Author: Serkadis

  • Why Facebook is Wrong About Privacy

    Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg told a live audience this weekend that the world has changed, that it’s become more public and less private, and that the controversial new default and permanent settings reflect how the site would work if he were to create it today. Not everyone agrees with his move and its justification.

    Has society become less private or is it Facebook that’s pushing people in that direction? Is privacy online just an illusion anyway? Below are some thoughts, based primarily on the pro-privacy reactions to Zuckerberg’s statements from many of our readers this weekend. Though there is a lot to be said for analysis of public data (more on that later), I believe that Facebook is making a big mistake by moving away from its origins based on privacy for user data.

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    In Facebook’s early days, and for the vast majority of the site’s life, its primary differentiator was that your user data was only visible to other users that you approved friend requests from. As of mid-December, Facebook users were no longer allowed to hide from the web-at-large some information including their profile photos, list of friends and interests in the form of fan pages they followed. Text, photo and video updates shared on the site have always been by default private (friends only) but if you’d never changed your privacy settings before last month, then Facebook suggested you switch them to make those updates publicly visible to everyone. That became the new default.

    Here are three reasons why making some of this data public by requirement and some public by default is the wrong thing to do and why society is not in fact changing the way that Zuckerberg claims it is.

    Evolving Preferences Don’t Justify Elimination of Choice

    Mark Zuckerberg might be right, people probably are becoming more comfortable telling the world at large about more and different parts of their lives. Why does that mean it’s ok to take away peoples’ choices and force them to make public some of their information all the time? That just doesn’t make sense.

    Privacy is a fundamental human right and while that may seem less true when we’re operating on corporate turf like Facebook, Facebook used to be based on privacy. Why give it up so easily? (Isn’t it a cause for concern that so much of our civic interaction now goes on through this and other corporate channels?)

    It’s very hard to believe that the hundreds of millions of mainstream Facebook users are wanting to throw their privacy out the window – and if Facebook believes they are, why not as them clearly?

    Privacy Doesn’t Just Mean Secrecy

    This Summer we wrote about the academic research of University of Massachusetts-Amherst Legal Studies student Chris Peterson, who argues that an accurate and contemporary understanding of privacy is based more on the integrity of context than on absolute secrecy. Peterson tackles the contemporary reality of privacy on Facebook in a very readable draft thesis paper titled Saving Face: The Privacy Architecture of Facebook (PDF).

    Peterson argues that the idea that anything published ought to be understood as intended for public distribution is an antiquated understanding from the era when publishing was expensive and required a lot of effort. The opposite is true today, it’s free and easy to publish – so information at different levels of appropriateness for public eyes is being published. Why not support that?

    “There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment… It was even conceivable that they watched everybody all the time. But at any rate they could plug into your wire whenever they wanted to. You had to live – did live, from habit that became instinct – in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and except in darkness, every movement scrutinized.” – George Orwell, 1984

    Instead of what Facebook is doing, Peterson says that a more appropriate understanding of privacy today is based on context. We expect our communication to go on in an appropriate context (no drinking in church or praying in the bar) and we expect to understand how our communication will be distributed.

    If a college friend took photos of you drinking in a bar and showed them off to people in church, you might feel your privacy has been violated in both appropriateness and distribution. The bar is a public place, though, and not completely secret. Thus the need for a more sophisticated understanding of privacy that is more than mere secrecy.

    By pushing your personal information and conversation through activity updates fully into the public, Facebook is eliminating any integrity of context that these conversations would naturally have. Posted updates can be directed only to limited lists of Facebook contacts, like college buddies or work friends, but that option is buried under more public default options and much of a user’s activity on the site is not subject to that kind of option.

    Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg used to say that people would share more information if they felt comfortable knowing that it would only be visible to people they trusted. He told me in an interview two years ago that users who wanted to couldn’t take their data off of the site because privacy control “is the vector around which Facebook operates.” Now apparently, he’s changed his mind. This weekend I argued that his justification for the new stance is not credible.

    Many People Need Control Over Personal Information

    Do people no longer need to keep access to some of their personal information online limited just to trusted friends? Facebook seems to be arguing that they don’t.

