Blog

  • The Brainpickings brouhaha and the problem with affiliate links

    There’s been a lot of sound and fury recently about a blogger named Maria Popova, who makes her living by curating links to smart content on her Brainpickings blog. Popova has been quite vocal about how she doesn’t like traditional advertising and instead relies on donations from her readers, in much the same way that former Daily Beast blogger Andrew Sullivan now does. But that commitment was recently challenged by an anonymous critic who noted that Popova also gets revenue from affiliate links to sites like Amazon — and the resulting debate says a lot about the future of both content and advertising.

    One of the reasons why this incident has drawn so much attention is that Popova seems like a great example of the kind of self-sustaining media entity many bloggers — and even traditional journalists — aspire to become. While she may not be in the same league as Sullivan, who employs a team to run his Daily Dish blog (and who will be speaking at our paidContent Live conference in New York on April 17), the idea that someone can make a living by simply curating excellent content in return for donations is inspiring.

    The Popova case has also become a flashpoint because as traditional advertising becomes less lucrative, publishers are turning to alternative forms of advertising such as “native” or sponsored content — something that caused a similar firestorm of criticism for The Atlantic recently — as well as affiliate-related content. Gawker is hiring writers to create what it calls “commerce journalism” that is designed to drive revenue from affiliate links. But standards on disclosure and other elements of these new forms of advertising are all over the map.

    brainpicker1

    In a number of profiles, including a glowing one in the Sunday New York Times, Popova comes across as a highly intelligent and motivated individual — a former recreational bodybuilder from Bulgaria who started Brainpickings as a way of collecting interesting links to books and other content. The reputation of the blog seems to have spread fairly quickly, to the point where luminaries like former State Department official Anne-Marie Slaughter said they support her through donations in the same way they support National Public Radio. And Popova has said repeatedly that she is proud to be advertising free:

    “It doesn’t put the reader’s best interests first – it turns them into a sellable eyeball, and sells that to advertisers. As soon as you begin to treat your stakeholder as a bargaining chip, you’re not interested in broadening their intellectual horizons or bettering their life. I don’t believe in this model of making people into currency. You become accountable to advertisers, rather than your reader.”

    That rosy picture got a little blurrier over the past couple of days, however, after an anonymous blogger posted on Tumblr about Popova’s liberal use of affiliate links — that is, links to books and other products on e-commerce sites (primarily Amazon) that provide her with a payment if one of her readers clicks through. The anonymous blogger extrapolated from Popova’s traffic numbers and estimated that she could generate between $200,000 and $400,000 a year from those links.

    Disclosure is always better if you want trust

    Given that kind of income — from something that is pretty clearly a form of advertising, although perhaps a non-traditional one — the Tumblr critic argued that Popova’s claim to be “advertising free” is clearly inaccurate. He also argued that some of her donors might think twice about giving her money every month if they knew that she was deriving a substantial amount of income from affiliate links, something that Popova doesn’t disclose before or after a reader clicks on one of those links.

    Reuters blogger Felix Salmon followed up with a post about Popova, repeating some of the financial claims made by the Tumblr critic (who has since revealed himself to be Tom Bleymaier, founder of a startup in Palo Alto, Calif.) and adding some of his own. Popova has since responded to both Salmon and Betabeat — which also published a critical post about her practices — saying she doesn’t see affiliate links as advertising, is open about using them, and doesn’t make anything close to what Bleymaier said she does.

    “Those numbers are ludicrous! If Amazon gave me even a tenth of that a year after Uncle Sam takes his fair share, I’d be delighted. I’ve been completely honest about the Amazon links with anyone who’s ever asked – and have many, many, many emails I’m happy to forward – and have brought it up myself multiple times in talks and on Twitter.”

    Many of Popova’s supporters have said they are happy to have her get revenue from her writing in any way possible, and don’t mind the lack of disclosure about her use of affiliate links. Others, however, have questioned why she wouldn’t attach a simple disclaimer to her site — especially on the donation page — to note that she uses them (and some have even pointed out that this kind of disclaimer is arguably required by law, due to FTC regulations on disclosing marketing-related content).

