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Posts Tagged ‘independent news’

OBSNewsTV.com creates YouTube channel dedicated to helping net surfers and iPhone users read independent news online

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

SACRAMENTO, California – (OBSNews.com)  A startup independent online news company, www.OBSNews.com has created a YouTube.com channel (go to www.OBSNewsTV.com to be directed to the channel) to help promote their brand of independent internet media coverage.  In the grandest traditions of Silicon Valley’s garage start-ups the company was the brainchild of two internet entrepreneurs Manny Fernandez and Patrick McGilvray, J.D. 

The company was created in the Fall of 2007 to help gain media attention for McGilvray’s family’s lawsuit against a large concrete company who had dumped hundreds of tons of concrete rubble and rebar on the family’s land (see www.obsnews.com/hanson.htm).  The site soon mushroomed into a news destination.

Recently the OBSNews team covered the California Democratic Party statewide convention held in San Jose at which the supporters of presidential hopefuls Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton pled their cases for the cameras with passion.

Most Internet Users are Unaware of Their Data Online.

Saturday, December 22nd, 2007

Forty-seven percent of internet users have searched for their own name online but few monitor their online presence with great regularity.

Fifty-three percent of internet users have searched online for information about personal and business contacts.

These findings represent a significant change from when the Pew Internet Project first reported on this activity in 2002, at which time 22% of internet users had searched online for their own name.

More powerful search engines have made it easier to find a match for a personal name search and the “participatory Web” has made it more interesting.

The explosion of blogs, YouTube, Flickr, and online profiles have increased the size of people’s digital footprints, but few adult internet users have made digital identity management a routine part of their online lives. Indeed, just looking at those who use social networking sites, a higher percentage of teens than adults are restricting access to their profiles.

“The cumulative traces of our online activity are more visible in the age of Web 2.0,” says Mary Madden, a co-author of the report. “The more content we voluntarily contribute to the public or semi-public corners of the Web, the more we become not only findable, but knowable.”

These are among the findings of the Pew Internet & American Life Project’s latest report on the internet’s impact on society, “Digital Footprints: Online identity management and search in the age of transparency.” The report is based on a December 2006 national telephone survey of 2,373 adults, of whom 1,623 are internet users. The margin of error for the portion of the survey dealing with internet users is plus or minus 3 percentage points.

Most internet users are unconcerned about the extent of the data available about them online:

  • 60% of internet users say they are not worried about how much information is available about them online.
  • 38% of internet users say they have taken steps to limit the amount of online information that is available about them.

But it could be that they are simply unaware:

  • Roughly one third of internet users say the following pieces of information are available online: their email address, home address, home phone number or their employer.
  • One quarter of internet users say a photo, names of groups they belong to, or things they have written that have their name on it appear online.
  • Few internet users say their political affiliation, cell phone number, or video appear online.

In interviews with the Pew Internet Project, privacy advocates and professional researchers argued that many of these data points are indeed available about most people, either on the open Web or in select online databases.

When asked about eight different groups of people one might search for online—ranging from family and friends to romantic interests and business colleagues—53% of adult internet users said they had looked for information connected to at least one of these groups.

These searches for others are often focused on basic contact information, but can be wide-ranging:

  • 72% of people searchers have sought contact information online.
  • 37% of people searchers look to the Web for information about someone’s professional accomplishments or interests.
  • 33% of people searchers have sought out someone’s profile on a social and professional networking site.
  • 31% have searched for someone’s photo.
  • 31% have searched for someone else’s public records, such as real estate transactions, divorce proceedings, bankruptcies, or other legal actions.
  • 28% have searched for someone’s personal background information.

“Nostalgia seems to motivate quite a few internet users. The most popular search target is someone from the past – an old friend, an old flame, or a former colleague,” said Susannah Fox, a co-author of the report. “These findings provide powerful evidence of the internet’s capacity to reunite and reignite social connections.

One-third of internet users say they have searched for information about someone with whom they have lost touch. And one in five internet users say someone has reached out to reconnect with them after finding their contact information online.”



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