    There is a long list of people who clearly do, though, including: people who’ve escaped abusive relationships, people with marginalized religious or sexual preferences, people who fear losing their jobs or who’ve been pushed around by bullies throughout their lives. That list adds up to a very large portion of the world, in fact. The group of Ivy League elites who run Facebook might think there’s no reason to be able to control access to their personal information, but many of them are less socially vulnerable and have less need to control their personal information.

    Consider this comment left by one of our readers in response to Zuckerberg’s statement. “As a person who is being stalked for being an innocent bystander in a child custody case, I can tell you that losing my choices over what is searchable or not is huge. I have nothing to hide nor be ashamed of but the loss of choice for my privacy has hit home in a poignant manner.”

    Stories like that are far more common than you might think and removing user control over what’s public removes the ability for millions of people to safely participate on Facebook.

    More than millions, tens or hundreds of millions of people around the world have reason to limit visibility of their personal information from the web but still want to be able to share that information with trusted contacts. Facebook became a huge success on that premise and ought to be able to continue to thrive without doing a 180 degree turn on privacy.

    Discuss


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  • Paradoxes of Blood Sugar Control

    For at least some of the diabetic complications, there is a disconnect between better blood sugar control and the development of complications. For example, little relation has been found between blood glucose control and both coronary disease and lower extremity arterial disease, the first being a major killer of diabetics, the latter being a primary cause of amputation. (C. Lloyd, et al, "Incidence of complications of insulin dependent diabetes mellitus," American Journal of Epidemiology, vol. 143, no. 5, p. 431 (1996)); E. Konduracka, "Myocardial and coronary vessel dysfunction in diabetes I patients," Przeglad Lekarski, vol. 59, no. 7, p. 514 (2002)) In diabetics with established cardiovascular disease, intensive blood sugar control shows no improvement and seems even to increase cardiovascular and all-cause mortality. (S. Mudalier, "Serum glucose control in diabetic patients with cardiovascular disease," Current Atherosclerosis Reports, vol. 11, no. 5, p. 384 (2009))

    Only half of diabetics with poor glucose control develop renal failulre, while 40% of those with good control develop diabetic neuropathy. (S. Rich, "Genetics of diabetes and its complications," Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, vol. 17, p. 353 (2006); M. Centofani, "Diabetes complications: more than sugar?" Science News, vol. 149, no. 26/27, p. 427 (1995))

    Recently there has been something of a revolution in views about strict blood sugar control for type 2 diabetics, since studies have shown that there is no benefit of intensive control for them in cardiovascular disease and microangiopathy. Although children with type 2 diabetes have much better glucose control than those with type 1 diabetes, they have much worse macrovascular disease than type 1 patients. (V. Montori and M. Fernandez-Balsells, "Glycemic control in type 2 diabetes: time for an evidence-based about-face?" Annals of Internal Medicine, vol. 150, no. 11, p. 803 (2009; K. Shiga and N, Kikuchi, "Children with type 2 diabetes mellitus have more risks for macrovascular complications," Pediatrics International, May 27, 2009))

    Rapid improvement of blood sugar control has long been known to worsen rather than improve diabetic complications. (M. Leow and J. Wyckoff, "Under-recognized paradox of neuropathy from rapid glycemic control," Postgraduate Medical Journal, vol. 81, no. 952, p. 103 (2005): G. Tauber, "Diabetes: paradoxical effects of tightly controlled blood sugar," Science, vol. 323 (5917) 1009 (2009)) It is interesting to compare this with the result noted in pregnant diabetic women, which is that they seem to have better outcomes when their blood sugar levels are kept stable, rather than when they are rendered more unstable by the effort to keep them closer to normal. Perhaps what the body needs most is just glucose homeostasis rather than normoglycemia. Hyperglycemia, because it creates more space for instability, may then be causing complications by worsening the irregularity of the body’s glucose supply rather than by simply elevating the blood sugar level.