    I think the main point that Salmon makes in his post on the issue is a good one: namely, that if you are relying on donations from your fans for your livelihood — as Sullivan is, and others such as musician Amanda Palmer are — then it behooves you to be as open as possible about your financial arrangements, in the interests of increasing the trust your readers or fans have in you. Sullivan and Palmer have both been extremely forthcoming about their financial situations, an approach Popova might want to imitate.

    Images courtesy of Shutterstock / Igor Steganovic and Brainpicker

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

    • Jim Jones Arrested For Disorderly Conduct

      Rapper Jim Jones was arrested on Wednesday for disorderly conduct in New Jersey after a disagreement with officers who were trying to tow his car.

      Jones reportedly showed up as the tow was happening and questioned the officer in charge, who let him know he had a summons on the windshield for a parking violation; the car hadn’t been moved since February 6th.

      Jones allegedly tried to pay his fine on the spot, and when police began questioning him about prior arrest warrants–for failing to shovel a sidewalk and failing to yield to an emergency vehicle–he became agitated. It was reported that Jones tried to walk away during the arrest. He later posted his own bail and is due to return to court on February 27th.

      Image: YouTube

    • New TED Book: How Did You End Up Here?

      HowDidUEndHereWho hasn’t found themselves at party, standing awkwardly by the guacamole, approximately five feet from another person doing the same? Sometimes it’s just hard to know what to say to start a conversation.

      Davy Rothbart can help. In his new TED Book, How Did You End Up Here?: The Surprising Ways Our Questions Connect Us, Rothbart collects more than 100 of his all-time favorite questions to ask someone you’ve just met, generated by people around North America whom he’s only just met himself. Rothbart opens his toolbox, sharing secrets of his trade, stories from the road, and strategies for approaching people and pushing past superficialities while also taking a close look the questions themselves — the funny, strange and surprising questions we all want to ask the people around us.

      Rothbart — a writer, reporter and documentary filmmaker — is known for his curiosity about other people’s lives. Whether it’s the folks he interviews as a frequent contributor to public radio’s This American Life, or the people he connects with through the personal notes and letters published in his annual magazine, Found, Rothbart has honed a unique talent for compassionately probing into the lives of strangers and drawing out surprisingly revealing stories of beauty, heartbreak and humor.

      How Did You End Up Here? is available for the Kindle and Nook, as well as through the iBookstore. Or download the TED Books app for your iPad or iPhone, and get a subscription with a new TED Book every two weeks.

    • Can The BlackBerry Z10 Help You Cheat At Scrabble?

      Reviews of the latest BlackBerry phone – the BlackBerry Z10have been generally positive, but are not asking the tough questions. Can the BlackBerry Z10 make phone calls? Can it help you cheat at Scrabble? Can it play obnoxious memes during lunch? These are the questions that one brave reviewer has agreed to tackle.

      Sortable has reviewed the BlackBerry Z10 by not comparing it to other phones, but rather testing it out in a variety of situations. The review should help you come away with a better understanding of what the BlackBerry Z10 is truly capable of.

      The BlackBerry Z10 has proven itself as a decently popular smartphone (in Canada), but it still has to prove that it’s the savior RIM BlackBerry is punching it up to be. We might be able to get a better grasp on its potential fortunes once the phone launches across all major carriers in the U.S. next month.

    • Facebook Thinks You May Want to Pay to Promote Your Friend’s Witty Status

      After unveiling Promoted Posts for businesses that allowed them to highlight and give more visibility to individual posts (for a fee, of course), Facebook eventually let individual users do the same for their statuses, photos, events, and more.

      Now, they’ve taken it a step further. Starting now, Facebook is rolling out the ability to let you pay to promote your friends’ statuses, photos, events, etc.

      So if your friend has an amazing photo that you think more people should see, you can now help them out, for a price.

      The only people for which the post will be given prominent billing are the poster’s friends. You’re basically just bearing the weight for their promoted post. If the original poster and the promoter have mutual friends, they will see the whole thing.

      “You can only promote posts to the people that your friend originally shared with. If you have mutual friends, they’ll see that you shared it and promoted it,” says Facebook.

