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The 2012 Campaign Heats Up, President Obama To Start Tweeting From @BarackObama

You’re about to see whole lot more Tweets from the President. President Obama’s Twitter account, @BarackObama, has been around for sometime, accumulated 8.6 million followers but he was rarely sending any Tweets himself-his staff did. Today, the President’s campaign posted a message notifying the public that his 2012 presidential campaign staff (Obama for America) will start managing his Twitter and Facebook accounts (which were previously managed by the DNC).

And Obama will be Tweeting regularly from @BarackObama, with the signature
“-BO.” Apparently both Facebook and twitter accounts will be posting daily updates from the campaign trail, from Washington, and more.

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Facebook’s ‘Project Spartan’ To Take On Apple

Image representing iPhone as depicted in Crunc...

Image via CrunchBase

Following a leak Wednesday about a possible upcoming photo-sharing app for Facebook, TechCrunch claims that Facebook’s next big endeavor, internally known as “Project Spartan,” will establish a new mobile web app platform that could help the social networking giant gain independence from Apple’s App Store.

Unnamed sources told TechCrunch that Facebook’s new platform will be HTML5-based and will be compatible only with Apple’s mobile Safari browser (at first). This means that when the platform launches, its entire customer base will be iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad users.

“As of right now, there are believed to be 80 or so outside developers working with Facebook on Project Spartan,” writes TechCrunch, listing FarmVille developer Zynga among the partners. “These teams are working on apps for the platform that range from games to news-reading apps.”

If the sources are correct, Facebook’s platform will sidestep Apple’s App Store and create a mobile marketplace all its own. Users will also be able to download and access apps directly from Facebook’s platform.

“Forget the buggy Facebook app,” Gizmodo says of the project. “iPhone owners could use a mobile version of Facebook that is lean, mean and outside the reach of Apple’s control. [...] Here’s something to think about if this rumor pans out. Adobe Flash is gone, Apple is gone and everything will be channeled through Facebook. Kinda scary, huh?”

Looking toward Facebook’s financial goals, Techland writes, “If [Facebook] can get enough people using an iOS-optimized website, it can use that to sell them stuff too. It can sell apps that work within its web platform (as opposed to apps that have to approved by Apple first).”

Some, however, think Facebook might not be headed in the right direction. Gigaom, for example, writes,

Farmville, and many other social games that use in-game currency to make most of their money, have already found a profitable route to mobile thanks to Apple’s App Store. A Facebook offering might immediately appeal to some of these developers [...], but to prove a viable alternative in the long run, Facebook will have to either offer a better value proposition to devs (by giving them a bigger cut) or show that developers can reach more users than they do with native offerings. [...] For a store that resides entirely on the web, that’s a tall order, because it means convincing mobile users to shift their idea of what constitutes mobile software once again. It’s hard to understate how different it is to ask mobile users to pay for an application, versus asking them to pay for access to what basically amounts to a website.

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French Ban Words ‘Twitter’ And ‘Facebook’ From TV, Radio

How do you say Twitter and Facebook in French? You don’t say them at all.

France has banned the names of both social networking sites from being spoken on radio or television, unless they are part of a news story.

The reason for the ban goes back to a 1992 decree that says mentioning such services by name is an act of advertising. Therefore, using the terms “Twitter” and “Facebook” constitutes preferential treatment.

Christine Kelly, a spokesperson for France’s Conseil Superieur de l’Audiovisuel (CSA), explained the ban.

“Why give preference to Facebook, which is worth billions of dollars, when there are many other social networks that are struggling for recognition,” she told L’Express. “This would be a distortion of competition. If we allow Facebook and Twitter to be cited on air, it’s opening a Pandora’s Box– other social networks will complain to us saying, ‘why not us?’”

But critics highlight the absurdity of such an edict. TechCrunch writes:

Instead of referring to specific social networking pages, like saying “Find us at Facebook.com/Audi” or follow us on “Twitter.com/Pepsi” brands will have to skirt around the issue, saying things like “Find us on social networking sites!,” or directing viewers to their community pages and hoping that viewers will just pick up on where to go.

Ex-pat blogger Matthew Fraser attributed the new restrictions to traditional French protectionism when it comes to the spread of American culture.

“Facebook and Twitter are, of course, American social networks,” he wrote. “In France, they are regarded — at least implicitly — as symbols of Anglo-Saxon global dominance — along with Apple, MTV, McDonald’s, Hollywood, Disneyland, and other cultural juggernauts. That there is a deeply-rooted animosity in the French psyche towards Anglo-Saxon cultural domination cannot be disputed.”

Back in 2003, the French banned the use of the word “email” in all government communications and publications.

Source :- http://www.huffingtonpost.com

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Zynga And DreamWorks Partner For Kung Fu Panda 2 Marketing Deal In CityVille

Image representing Zynga as depicted in CrunchBase

Image via CrunchBase

Zynga is racking up the Hollywood and entertainment partnerships. After launching a marketing deal with Lady Gaga for FarmVille, the social gaming giant is rolling out another deal, this time with DreamWorks Animation for the promotion of the studio’s new movie Kung Fu Panda 2. Zynga says this is the first-ever in-game integration within CityVille, the company’s most popular game by monthly active users on Facebook.