    Some have held that the worsening of complications from rapid improvement in blood sugar control is followed by an eventual net improvement in complications over time. But one study which followed cases of diabetic retinopathy for 41 months after rapid glucose tightening failed to detect the expected improvement. (O. Brinckmann-Hansen, et al, "The Response of diabetic retinopathy to 41 months of multiple insulin injections, insulin pumps, and coventional insulin therapy," Archives of Ophthalmology, vol. 106, no. 9, p. 1242 (1988)) Perhaps complications are in part due to the repeated, short-lived attempts by patients to bring their blood sugar levels under control, each of which causes damage, and since most people cannot maintain their blood sugar improvement (the DCCT follow-up showed that strict control group participants gave it up after the study), all they wind up doing is making things worse. Homeostasis is vitally important for many physiological functions, and blood pressure, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, pH, and potassium all have to be kept constantly in a narrow range or damage occurs, so perhaps this is the case with blood sugar as well.

  • Electronic Arts forecasts another tough year

    danteElectronic Arts said today that it expects its revenues and earnings to be below its previous financial guidance.

    Eric Brown, chief financial officer of EA, said in a conference call that the company’s fiscal third quarter will be short of internal expectations and consensus estimates because of a soft December for EA in Europe and a shift to lower-margin distribution titles in North America. Overall, Brown said the overall packaged good sector is likely to be flat or down in the fiscal year that ends March 31, 2011. The latter prediction surprised some analysts on the call.

    EA said sell-through and reorders were below expectations. Digital games, such as online-based titles, were above expectations but not enough to make up for a shortfall in Europe in packaged good sales. EA now expects non-GAAP results of $1.33 billion to $1.35 billion and non-GAAP earnings per share of 29 cents to 33 cents. The shift from packaged goods sold at retail to digital games played online has been very fast and dynamic, said John Riccitiello, chief executive of EA, on the conference call.

    “What we have is a two-year turnaround that is taking longer” because of the dynamism in the sector, Riccitiello added.

    He acknowledged that EA’s forecasts were so far off in 2009 that the company is planning for a more conservative view of the overall sector. Riccitiello said EA has a massively multiplayer online game planned for the spring of 2011 that should make a big difference in its earnings, but EA is excluding that revenue from its FY11 plan for now.

    For the fiscal year, EA expects non-GAAP results of $4.125 billion to $4.2 billion in revenue and EPS of 40 cents to 50 cents a share. In the current fourth fiscal quarter, EA is launching Mass Effect 2, Battlefield: Bad Company 2, Dante’s Inferno, Army of Two: The 40th Day, and Command and Conquer 4.

    Riccitiello said the rest of the year will include a “great new version of Medal of Honor,” a “revitalized” Need For Speed in fiscal 2011, “The Sims on console, Dead Space 2, FIFA in a World Cup year” and Crysis.


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  • Wattpad boosts ebook community with new funds

    wattpad logoPopular ebook community Wattpad today announced an undisclosed amount of angel funding from various private investors. Wattpad, the self proclaimed “YouTube for ebooks + MySpace for writers”, is a social platform where readers and writers can connect by sharing their writing or reviews on ebooks.

    The platform is completely community driven, users upload and share all content. For writers, Wattpad is especially enticing as it allows for them to easily share their writings and gain feedback and suggestions.

    The company notes that all content can be accessed in several ways, including Wattpad’s website (www.wattpad.com), mobile site (m.wattpad.com) or through the Wattpad application supported on all mobile devices including Apple iPhone, Google Android, RIM BlackBerry, Nokia, Motorola, Sony Ericsson, Samsung, LG and more.

    Currently, Wattpad can account for over 25,000 monthly uploads from its ebook library and proclaims that “billions of pages will be read by its community on the web and mobile devices.”

    Funding will be used to continue growth in the new year around their mobile and ebook sectors as well as expand on engineering, marketing and business development.

    The company didn’t disclose the amount of funding. The round was lead by Harvey Beck and Alan Levine, former co-CEOs of ICOM and Bert Amato, co-founder of Delrina.


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  • BlackBerry Curve 8910 in the wild?