      It should be gradually rolling out globally, and it will only be able to be used by those with 5,000 or less friends/subscribers. Shortly after rolling out Promoted Posts for users, Facebook did away with the 5,000-friend limit and let anyone and everyone promote posts. If this sort of cross-Promoted Posts takes off, there’s no reason to think Facebook won’t consider upping the limit here too.

      [via The Verge]

    • Is Quora’s quest for growth worth alienating key users?

      It’s a scene that often plays out in tech, but still causes a firestorm every time: A tiny, beloved, early-adopter startup gets some traction and funding, and suddenly it has to grow up and add more users to become a real business and please its investors. But when it makes those moves to grow, it pisses off the early adopters, and the startup is stuck in a no-win situation.

      The issue came up Wednesday evening when engineer and former professor Scott Hanselman wrote a post titled, “I’d like to use the web my way, thank you very much Quora.” The post pointed out that the company has started redirecting mobile users who end up on Quora webpages to download the company’s mobile app before reading answers.

      And indeed, it’s an incredibly annoying tactic. Search for any topic (like, “best Star Wars movie“) and include “Quora” in the query, and try to read the resulting page on your mobile device. You can’t. The page tells you to download the app to read further, and will only let you see the first answer until you do so. On desktop, you’re asked to create an account and log in before reading. Not such a great user experience.

      And then Y Combinator founder and startup legend Paul Graham weighed in on Hacker News, writing that Quora co-founder and ex-Facebook CTO Adam D’Angelo is trying too hard to gain new users the way he learned at Facebook, not understanding that Quora users are a different breed. He argued against the company’s policy of making users create accounts to read answers and comment on the site:

      It may be a mistake to alienate the sort of people Quora has been alienating by doing this, even if they end up numerically ahead in the short term. I’m one of them. Quora has now spent several years training me to be bummed out every time I click on a link to their site.

      Quora hasn’t responded with any comment yet as to how long the “download the app” screen has been in place, or why they require users to make accounts. But it’s not too hard to see why they’re doing this: the company has raised a lot of funding ($50 million just this past summer), and it needs to see growth. While it saw early success from its high quality questions and answers on the site, it can’t become a profitable business with just a handful of readers.

      A similar thing happened last summer with Twitter and its developers over API restrictions. It happened in December with Instagram and its terms of service debacle after joining up with Facebook. And now, Quora is in the limelight.

      “We want to get to be 100 times bigger than we are today,” D’Angelo told Om in a January interview. So how does the company get there?

      Quora has tried a lot of different tactics in its quest for growth in the past year: adding a standalone blogging platform, rewarding users who write the best and most plentiful answers, letting people embed quotes across the web, and adding an Android app.

      So getting people to download the company’s app and requiring account? Not too surprising. But at some point, Quora needs to make sure that it strikes the best balance possible between demanding investors and loyal users.

      Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
      Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

    • Roundup of Hosting, Cloud News: INetU, Internap, Phoenix Nap

      INetU will offer its full product portfolio of cloud and security services from its Seattle data center starting in April.

      INetU will offer its full product portfolio of cloud and security services from its Seattle data center beginning in the spring of 2013.

      Here’s a round up of noteworthy articles published by THE WHIR. Read the full story on thewhir.com:

      Web Host INetU Adds Seattle Data Center to Boost Disaster Recovery

      Headquartered in Allentown, PA, web hosting and cloud services provider INetU announced on Thursday that it has expanded its data center footprint to the West coast with the addition of a Seattle data center. The company, which has data centers on the East Coast and in Amsterdam, plans to provide customers its full product portfolio of cloud and security services from its Seattle data center starting in April, including its Gated Community Cloud service, private and hybrid clouds, and the INetU Security Suite.

      Phoenix NAP Adds Dedicated Server Offering to Ashburn Data Center

      Web hosting provider Phoenix NAP announced that its dedicated server offering, Secured Servers, is now available in its data center in Ashburn, Virginia.

