February 27, 2009

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Get your Twitter name NOW - this may well be the next wave of domain ownership Image by gleonhard via Flickr I sure hope I am not telling you anything really new here, but in any case: to everyone out there - if you have not yet claimed the perfect twitter user name for your venture, company, location, service or blog yet - such as, in my case, twitter.com/gleonhard - you should do so now. Yes, like, right now. It's already happening but I predict that very soon this trend will really explode, and Twitter names will be registered, squatted, bought and sold like domains used to be, not so long ago. I myself own about 10 or so names that I am using or plan to use, such as Dailywisdoms and FutureFeed. Unfortunately I was asleep at the wheel for a while, myself, as far as Twitter is concerned, and missed the unique chance to get about another dozen or so names that I really should own such as 'thefuture' ;) - so much for successfully predicting the future (or, rather, acting on it;) So, get to it! Note: you need a new email address for each twitter account that you want to register.Related articles by Zemanta State of the Twittersphere - Q4 2008 Report (mediafuturist.com) FutureFeed launches on Twitter - follow us! (mediafuturist.com) If you are not ready for Twitter actions just yet... just get my Tweet feed (mediafuturist.com) Music Industry: so now you are on Twitter - so what should you do next? (mediafuturist.com) 7 reasons why everyone in the music industry should try Twitter (mediafuturist.com)
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Facebook's CEO on the ToU debacle: "Governing the Facebook Service in an Open and Transparent Way" - Adios Control! Read Zuck's post: Facebook | Governing the Facebook Service in an Open and Transparent Way. When Facebook changed their Terms of Use last week, making it look a lot more 'controlling', all hell broke loose. Even in Switzerland (where I live), the national TV news reported on the uproar that followed. Everyone hated Facebook's new ToUs and lots of people were considering ditching their accounts. Even though their new ToUs did not surprise me, and I already consider everything I do on Facebook to be kind of 'in public domain' (under the Creative Commons license I use for pretty much anything), I do think that they way they have gone about this left a lot to be desired. Their brilliant and decidedly Web2.0 move was to immediately back-paddle and return to the old ToU - very smart, and something that probably got them extensive media coverage all over the world (hey - there's a lot more room to grow, from their measly 160 Million or so users;). So Zuck wrote in this blog-post: "Our main goal at Facebook is to help make the world more open and transparent. We believe that if we want to lead the world in this direction, then we must set an example by running our service in this way. And... we came to an interesting realization—that the conventional business practices around a Terms of Use document are just too restrictive to achieve these goals. We decided we needed to do things differently and so we're going to develop new policies that will govern our system from the ground up in an open and transparent way. Beginning today, we are giving you a greater opportunity to voice your opinion over how Facebook is governed" Well-done. Sure sounds a lot like Facebook will be more like a...

Gerd Leonhard

Keynote Speaker, Think-Tank Leader, Futurist, Author & Strategist, Idea Curator, some say Iconoclast | Heretic, CEO TheFuturesAgency, Visiting Prof FDC Brazil, Green Futurist

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