    If you thought RIM had completely run out of ways to mildly remix its existing portrait QWERTY formula, think again — the transition from trackball to optical pad has opened up a whole new world of exciting opportunities, and it looks like the venerable Curve 8900 might be the next model to get the refresh. BerryReview appears to have scored a shot of the alleged 8910 in its most natural environment — a desk calendar — preserving the Curve series’ typical broken-up keyboard style (as opposed to the connected keys you see in the Bold line). Otherwise we don’t really know much, but naturally, the new model is said to be running BlackBerry OS 5.0 under the hood (in other words, it’ll look pretty much like every other BlackBerry you’ve used in recent memory). More on this puppy as we get it.

    BlackBerry Curve 8910 in the wild? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 Jan 2010 22:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • 2010 Wishes. Daley Plaza: Time for a Makeover?

    2010 Wishes:

    Daley Plaza is a great public place. It is in the center of everything, and it is used all the time for a variety of different events.

    Because it is so vital I think it is due for an extreme makeover. A makeover also seems fitting because Block37 is now live. The plaza looks dated to me, and I think we could stand to lose some things and add some things.

    The first thing that should go is the pigeon warmer/eternal flame. I think we can find a better way to honor deceased vets. I would also like to see a new fountain. I think the current one is boring and the plaza could benefit from a more modern fountain, and the fountain should have a winter use.

    The plaza could also benefit from more green. Add more some trees and possibly some flower planters. More seating would be cool too.

    But if this ever happens most of the space should remain open for events and such.

    There is a thread in Citytalk and Urban Issues devoted to interesting urban plazas. Looking at it made me think Daley Plaza could be more interesting.
    http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=1022195

    I thought this was a cool example:

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Justme
    (Post 48298943)
    The Plaza del Torico in Teruel, Spain was renovated with something even better than yellow bricks—over 1230 color-changing LED lamps embedded in the pavement. It’s kind of like that fiber optic pavement you might have seen at an amusement park in the past, only on a larger scale. The whole system can be programmed to change colors and patterns in sequence.


  • Nick Jonas Covers Taylor Swift “You Belong With Me”

    Good to know that Taylor’s still pals with at least one JoBro. Nick Jonas gave a shoutout to the country charttopper and performed a verse of her hit single, “You Belong With Me,” during a performance on the Nick Jonas & The Administration Tour last weekend.

    In Nov. 2008, Taylor wrote a diss track following her split from Nick’s older brother, Joe, who allegedly dumped Taylor in a two-minute phone call.


  • Here they come: the first iSlate fakes

    -2

    Gentlemen, start your Photoshopping! Here we have the first of the iSlate fakes, similar to the older iSlate fakes. What makes this fake? All the icons are distorted and its showing ugly people in iPhoto. Apple never shows pictures of ugly people.


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  • Nyko gaming accessories

    NYKO_Logo.1Nyko, proprietor of fine gaming peripherals, showcased several new items at CES. For the Wii we have the upgraded Wand+, the Type Pad wireless keypad, the Perfect Shot pistol grip attachment, and the Charge Base Quad charging station. We also have a media hub for the PS3 Slim, and a new personal headset/speaker combo for the Xbox 360.

    DSC00421

    First the Wii stuff. The Wand+ is Nyko’s latest replacement for the standard Wii Remote. Other than being fully compatible Wii Motion Plus games without needing an extra dongle, it doesn’t have a whole lot of extra functionality that the standard remote doesn’t. As you can see above it is slightly smaller, although the buttons have been enlarged a bit. It rests comfortably in your hand, does what it’s supposed to, and doesn’t suck. It comes in the two designer colors you see, for $39.99.

    DSC00427

    The Type Pad is an interesting attachment, applicable mostly to those who browse the web a lot on their Wii. The QWERTY keypad is within easy reach of your thumbs, and the A and B buttons become triggers on the underside. It fits both Nyko’s wand series and the standard remote. No extra batteries needed, it’ll leech power straight from the remote. $29.99 if you just absolutely need a full keyboard for your Wii experience.