      Internap Survey Finds Organizations Want Cloud-like Control in Colo Environments

      A new survey released by cloud, hosting and colocation provider Internap finds that IT organizations are looking for cloud-like visbility and control in their colocation environments. Internap says that the agility associated with cloud services will likely impact the way colocation services are managed and delivered over the next few years.

      US Highest Spam Volume in the World: Eleven Email Security Report
      A dubious honor goes to the United States being found the highest volume spam email in the world as compared to that of other countries. German email security provider Eleven released the Eleven Email Security Report February 2013, which signals the United States’ return to being the highest total spam volume in the world, followed by followed by India and Romania, respectively.

      Keep up with Data Center Knowledge’s colocation news at our Colocation channel.

    • Criterion Collection on Hulu Opens Up 800+ Classic Films for Free This Weekend

      If you’re a film lover and want to spend the weekend holed up watching the best of Jean-Luc Godard, Ingmar Bergman, Francois Truffaut, Kurosawa, Chaplin, and more – Criterion and Hulu have an offer for you.

      Starting today and continuing through the weekend, all Criterion films on Hulu will be free to all – even those who are not subscribed to Hulu Plus.

      Normally, Criterion films are only able to be streamed by Hulu Plus members. In that case, they’re ad-free. In this free-stream weekend, you’ll have to put up with a few ads throughout the film. But it’s a fairly small price to pay to have access to nearly a thousand classic films.

      The Criterion Collection first appeared on Hulu back in February 2011. As of today, there are over 800 different films to stream from Criterion on Hulu, making it one of the most-impressive collection of classic and often hard-to-find films around.

      You can start browsing Criterion films on Hulu here.

    • Microsoft reminds us Windows 7 RTM support soon ends

      Microsoft has killed off a bunch of products lately, moving forward to new and “improved” platforms, even making changes to company logos. The concept isn’t foreign in the tech industry — everything changes, almost daily. Yesterday Live Mesh died, soon Messenger will follow it to the grave. Today Microsoft reminds us that Windows 7 RTM’s days are numbered.

      It is not that we didn’t know this day was coming — the company gives plenty of notice about these things. The irony here is that many businesses are just now moving to the platform from XP. Hopefully most had the foresight to move all the way to Windows 7 Service Pack 1, or later. That version of the operating system will enjoy much more life before being shut off. Microsoft’s Stephen Rose points out “mainstream support continuing until January 13, 2015, and extended support continuing until January 14, 2020”.

      However, as for the RTM, or non-SP 1 version, the date is fast approaching — April 9, 2013. That is just under two months to get your things in order.

      This is not to say your computer will suddenly fail to boot that day. It simply means that Microsoft will no longer issue updates and that you could soon become vulnerable to attacks and malware. If you care to risk it then you can continue running the OS for as long as you wish. Heck, you can still install and run Windows 95 if you would like — I have an install disc I will sell you cheap.

      Photo Credit: Adriano Castelli/Shutterstock.com

    • You Can Now Buy Reddit Gold with Bitcoin, Credit Cards

      Starting today, you can purchase reddit gol in two new ways: Bitcoin and Credit Card.

      Previously, reddit users who wanted to upgrade could only used PayPal or Google Wallet.

      “We’re using Coinbase as our bitcoin payment processor and Stripe for credit cards. Right now we’re only accepting credit card payments from the US and Canada, but bitcoin payments can be made from anywhere in the world. Buy your loved ones reddit gold for Valentine’s Day–it’s a gift sure to warm their hearts,” says Brian Simpson on the reddit blog.

      Why buy reddit gold? Well, apart from special features like the ability to customize r/all, comment highlighting, saved comments, and the choice to turn off ads, buying reddit gold can help support the site.

      And there’s always that ultra-secret super swanky lounge people keep talking about, but I’ve never seen it. It’s kind of like the reddit version of the pool on the roof of your high school.

      Or, if you’re cheap, you could always wait for that perfect moment to deliver a wonderful comment somewhere on the site and hope some generous soul buys it for you.

      Reddit gold is $3.99 a month or $29.99 a year.

