Posted on November 24 2009 by admin
[Germany] Several federal and regional government officials in Germany are trying… See the rest here: Using Google Analytics Is Illegal, German Government Officials … Share this on del.icio.us Digg this! Share this on Reddit Buzz up! Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Share this on Technorati Share this on Facebook Tweet This! Subscribe [...]
Posted on November 24 2009 by admin
[Germany] Several federal and regional government officials in Germany are trying to put a ban on Google Analytics , the search giant’s free software … View original post here: Achtung! Google Analytics is illegal, say German government officials Share this on del.icio.us Digg this! Share this on Reddit Buzz up! Stumble upon something good? Share [...]
Posted on November 23 2009 by admin
Google Analytics for Government Cities could make the success of governance measurable and known. Rather than waiting for the next election to recognize and. Read the rest here: Ideas for Cities: Google Analytics for Government | GOOD Share this on del.icio.us Digg this! Share this on Reddit Buzz up! Stumble upon something good? Share it [...]
Posted on August 2 2009 by admin
by Jonah Stein and Jonathan Hochman The FTC recently announced guidelines for bloggers that requires that they disclose financial interests, freebies and paid reviews. This decision is seen as a shot across the bow of pay per post networks and bloggers who are monetizing through affiliate programs. The FTC has decided that compensation is the [...]
Posted on August 2 2009 by admin
Obama has been known to use domain names to go after emotionally charged empty words that are easy to support (like change), but now the government is going after commercial keywords like cars. Cars.gov was launched on June 30th and is already ranking #3 in Google for cars! What does it do to the value [...]
Posted on August 2 2009 by admin
The AP reported that the FTC is planning on going after bloggers that make fake endorsements or get paid in products for coverage without disclosing it: “New guidelines, expected to be approved late this summer with possible modifications, would clarify that the agency can go after bloggers–as well as the companies that compensate them–for any [...]