    DSC00424

    And speaking of power, the Charge Base Quad let’s you recharge four controllers at once, either the Wand or original. One cool thing is that complete contact between the remote and the charger isn’t necessary to charge, meaning you don’t have to take off any gel cases or the like. There’s also a USB port on the base so you can charge your phone, beard trimmer, etc. all for just $49.99.

    DSC00429

    Okay, if you really need me to explain this product, I’m not sure what I can tell you. It’s a gun. For your Wii. It’s $14.99. It works.

    DSC00499

    Now we make a quick delve into the Playstation realm. If you were disappointed the PS3 Slim reduced the number of USB slots, you’re in luck. This media hub attachment will give you 4 USB ports, a media card reader for SD and Sony memory sticks, and an IR remote to control DVD and Blu-ray playback. They run $24.99 a pop.

    DSC00437

    And from the PS3 we bounce over to its mortal enemy, the Xbox 360. The SpeakerCom 360 is a combination headset and loudspeaker, so you can share you profanity laden Xbox Live conversations with the whole room. It requires a single AAA battery, and the backs of the earbuds are magnetic. I personally prefer an actual headset for gaming, so the weight isn’t on my ears. But to each their own. $19.99.


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  • Super Dino Galaxy? Chinese knockoff of Mario is utterly shameless

    There are no words. This is the most egregious product-biting I’ve ever seen. Even worse than Super Shrek Brothers. Just watch the video and be amazed at the dedication that Chinese knockoff artists have to their craft. Apologies if there’s an ad before, that’s not us.

    [via 1up]


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  • KICK-ASS the movie might actually be a kick-ass movie

    Watch the trailer above and tell me that you don’t want to see the movie. Yeah, you can’t.


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  • How Much Exercise Does it Take to Lose Weight?

    Filed under: , ,

    Dear Sarah,

    Just how much exercise does it take to lose weight?
    Mary

    Dear Mary,

    Obviously every person is different, but I will answer this question in general terms. First let me say that using fitness as a weight loss tool is terrific, … Read more

     

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  • Very Simple Advice on How to Live Longer and Healthier

    Filed under: ,

    According to a recent report released by the MacArthur Research Network on an Aging Society, North Americans living in the next 40 years will be much older than many current predictions. “The significance of this study is that it not only brings up … Read more

     

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  • Matt Hazard: Blood Bath and Beyond Review

    The first Matt Hazard game, Eat Lead, wasn’t very good, and the newest Hazard game, Blood Bath and Beyond, repeatedly acknowledges this fact. Self-deprecation kicks off the game, and paired with an admission that BBB’s forthcoming story will make little to no sense, sets you up for one of the wackiest games available both in terms of the nonsensical storyline and the boneheaded development decisions that make it a far less enjoyable game than it should be.

    BBB is a return to Matt Hazard’s fictional back catalog of retro games, but as a side-scrolling shooter with 2.5D graphics, you might assume the controls would borrow the intuitive, dual-stick setup that Shadow Complex used (movement on the Left stick, aiming/firing on the Right). You’d be wrong.

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  • Hashima (Battleship) Island

    I decided to create a thread on it since it was featured on History Channel’s Life After People.

    Located off the coast of Nagasaki, Hashima was a colony where most of its inhabitants worked in undersea coal mines runned by Mitsubishi. But because petroleum replaced coal as a source of energy, coal mines around the island shut down and its inhabitants left.

    Today its one of the few abandoned towns in Asia.

  • Recovering from lows

    On Saturday I was out walking for 2 hrs. At dinnertime I took my usual dose of novo-rapid (20U). Soon after I didn’t feel so well so just ate some chicken. My BG dropped to 3.1. I felt shaky and had a cold sweat. I tried to raise my BGby eating fruit; juice and glucose tablets. After several hours I was up to 4.6 and felt better. I went to bed but did not take any Lantus. On Sunday I slept most of the day. Today my readings are really high Am – 8.5; pre dinner 18.1. I’ve had lows before but have never needed so much time to recover. It’s probably the effect of eating so many high sugar foods.Tomorrow I am back on track.
  • Snooki Covers Britney Spears “Radar” [VIDEO]

    Sorry Snooks, but we don’t need another Amy Winehouse. One is quite enough, thank you.