    • Apple’s Retail Strategy Proves That If They Build It, You Will Come (And Spend)

      gallery

      Apple is a unique company in that even if you break down its individual lines of business and view them as distinct from the whole, it can still be regarded as immensely successful in a number of different areas. As a hardware company, it’s a success; as a software and services provider, it’s a success; and as a retail chain, it’s a success. And Apple’s physical retail presence shows such steady upwards growth that it, rather than any product, could be the site of the company’s greatest innovation over the next few years.

      Speaking at a Goldman Sachs investor conference on Tuesday, Cook went into detail about Apple’s retail plans, addressing the growth and success of the company’s stores, as well as plans for expansion and changes to their deployment strategy for 2013. Asymco’s Horace Dediu visualized the numbers shared, charting the progress of key metrics like store openings, store visitors international distribution and more in a blog post yesterday.

      One of the most important metrics Dediu tracked is depicted in the graph representing store visitors vs. stores open. After initially expanding their physical presence more quickly, and averaging fewer visitors, attendance quickly cut up and for the past two years, stores have been averaging around 1 million for every location open. Apple’s strategy this year involves not only opening new locations, but closing existing ones and replacing them with larger outlets, which should make for an even higher visitor-to-store ratio in the future if trends continue.

      In terms of money invested in Apple’s retail efforts, we see a trend that could result in much more of the kind of innovation I alluded to earlier. The Asymco chart for spend on “Property, Plant and Equipment” shows a huge recent spike in money committed to “machinery, equipment, and internal use software,” as opposed to normal, steady growth for land, buildings and improvements to said facilities.

      Since late 2009 when we begin to see the curve start to trend upwards more sharply, Apple has introduced its own iPod touch-based check out and inventory system (replacing a legacy version based on Windows CE hardware), moved to iPad-based information consoles, changed the structure of its stores to de-emphasize checkout and highlight Genius and One-to-One customer interaction, launched self-serve EasyPay shopping for customers, introduced in-store pickup, and just generally changed the way the world thinks about brick-and-mortar stores. No big deal.

      Remember too that Apple’s retail leadership has been somewhat in turmoil recently. Apple’s SVP of Retail Operations Ron Johnson, largely credited with much of the retail division’s creation and success, left the company back in June of 2011. A search for his replacement ultimately resulted in the controversial hiring of Dixons CEO John Browett in January 2012, after a six-month search. Finally, John Browett was dismissed from that role in October 2012, after less than a year on the job. Apple is still looking for a replacement for Browett.

      Apple is making commerce more invisible, and yet winning more shopper dollars.

      It may seem like lack of a clearly defined top man in retail would lead to uncertainty, but Apple Retail had its best year ever in 2012 amid all these shakeups, and CEO Tim Cook said that the retail locations in particular have helped the iPad enjoy its runaway success since launching in 2010.

      Cook talked about the label of “retail” not being sufficient to describe what Apple is building with its stores, and more and more, that’s becoming true. Just like the company tries to hide elements like the file system in iOS, or deliver CE devices that aren’t upgradeable or modular, opting instead for a smooth, appealing and user-friendly outward appearance, it’s also taking commerce out of the store experience as much as possible. And yet as a reward it’s winning more customer dollars.

      You can measure innovation in terms of a revolutionary new smartphone, or a dramatically different PC design, or you can measure it in the aggregate effect of a sustained effort to change an age-old practice. Apple’s retail efforts are the latter kind, and its spending patterns suggest there’s plenty more of that to come.

    • Steam For Linux Out Of Beta, Celebrated With Sale

      For the past few months, Valve has been testing its Steam client on Ubuntu, the most popular Linux distribution. During that beta period, many of the games were locked away in beta testing leaving those not invited high and dry. Now that beta period is over, however, and Steam is ready to celebrate.

      Valve announced today that Steam for Linux is officially out of beta. It’s available as a free download from the Ubuntu Software Center. Steam coming to Linux, as well as the efforts of many indie developers, may finally make Linux a viable gaming platform. That’s what the folks at Canonical think at least:

      “The introduction of Steam to Ubuntu demonstrates growing demand for open systems from gamers and game developers,” said David Pitkin, Director of Consumer Applications at Canonical. “We expect a growing number of game developers to include Ubuntu among their target platforms. We’re looking forward to seeing AAA games developed with Ubuntu in mind as part of a multi-platform day and date release on Steam.”

