Will your trust in Google Screw you Someday?



Yesterday’s story from Chris Brogan about a colleague who came back from lunch to find his Google account locked out, reinforces what I have been advocating for a number of years.

Who do you trust with your data, with your rss feed, your documents, your email…… Well a lot of people trust Google with that data. What would happen today if you were locked out of your Google account forever?

Brian my creative director teased me the other day, and said I needed to get with the program and start reading email via the web, versus reading email in Thunderbird. The lock out incident yesterday reinforces the need to always have a local copy.

Some will say this is a isolated incident, and that it would never happen to me. Well what if you got locked out of your Feedburner account, or worse yet had someone hijack your account. Your audience would be in the hands of someone that was intent in stealing your account and there would be very little you could do.

How long would it take to undo the damage, who would you call first? You do realize Google really does not do live technical support. You may have to wait weeks to get your accounts back.

Here are some simple rules:

  • Keep as much data as you can on your local machine
  • Never let Google do what your local applications can do
  • Always have a backup plane just in cast the worse happens
  • Never leave or have mission critical data on a Google site

Really we all love online collaboration, my company has lived on that from day one. But we also have always taken those documents out of the cloud just in case.


2009 Consumer Electronics Show Sponsor Search



Once again my planning for the Consumer Electronics Show is underway. While our coverage of the 2008 event is still getting play online the search starts again to find a sponsor.

With the 2006, 2007 & 2008 coverage reaching millions of people the 2009 event will be no different. If you want to reach millions of electronics consumers you will want to consider sponsoring our 2009 coverage.

Andy McCaskey from Slashdot Review and I will once again be making the trek to Las Vegas. For a sponsorship package drop me a line at geeknews@gmail.com


Has anyone found a killer Facebook app yet?



That is presuming you are still actually looking. If you look at this article from O’reilly you will see that while the number of subscribers are increasing the number of active users is slowly declining. Meaning that more people are falling off the site than are joining. If I take a quick poll among my peers this matches what is shown on this graph, that a lot of them have fallen away from Facebook use. The number of useless applications that are available continues to grow.

As reports over the last day or so are suggesting a number of Facebook shareholders (mostly employees) are trying to realise some equity for their stake now, presumably while it retains some value. The company seems to not be using its initial advantage to build a sustained business model yet and there is obviously some more work for them to do. While the promise of the social network that incorporated third party application integration was high, this is yet to translate into something that is actually useful.

The problem could be that Facebook simply grew to fast. During the fast growth they made quick decisions on philosophy and technology. While the site continues to need more work to expand its utility these changes are hugely more complex and difficult to implement while providing support to their existing users. While new functionality could help the site over time it could alienate some users or disrupt service which will annoy even more.

There is still promise in the philosophy but it is losing some of the market impetus while they work out how to turn promise into reality. I would imagine that some of the larger investors will be pushing for some experienced business builders to be brought onto the team to help work out what to do.


GNC-2008-08-05 #397 Back in Hawaii with a Live Recording



Back in Hawaii and more fun shooting the show in Video as well. Lots of good tech tonight. Shows flavor changes a little bit when its live as I can not make mistakes.. I’m sure you will find them.

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Listener Links:
Remote DVR Win for Consumers
Charge for Pillow and Blanket
Blacklisted by Google and Why
Some things to Ponder

Show Notes:
MPAA wants to plug Analog Hole
New Macbook?
150 Million year old UFO?
iPhone Update
Don’t be a DNS Victim
Are you using Cameras?
Human Powered Future?
Exploding Star Missed
Life on Mars Rumors
50 Websites for Writers
240,000 Kindles and my Review
Scotty did not get Beamed up :(
No more Lead Foots
Tunecast Audio
Would you Ride This?
Tether your iPhone with Netshare
Translation by Google?
Cloud DVR ok’d by Court Consumers win Big
Feedburner Hack
Sitemeter does it again not to be trusted!
Liquid Ethane on Titan
Podcast Benefits
30 Million to go to ISS would you Pay?
Is your Data Storage Exploding?
AT&T and Apple Renew iPhone Contract

BLOCKBUSTER Total Access click to activate coupon for $10 off your first month.


It’s no wonder I don’t Trust Feedburner Numbers



This site does not use Feedburner nor it never will because I knew a long time ago that I can measure my own readership statistics a lot better than any third party will ever be able to.

I never understood why people would use a service in which they don’t need. My blog application creates perfectly good RSS feeds, to ask a third party to copy that data and then redisplay under their branding never made any sense.

But now it turns out that spoofing ones subscriber numbers with Feedburner turns out to be pretty easy.. [Hack your FeedBurner Numbers Today]

 


DVDXCopy – If you can’t Beat Em, Join Em.



The Software DVDXCopy by 321 Studios was banned in the US 5 years ago after a big battle with Hollywood. 321 studios took on a lawsuit stating that people have a right to backup and archive material they purchased. The movie studios countersued, and in February 2004, it was ruled that DVDXCopy violated Digital Millennium Copyright Act laws and was officially banned in the US.

Well, the website apparently revamped their site from the Sale of the DVDXCopy software to an informational website of the best DVD Copy software. They review 3 different DVD copy programs, but are heavily pushing DVDneXtCopy, which the pro version can allow copying of single, Double sided DVD’s in multiple formats including formats for the iPod and PSP.

The site is not shy on saying that the XCopy version has been banned. But they are also warning people that there are fake versions of the software out there.

Of course we all know that copying movies for redistribution is illegal. However I would like to back up my movies in the case of damage. When I travel I don’t like to take original movies – I like to take copies. That way if something happens, I don’t lose the original.

Then again, with items like Blockbuster and Netflix around, will copying DVDs be as important nowadays?