter, Apple, and eBay.

Wu writes:

The Internet has long been held up as a model for what the free market is supposed to look like—competition in its purest form. So why does it look increasingly like a Monopoly board? Most of the major sectors today are controlled by one dominant company or an oligopoly. Google “owns” search; Facebook, social networking; eBay rules auctions; Apple dominates online content delivery; Amazon, retail; and so on.

If you define a market narrowly enough, it is easy to make any company look like a monopoly. But let’s concede that the Internet creates a lot of winner-take-most, if not a winner-take-all, situations. (A company can effectively have monopoly power without technically owning 100 percent of the market). The bigger question is: How durable are information monopolies on the Internet?

The same factor that gives rise to these monopolies so fast can prove to be their undoing: the lack of friction. Switching costs are almost nonexistent for most products on the Internet. Every single competing product or service is literally just a click away.

If there is one thing that locks us in, it is ourselves. It is the network effects at play across the Internet which help build up these natural monopolies faster than they otherwise would. Wu makes a deliberate point of this:

It was we, collectively, who made Google and Facebook dominant. The biggest sites were faster, better and easier to use than their competitors, and the benefits only grew as more users signed on. But all of those individually rational decisions to sign on to the same sites yielded a result that no one desires in principle—a world with fewer options.

Every time we follow the leader for ostensibly good reasons, the consequence is a narrowing of our choices. This is an important principle of information economics: Market power is rarely seized so much as it is surrendered up, and that surrender is born less of a deliberate decision than of going with the flow.

The more people who use Google’s search, the better it becomes; the more people on Facebook, the more you need to be on it too; the more people who sell on eBay, the more buyers it attracts, and so on.

Certainly information monopolies do exist and can persist. Look at Microsoft’s everlasting hold on desktop operating systems. But the half-life of market domination seems to be dwindling. AT&T ruled for 70 years, Microsoft ruled for maybe 25, so far Google has ruled for 10. Will Facebook rule next, and of so, for how long?

Monopoly is a big, bad, evil word, but not all monopolies are bad. One of the main reasons monopolies were regulated in the first place was because of their pricing power, but today’s information monopolies provide many of their services for free. It’s hard to argue consumer harm when consumers either aren’t paying much or are paying very little. (Amazon, for instance, maintains its dominant position in ecommerce through low prices). Many information monopolies today are more interested in collecting our data than taking our money.

The stronger argument is that information monopolies discourage competition, and that ultimately will limit choice and innovation. Look at search. You’d have to be crazy (or Blekko) to launch a search startup today and try to go up against Google.

But that brings us back to the durability issue. If Google’s power is transitory because it missed the boat on social, then does it really matter whether it holds near-monopoly power in search? While it is a good idea to remain vigilant against the rise of any information monopolies, the Internet will keep moving faster than the law or regulations can keep up.

Update: I asked Tim Wu how durable he thinks these information monopolies will be, and he agrees, “That’s the big question. Unfortunately my paragraphs on that question were deleted from the piece.” Here are those paragraphs the Wall Street Journal didn’t want you to read:

Are today’s internet monopolies really comparable to the info monopolies of other ages, like AT&T, the Hollywood studios, and NBC? Informed by the apostle of creative destruction Joseph Schumpeter, some agree that Internet monopolies are inevitable, but insists also that they are also inherently vulnerable and ephemeral. Just wait and today’s monopolies will be reshaped or destroyed by disruptive market forces. Bing may have had a slow start, but it may still run over Google, and if not, perhaps the rise of mobile Apps will make search engines irrelevant altogether. The theory is based, in part, on an inescapeable truth: all things change.

It is possible that we are living with a free market a very different kind than that envisioned by Adam Smith. He believed that a free market would mean many firms competing to sell their product at the lower price. It is a vision of successive industrial empires who stay in power only as long as they enjoy Heaven’s mandate. And indeed if, say, Facebook’s rule over any social networking were somehow limited to, say, 10 years, or better, ended the moment the firm lost its technical superiority, the very idea of monopoly might seem quite wholesome.

Exactly.

Photo credit: Flickr/ Chris Smart


Down Goes Arrington: WordPress.com Getting Top Author Stats Shortly

If 75 percent of my day is spent writing, the remaining 25 percent is probably going over TechCrunch stats. I’m obsessed with it. That’s why I do so many posts about things like Chrome getting ready to overtake Firefox as the dominant browser among TechCrunch readers (less than 1 percent away now). So I was obviously happy when WordPress.com (which hosts us) overhauled their Stats area earlier this year. But it was always missing just one thing.

WordPress.com’s Stats area gives you a solid overview for how your blog is doing overall. And unlike Google Analytics, the data is up-to-the-minute fresh. You can see your top posts, top referrers, top search engine terms, top clicked links, and a few other things. One thing it doesn’t have though is the ability to see how each author is doing in terms of traffic to their posts. In other words, it’s lacking in the vanity department. But that’s coming shortly.

WordPress founder Matt Mullenweg shot us over a quick snapshot of the new feature that they’re cooking up. As you can see, it will be a new box that shows you the Top Authors alongside the others like Top Posts, etc. The top ten list also shows you corresponding traffic numbers (I’ve removed those in the screenshot) and apparently the total number of your posts getting traffic on any given day (at least I think that’s what the number is parentheses is).

Obviously, I’m happy because I’m at the top. But that’s just for today (plus, I clearly have a huge back catalog, so it’s a little unfair).

Sure, there are a range of other plug-ins for WordPress that offer similar functionality, but now the vanity element will be fully baked into WordPress’ real-time analytics system. This is a nice addition for larger multi-author blogs. Previously, it has been kind of a pain to get these numbers in an accurate way.

Mullenweg notes that this feature should roll out in the next week or so.


Photo Reveals That Google Is Still Baking Android Gingerbread — Literally

I know, I know. The indications were that the next version of Android, 2.3, was supposed to be out already. It has been nearly a week since an OHA member tweeted that the Nexus One would be getting the Gingerbread OTA update in “the next few days“. So far, nothing. But Google is doing their best to keep whetting everyones’ appetite.

Yesterday, the search giant sent out a tweet from their mobile account (yes, the one they paid to promote on Twitter two days ago). The tweet read, “Our cafes are baking something sweet”, and contained a link to a TwitPic of dozens of gingerbread Android cookies. Cute Google, cute.

It’s been three weeks since Google put the giant Gingerbread Man on their lawn.

By the way, the metadata on the picture shows that it was taken with a Nexus One (and not the mythical — and delayedNexus S). No word on if it was powered by Gingerbread.

Perhaps Google is just timing the launch of Gingerbread to take some of the wind out of Facebook’s sails. After all, the social network is set to launch their email-killer on Monday.

Google Mobile@GoogleMobile
Google Mobile

Our cafes are baking something sweet http://twitpic.com/3682u2

November 12, 2010 11:56 am via webRetweet

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