      All games purchased through Steam for Linux will also be playable on Windows and Mac through Steam Play. That’s great for those who already own hundreds of games on Steam for Windows, but perhaps want to start experimenting in Linux.

      For long time Linux users new to Steam, Valve has a treat for you guys as well. Team Fortress 2, Valve’s hugely popular team-based shooter, is available day one in all its free-to-play glory. For a limited time, Team Fortress 2 players on Linux will also receive a free exclusive in-game Tux item. Other Valve titles available today include Half-Life, Counter-Strike 1.6 and Counter-Strike: Source.

      To celebrate the launch of Steam for Linux, all the currently available Linux titles on Steam are on sale until February 21. There’s over 50 titles to choose from, and a lot of them are pretty fantastic. You can check out the full list of games on sale here.

      Before you ask, PC and Mac gamers can get in on the sale too.

    • Cedexis Fusion Tames Big Data Flows for Traffic Shaping

      Web optimization company Cedexis launched Cedexis Fusion, a component of its Software as a Service platform to integrate big data flows from third-party tools, CDNs and clouds to enable a wide range of performance, availability and cost-for-performance traffic shaping.

      Cedexis Fusion integrates that data into the Cedexis Openmix platform, which acts as a global load balancer, driving traffic to the most available, best performing or least costs-for-performance resources. Monitoring and performance data is aggregated in real-time and makes this big data actionable. A range of pre-built integrations are available immediately, including New Relic and AppDynamics application performance monitoring software; Akamai, Level3, Edgecast and ChinaCache CDNs; SoftLayer’s server management data, and many others.

      “So many systems produce volumes of Big Data, but making that data real-time actionable has been difficult or impossible,” said Greg Unrein, VP of Product Management of Cedexis. Fusion allows customers to make their monitoring investments really pay off, accessing all of their Big Data metrics, and automating the process of reacting to the data to improve website performance. Cedexis Fusion is more than a data aggregator. It is the point of convergence of all the real-time Big Data streams that feed our cloud-based global load balancer – Cedexis Openmix.  With Openmix, Fusion customers have a single place to define how they wish to detect and avoid Internet congestion and service disruptions to achieve 100% service availability.”

      Cedexis hosts a Developer Exchange as well, for custom innovations and private data ingestion ideas. Customers can automate big data streams from any HTTP source. Example applications include green energy sensitivity, least costs routing and incorporation of private measurements from internal systems. Additional use case examples for Fusion include a one stop interface for purging content on CDNs, predicting over-utilization, minimizing bandwidth bursting charges, and avoiding slow shopping carts.

      Privately held Cedexis was founded in 2009 and its platform  optimizes web performance across data centers, content delivery networks (CDNs) and clouds for companies that want to ensure 100% availability and extend their reach to new global markets. Companies rely on Cedexis to ensure 100 percent availability, fast page loads, downloads and transactions to drive traffic and revenue at lower cost and risk.

    • “Trick Shot Titus”: Watch This Toddler’s B-Ball Skills

      There’s a video making its way around the web today, and for good reason: the toddler in it has mad basketball skills.

      We’re not just talking making the shots; he does trick shots, makes several shots in a row while laying down, and makes shots no matter what height the goal is set at. This kid definitely has a future in sports should he be interested, but the best thing about Titus, perhaps, is his sheer love of making baskets. The look on his face every time the ball goes in is pretty adorable.

    • Securing our Nation’s Borders

      Flying Over the Rio Grande River

      Flying on the U.S. side of the U.S.-Mexico border and overlooking the Rio Grande River, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano tours the border in a U.S. Customs and Border Protection Office of Air and Marine helicopter over Clint, Texas, Feb. 5, 2013. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

      Last week, I travelled to San Diego, CA and Clint and El Paso, TX where I saw firsthand the need for more modernized immigration laws that make it harder for criminals and transnational criminal organizations to operate, while encouraging immigrants to choose to pursue a pathway to legal immigration rather than breaking the law.

