Watch out, there’s a (newly updated) Panda about: Google’s latest iteration of its Panda algorithm (4.1) to be more precise. And in under a week of its rollout, it’s already dealt a savage mauling to some forms of online content.
ContinuedPanda 4.1 rolls out: who wins and who loses?
Forgettable content: why editorial clout matters in content marketing
What does the Ello explosion mean for marketers?
Now here’s a phenomenon worthy of a little reflection: Ello, the new advertising-averse social network that sank without trace after its launch in March is suddenly attracting signups faster than the chomp-through rate in a glutton’s doughnut-eating contest. How come?
ContinuedApple and Google ramp up privacy and security protections
It seems that the big players in cyberworld are becoming very twitchy about public perceptions of their somewhat lackadaisical attitude to personal security: last week, Google announced that its new Android “L” OS will feature automatic data encryption built-in just a day after Apple announced that its new iOS 8 shields users data with passwords that Apple can’t decrypt (even if they’re confronted with a court order).
ContinuedMicrosoft is bringing the Universal Hardware Keyboard to mobile
If you’ve got a massive software line but find that its historic success doesn’t fit easily with new mobile trends, what do you do? Answer: make it fit. Well, to be more precise, provide the hardware that’ll make it fit. Like a physical keyboard for mobile devices.
ContinuedAlibaba IPO a record breaker with ominous undertones?
Wall Street has just witnessed the biggest stock market launch in history in the form of the Alibaba IPO. The Chinese internet behemoth (a mixture of Amazon and eBay) raised a record-breaking $25 billion (£15 billion) and saw its share price catapult by more than 38 percent: bankers set the initial price at $68 but by Friday, clamorous investor demand ensured that this zoomed to $92.70. It slipped to just below $90 on Monday, but that was still 35 percent above the initial price.
ContinuedThe key to internet security: law or technology?
On 1st September, we reported that the UK’s most senior judge (Supreme Court President Lord Neuberger) was making dark intimations about a major overhaul of privacy law. He said we needed to keep up with the ever-shifting dynamics of information exchanged on the internet.
ContinuedIn dumping Authorship Google hasn’t dumped author evaluation
Google Authorship is dead. Long live Google Authorship. That may sound like pure flapdoodle, but claims of Authorship’s literal death may be premature.
ContinuedThe revamped Penguin waddles closer
There probably aren’t many webmasters and content creators out there who would regard a new Penguin as a good Christmas present; but the signs are that the nervously anticipated Penguin 3.0 will be with us before Santa boards his sleigh this year.
ContinuedIs the free social media advertising ride approaching its end?
Are the days of organic reach on social media coming to an end? A growing brigade of digital marketers are leaning toward this view, and not without reason.
Continued