CityVille, which has more than 88 million monthly players, will allow users to place a Kung Fu Panda 2 themed drive-in movie theater in their city. Players who place the theater will also receive collection items, members of Kung Fu Panda’s Furious Five: Tigress, Crane, Mantis, Viper and Monkey. When all five items are collected, an exclusive Po the Panda statue will be unlocked and available to players as a reward for completing the Kung Fu Panda 2 quest. The integration runs until May 31.

Why CityVille? Zynga’s Global Director of Brand Advertising Manny Anekal says that nearly a third of all Kung Fu Panda fans on Facebook have also played CityVille. For DreamWorks, the studio can reach 88 million users, who are engaged with the Kung Fu Panda brand, with the promotion.

This isn’t the first partnership with DreamWorks; Zynga and the studio previously launched a “Mega-Farm” promotion on FarmVille with animated movie Megamind. But Zynga says this is the first in-game marketing deal for CityVille. And this follows the recent appointment of DreamWorks Animation chief Jeffrey Katzenberg to Zynga’s board of directors.

As TechCrunch wrote in the past, adding Katzenberg to the gaming company’s board represented a broader, multi-channel entertainment strategy for Zynga. I’m sure we’ll see a number of similar deals being struck with both DreamWorks and other movie studios for branded promotions in Zynga’s games.

Source :- http://techcrunch.com

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Facebook Might Launch Project Titan to Jab Gmail

The social network giant is expected to launch an email service to take a bout against Google

Facebook has reportedly sent out invitations for a special invite-only event to be held on November 15 at St. Regis Yerba Buena Terrace in San Franscisco, US. Michael Arrington, founder and co-editor of TechCrunch is betting that Facebook will unveil a new web-based email client codenamed Project Titan at this event. Internally, Project Titan is referred as “Gmail Killer” and is said to bring email address backed by @facebook.com domain name. Do you think Facebook can take over something as big as Gmail? Well, probably not but read on.
Earlier this month, Google had updated its API Terms of Service that allowed easy export as well as import of Contacts to a service or application only if the same is reciprocated. In a way, Google shut down Facebook’s access to pull contacts from Gmail to protect the user

data. To battle that, Facebook came up with a work around to download Gmail contacts as CSV files and then upload it to Facebook. Google wasn’t happy with Facebook’s move and criticized Facebook for not letting users get their Friend Lists and email addresses out of Facebook.
This is not the first time both companies stood against each other for Friends/Contacts exchange matters. Back in 2008, Facebook suspended Google Friend Connect as the latter started re-distributing user information from Facebook to other th

ird party developers without any user knowledge. Looks like that wound didn’t heal even after more than two years have passed. But in a way, Google is correct for not letting a service simply take away Gmail contacts and not offering something in return to Google. All Google is asking Facebook to do is to let users pull out Contacts and Friends from Facebook to Gmail. Practice what you preach.

Now, to respond back to Google and kill the whole data protection issue, Facebook is rumored to launch its own email service with @facebook.com domain. It’s pretty unlikely to kill Gmail but if Facebook launches its own email service, it would be interesting to see how other popular web-mail service providers react.

Facebook chat integration in several mobile apps has certainly made many Facebook users happy. But when Facebook Chat is used in the web interface, it’s not that comfortable to use. Though the invitation obviously points that a new email/messaging service is on the anvil, I think Facebook might give a facelift to its Chat service. A much deserved facelift for users who have thousands of known and unknown friends. If Facebook chat is revamped with the ability to share photos, links and files, it will actually lead to loads of users remaining logged into Facebook for longer hours.

However, as of now, we have no confirmation on Facebook’s deal. We’ve got to wait till November 15 for Facebook’s official announcement.

Courtesy :  http://www.techtree.com

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Facebook Photo Sharing Gets Tweaked

Facebook has re-worked on its photo sharing feature to allow loading of higher resolution of photos and easier tagging features.

Facebook has announced new photo sharing features for its users. Previously Facebook users had problems uploading High-resolution photos and tagging experience was considered slow and tiresome.

But now all that is past, with Facebook all set to roll out changes starting next month. Now Facebook users can upload images with a resolution of 2048 pixels on the largest edge. In addition to this you can now download your friends’ photos to your hard drive and have it printed.

Facebook has also made viewing photos more convenient, using the “light box” design motif that blackens the other elements on the page, and allows the user to open the photo in the center of their screen and close it when their finished viewing it. There’s no need for users to go back and forth between pages or reload the page.

Another new improvement is the “Bulk Tagging” that will allow users to tag more than one photo of an event at once. According to Sam Odio, Product manager Facebook “With our new uploader, you will be able to tag multiple photos in the same album all at once, as well as tag photos of the same person with a lot less effort.”

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