      See a photo gallery of Secretary Napolitano's visit

      Over the past four years, we have dedicated historic levels of personnel, technology, and resources to the Southwest border, and undertaken an unprecedented effort to transform our Nation's immigration enforcement systems into one that focuses on public safety, border security, and the integrity of the immigration system. We have matched our success at the border with smart, effective immigration enforcement, with a focus on identifying and removing criminal aliens and other public safety threats, recent border crossers, repeat violators, and employers who break the law. We have also increased funding to our state and local law enforcement partners to make sure they have the resources they need.

      read more

    • Katie Couric: 911 Calls From Late Husband’s Phone Baffling

      Katie Couric has reached out to some friends in high places in order to try and find out why 911 calls are being made from her late husband’s telephone line.

      Couric says at least three calls have been placed from the number to emergency services, some of them while she wasn’t home. They’re originating from an old land line that her husband, Jay Monahan, used in their apartment.

      “It’s happened like three times the last three weeks,” Couric said. “Every day, every time at 2 a.m. on Tuesday morning. I was out of town the last time it happened and apparently it happened before when nobody was home.”

      Couric said she turned to Police Commissioner Ray Kelly to clear up the matter, which is now under investigation.

      “So I called Ray Kelly, who I know just through the years seeing at different things. ‘Ray, this is so weird but can you help me? I don’t know what to do,’” Couric said.

      It’s not yet unknown whether the calls are being made due to a malfunction or glitch of some kind, or if they’re what police refer to as “spoofing”: a hacker getting into the phone line to make the calls using a hijacking device.

    • 8 great talks about love

      Esther-Perel-imageEsther Perel begins today’s talk with an intriguing question: “Why does good sex so often fade even for couples who continue to love each other as much as ever?” It’s a question that’s highly appropriate to think about on Valentine’s Day.
      Esther Perel: The secret to desire in a long-term relationshipEsther Perel: The secret to desire in a long-term relationship
      Perel, the author of the book Mating in Captivity, offers a compelling theory for why desire is so hard to maintain in long-term relationships: on the one hand, a relationship must satisfy our deep-seated need for security, dependability and permanence while at the same time meeting our equally strong need for adventure, mystery and the unexpected. It’s a paradox so many couples feel: that great intimacy does not necessarily make for great sex.

      For a fascinating look at why we’re experiencing this “crisis of desire” (hint: it’s the first time in history when we’ve expected marriage to be about passion) and how we can boost out erotic intelligence within the space of a great relationship, watch this talk. And below, more great TED Talks in the areas of love, passion and sex.

    • A Peek into Your Favorite Apps

      Peek into your favorite BlackBerry 10 apps

      I’m excited about the new BlackBerry 10 devices and I hope you are too. Definitely one of my favorite features and one we’ve highlighted often is the “peek” functionality to view emails, your calendar, or other apps.

      To give you a better idea of how the “peek” functionality of BlackBerry 10 devices can help make it easier for you to get things done, I wanted to share a typical situation we often face: coordinating hangout time with a group of friends.

      Usually you begin by opening your email, or BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) creating a new appointment, returning to the email “home” screen to check your email, clicking through to return to the appointment, finishing creating the appointment, and then sending it to your friends. If you also have to look up their contact information, that’s even another step.

      I’ve found this is all way easier on a BlackBerry 10 device with peek functionality; you have the ability to “peek” back into your calendar while creating the appointment, as well as the ability to “peek” back to your contacts without leaving the appointment screen.

      This is just one example, but I love being able to peek between games, the web browser, email and Maps. It’s all about making life a little easier and letting you keep moving.

      How do you or will you use peek on your BlackBerry Z10 or BlackBerry Q10? Let us know.

    • Instagram says ‘self-help’ best option for woman suing over photos — and it’s right

      A mighty fuss broke out in December when the media accused Instagram of changing its terms of service to claim ownership of users’ pictures. In response, celebrities vowed to quit the popular photo-sharing service and, this being America, people started suing.