    Before she was picking up “juicers” and dancing on bars for MTV’s cameras, Jersey Shore’s Princess of Poughkeepsie was turning YouTube gems like this one. Do you think she realizes that we’re all laughing at her?


  • BREIN Shut Down Hundreds Of Torrent Sites That Apparently No One Ever Used

    TorrentFreak has an article up about an announcement from the rather aggressive Dutch anti-piracy outfit BREIN, insisting that it had shut down nearly 400 different BitTorrent sites in 2009, along with another 200 plus “illegal sites.” However, as TorrentFreak notes, no one seems to know what the majority of these sites were. It had cataloged somewhere around two dozen sites that were shutdown, but didn’t hear a peep from the users of the other hundreds of sites shut down — which seems odd, since users of such sites are usually pretty quick to tell TorrentFreak of any shutdowns. So, did BREIN shut down sites that no one uses? Or did those users not tell anyone? Anyone have any answers?

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  • Hakeem Kae-Kazim shoots new film in Nigeria

    Hakeem Kae-Kazim who is known for Hollywood blockbusters like ‘X Men Origins: Wolverine’, The Fourth Kind and Hotel Rwanda, is back in his home country of Nigeria filming his latest flick ‘Inale’.

    Hakeem Kae-Kazim

    Hakeem Kae-Kazim

    Hollywood actor Hakeem Kae-Kazim rose to fame playing George Rutuganda opposite Don Cheadle in the oscar nominated ‘Hotel Rwanda’.  It wasn’t long before he played in amazing films like ‘The Librarian’, ‘King Soloman’s Mines‘ and the family favourite ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ and the hit TV show ‘24’.  This award-winning actor was ecstatic to be filming in the country of his birth, for the first time in his life.

    Hakeem stars in the Nigerian film ‘Inale’, with Jeta Amata (Amazing Grace, Alexa Affair, Queen) directing this wonderful story.  The film is set to the music of the RENOWNED Bongos Ikwue and features songs from his past present and future. The story features an Idoma princess called Inale, who is said to have married the prize winner of a wrestling match and is played by Hollywood actress Caroline Chikezie (Aeon Flux),

    Hakeem Kae-Kazim will be back in Nigeria very soon to film another story with the same director and production team.  With his aim of raising the bar of Nigerian movies and to make it’s presence really felt on the world stage, his face will stay familiar both on a local and international level.

    “It is an exciting time in the Nigerian film industry I believe we are on the cusp of telling the African story from the African perspective on an international level, we have so many  untold stories  I want to be at the forefront of getting them out to our  people and to an international market”. Hakeem Kae-Kazim

  • Geodelic expands location service beyond T-Mobile to iPhone and Android phones

    geodelicGeodelic had the coolest location services app on T-Mobile’s popular Android phone. The Geodelic-based Sherpa app could help you discover what restaurants, coffee shops or other establishments were nearby, using an intuitive user interface.

    Now the company is expanding to the iPhone and other Android phones. The app is available now in both the iTunes App Store and the Android Market now. The Sherpa Local Discovery App debuted earlier this year on T-Mobile’s myTouch 3G with Google phone. It is still one of the most popular apps and has surpassed 300,000 downloads and 100,000 monthly users. Those are decent numbers for the fledgling Android platform.

    The free app has a carousel interface. You can use your finger to swipe a touch screen to spin the carousel to find out nearby restaurants or other places that are nearest to your location. The app learns your tastes and then makes future recommendations based on what it knows about you. It’s great when you’re in an unfamiliar place and don’t have time to plan where to go in advance.

    Santa Monica, Calif.-based Geodelic plans to open its location-based publishing system, giving businesses a way to add their businesses to the database.

    Rahul Sonnad, chief executive of Geodelic, was on my panel on Location-based Services at the Consumer Electronics Show on Saturday. He said that brands such as Best Buy and Universal Studios have begun using Geodelic to promote themselves to consumers based on geographic data.


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