Tag Archive for Facebook

Facebook Tried to Buy Twitter

Facebook Tried to Buy Twitter

-Updated 02-12-2011- The Wall Street Journal is reporting that in recent weeks executives from both Facebook Inc. and Google Inc., (GOOG) have been talking about the acquisition of Twitter.  According to the WSJ, the potential suitors have placed an estimated valuation on Twitter of $8 billion to $10 billion.  In case you weren’t paying attention, that is a 3x increase in three months since December 2010 when it was Twitter was valued at $3.7 billion.

Imagine the Bizarro World where social networkers Facebook and Twitter hooked up. In a recent Financial Times interview with Twitter co-founder Biz Stone, he revealed that in 2008, Facebook tried to buy Twitter for $500 million in Facebook stock.

Facebook saw the potential in Twitter but the Twitter big-wigs declined. Mr. Stone told the FT that Twitter wanted to become not just a popular site but a viable business, and not be taken over by another company. “We’ve created something that people are finding value in,” he told the FT. “But we haven’t yet created a business out of this, and we really wanted to do that.”

It is possible that if Facebook had bought Twitter it would have died. As a part of Facebook, Twitter would have been restricted to only one set of users and is unlikely to have gone through its huge period of rapid growth. Its main financial power has been in business and less in social networking according to the FT.

Twitter had 175 million registered users as of November 1, 2010, who sent about 95 million messages a day or 25 billion “tweets” last year. Twitter has pursued rapid growth over profits, but since last spring, it has brought in advertising revenues through paid for “promoted tweets.” In mid-December, Twitter said it had received a major infusion of funds from a group of investors, which reportedly put a $3.7 billion value on the site.

rb-

Well, a valuation of  $3.7 billion or $500 million in Facebook vapor stock seems the Twitter boys did OK for themselves.

Is Twitter worth $3.7 billion? Does it have a business model to support $3.7 billion?

Is Facebook worth $50 billion?

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Social Media Bubble

Social Media BubbleThere is growing speculation that a backlash against social networking is brewing. At CustomerThink.com there was a recent article When the social media bubble burst which points out that “We rarely see people as enthused as they are over social media. Among those recent rare times are: when the high-tech balloon popped; at the height of the housing bubble; just before the market crashed; and when Sarah Palin was nominated for VP. Hey, exuberance can be headiest just before the fall.”

Socail media

The author, Axel Schultze, CEO of the social business application development firm Xeesm says YES. Schultze believes that the social media bubble is about to burst. Schultze, the founder of the Social Media Academy, said in the article that people are starting the usefulness of social media, “People are recognizing already that the endless hours of watching the incoming streams from Twitter and Facebook or all the status updates on LinkedIn are hours wasted. All the paid tweets and people or agencies, who have been hired to tweet are not going to contribute to the bottom line. And the fan pages people build to get “fans, followers, connections” just hope that it will do something for the business – but it won’t.”

Schultze concludes that the social networking bubble will burst because, “Socializing is work, it takes time and focus, discipline and a clear understanding what to do and what not to do. And as 80% of humans continue to look for getting the job done automatically and get rich instantly, they will leave the social web because they just learned again and again – there is no free lunch.”

rb-

In the article, Schultze reiterates the fundamental change factor of the Internet, “from anywhere at any time”, when he says that the biggest benefit of social media is to do “more business with more people in a grander geography and in less time than ever before.” Schultze continues that the benefits of social media come at a price, “…the price you pay is to be more open, more social, more connected, more interactive, more helpful and more conversational than ever before.” Making organizations more open, more social, more connected, interactive, and helpful is hard work which means that many organizations will fail and the social networking bubble will burst.

Related articles

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Social Networks Are Risky

Social Networks Are RiskyAccording to the Czech security firm TrustPort, social networking’s popularity and ease of use can cause users to forget its risks.  These risks include the loss of private personal data and malware infection.  Even though social networking is new, a recent IBM (IBM) X-Force report says the threats are not.  According to IBM, traditional threats like phishing, malware, 419 fraud schemes, identity theft, data harvesting, and botnets now use social networks as attack vectors.