      Two months later, what’s the fallout? Well, nothing. Instagram’s new rules went in place in January and the site appears popular as ever (based on my own experience and Facebook’s optimism on a recent earnings call).  Meanwhile, Instagram this week issued a stinging rebuke to Lucy Funes, the California woman who is leading a class action suit against it.

      In a filing to dismiss the suit, Instagram’s lawyers said the case was based on “wrongheaded, even frivolous, legal theories.” The document, reported by Reuters, added that Funes’ alleged injury was “self-inflicted” and pointed to “her failure to take the self-help measure of deleting her account.” (our emphasis)

      The comments are harsh but also fair. Instagram, and every other social media company, is right when it points out that no one is forcing people to use their service and that, if you don’t like their rules, you can just leave. Instagram notes that Funes is still using the service.

      This take-it-or-leave-it approach may be exasperating to consumers who feel powerless as Facebook and others turn them into product pitchmen (Instagram will follow suit soon enough). But for now, the licenses these companies impose ensure the law is on their side and, as long as people don’t pay for sites like Gmail and Twitter, advertising is the only option that will sustain them.

      Unfortunately, companies that do try to be transparent about their advertising intentions are likely to be punished for their efforts. As Verge reporter and former copyright lawyer Nilay Patel explained in December, the controversy over Instagram only creates an incentive for companies to be obtuse or sneaky about their terms of service in the future.

      This doesn’t mean, of course, that everything is okay. Instagram and the other companies do pose serious threats to our privacy, data and dignity. But until there is a system in which consumers have an option to pay these companies to leave us alone (would you pay $5 a month for ad-free Facebook? — I might), this is the world we’re stuck with.

      The Instagram episode ultimately reflects a familiar pattern of hysteria, resignation and forgetting. There will be other examples soon enough.

      Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
      Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

    • Why Nvidia has to wait on the smartphone

      Commenting on his company’s fourth-quarter earnings Wednesday night, Nvidia CEO Jen-Hsun Huang got really excited about tablets. The success of Nvidia’s Tegra line in Android and Windows RT tablets overcame the growing weaknesses of its core PC graphics market, leading Huang to declare that he “believed in tablets wholeheartedly.”

      tegra-3-kaiBut Huang didn’t have the same enthusiasm for smartphones, reflecting the fact that Nvidia has had trouble penetrating that potentially lucrative market despite the attractiveness of the Tegra line. Why? Nvidia offers the two major silicon components necessary to power any smartphone. It has the quad-core Tegra 3 processor itself — which has made it into a handful of high-end smartphones like the HTC One X – and thanks to its acquisition of Icera in 2011, it has the radio modem necessary to connect the phone to the network.

      But what Nvidia doesn’t have is an integrated applications processor and modem, which Huang readily admitted is its key impediment. Here’s an excerpt from Huang’s comments at Nvidia’s earnings call (you can read the full transcript at Seeking Alpha):

      “There is no standalone modem business anymore and in many of these new 4G connected device marketplace, an integrated approach is necessary and that’s the reason why we bought Icera and that’s the reason why we’re investing in LTE.

      “… with an LTE modem, the Tegra processor and our software capability, we will be able to address a much larger phone opportunity going forward. And so we’ll have some phone success this year, but we’re not expecting to have a whole lot of phone design wins until we engage the market with LTE.”

      There are a lot of reasons why phone makers prefer integrated designs. Fewer components mean fewer suppliers and fewer parts to cram into the limited space of a smartphone. Fewer components mean less complexity in design and ultimately a lower cost to manufacture. But one of the biggest reasons 4G smartphone makers have become so keen on integrated chips is because they drain less power than a split-silicon solution. By sharing the same chipset and reducing the overall number of circuits, the design takes much less of a toll on the battery.

      That’s a big concern for smartphone makers as the first generation of LTE handsets proved to be battery killers. Last year before Mobile World Congress, Qualcomm SVP of Product Management Raj Talluri predicted that the power-saving benefits of Qualcomm’s then-new integrated Snapdragon S4 processors would give it a tremendous advantage in the LTE smartphone market. So far his prediction has proven true. Qualcomm has dominated the market.

      Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
      Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.