FacebookMany social networking users fall victim to attackers offering new apps or features for joining the group.  Net Security.org cites the Facebook Stalker Catcher as an example of such a scam.  Even though this malicious app appeared in 2009, Facebook users still fall victim to it.  To start a Stalker Catcher attack, Net Security.org says users are lured to the group on the pretext that they will see exactly who and when is visiting their personal profile.  The alleged instructions for feature activation result in nothing more and nothing less than sending group invitations to all contacts of the victim.

Sunbelt Software reports that the latest scam targeting Facebook users specifically targets kids.  The scam promises a free proxy service for those who want to bypass parental controls and blocks set up by schools.  The scam tempts the victims to try the service at hxxp://myfatherisonline.com to access Facebook in school.  Of course, when the victims visit the website, they can’t find the advertised service.  The researchers instead found a plethora of scam attempts.  The victims are faced with an affiliate site containing malware, surveys, quizzes, and offers for free iPhones that will try to get them to subscribe to a premium rate service or sign up for spam.

The number of users who voluntarily join fraudulent groups and send invitations to all their contacts is strikingly high.  In the Net Security.org article, IBM says the informal feel of social networks is the real risk.

We’re all friends here,” you’re thinking to yourself, and you’re mind chooses to ignore the things that would usually set off alarm bells in your head. Who knows – maybe it’s our inherent sense of safety that we get when surrounded by lot of people? Safety in numbers, so to speak. In any case, most of us are just less careful.

SPAM

These same users then access Facebook at work, exposing their employers to more risks.  The anti-malware firm Sophos recently found that reports (PDF) by companies of spam and malware derived from social networks were up 70 percent from a year earlier and concludes that “Because of this, social networks have become one of the most significant vectors for data loss and identity theft.”

Due to this carelessness, the criminals behind the scams quickly gain large databases of contacts.  These databases are later sold to other cybercriminals and used for sending spam or for further phishing scams.  Some fraudulent groups explicitly invite users to install a particular application, which is even more dangerous.  According to the article, the risk of malware infection should never be underestimated.

rb-

So the important message here is:

  1. Keep your computer up to date
  2. Use regularly updated antivirus and antispyware software
  3. Verify what you are doing before you do it
  4. If it is too good to be true, it probably is

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005.  You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter.  Email the Bach Seat here.

HTTPS Everywhere Updated

The Electronic Freedom Frontier (EFF) has updated its HTTPS Everywhere security tool to enhance protection for Firefox browser users against webpage security flaws. The new version of HTTPS Everywhere is a response to growing concerns about website vulnerability in the aftermath of the October 2010 release of Firesheep.

MalwareFiresheep is an attack tool that could enable an eavesdropper on a network to take over another user’s web accounts on social networking sites like Facebook or webmail systems such as HotMail if the browser’s connection to the web application either does not use cryptography or does not use it thoroughly enough.

Since the first release of HTTPS Everywhere the Firefox plugin has been downloaded more than half a million times.

Other sites targeted by Firesheep that now receive protection from HTTPS Everywhere include

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Server Counts Climbing

Server Counts ClimbingData Center Knowledge has updated its list of companies with the most servers (at least the ones that release the information). I wrote about this server list last year and some of the changes from last year include adding Intel (INTC) and Facebook to the list, SoftLayer’s acquisition of The Planet, and increases in server fleets.

Server Growth

FirmServers (2009)Servers (2010)% change
Intel--100,000NA
OVH55,00080,00045
SoftLayer21,00076,000262
Akamai Technologies48,00073,00052
1&1 Internet55,00070,00027
Rackspace50,03863,99628
Facebook--60,000NA
iWeb10,00035,000250

Some notable companies that have not changed since 2009 include:

* SBC Communications
* Verizon
* Time Warner
* AT&T
* Peer1/ServerBeach.

rb-

One thing that many of these companies have in common is that they are cloud companies or companies that enable cloud computing. The research firm IDC reported in 2009 that only 14.3% (2.2 Exabytes) of the 15.4 Exabytes of enterprise storage capacity resides in the public cloud. IDC believes this number will grow to 27.6% by 2013.

If IDC is right,  over the next 3-4 years, server fleets will continue to grow.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.