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I don’t speak about it much

August 28, 2002 by Michael Boyle

I don’t speak about it much

, but since I was laid off from my dot-com job in January 2001 I have worked for a Large Global Corporation as a sort of internal e-business consultant. Well, not a sort of – that’s what I do.

Anyhow, having never worked for a Large Corporation, I never realized how secretive people – companies – think they can be, and worse, think they must try to be about things. Doc Searls looked into this today and did a pretty good job of it. I tell my boss all the time: if someone can duplicate what we intend to do after hearing just a bare-bones description, we have bigger problems than secrecy. Not exactly Doc’s point, but up the same alley.

Furthermore, if we think that our competition wouldn’t come up with the very same ideas we have if they were in our place, we’re almost certainly drastically underestimating them, which suggests that we’re probably already in big trouble. Secrecy has its moments – but these are limited and rare.

Tags: Business

OK Check this out

August 9, 2002 by Michael Boyle

OK Check this out

: The recent decision on Internet radio royalty rates already makes the required payments high enough to put most such stations out of business, and completely out of whack with the rates that broadcast radio stations have to pay. Nonetheless, the RIAA Announces Intent To Appeal Internet Radio Royalty Rates. Dead isn’t enough. The RIAA wants them dead AND disemboweled.

Tags: Broadcast, Business, Internet

Corpo-Blogging

May 9, 2002 by Michael Boyle

Corpo-Blogging

in Wired News: Flash: Blogging Goes Corporate. It’s a reasonably interesting article but it’s not without problems. The whole thing describing why they put the sites on third-party domains is just weird, and really undercuts the whole effort, in a way. The Wired News writer gives them a pass on this, and goes even further:

Hale added: “Would it have been a true blog if we put it on Macromedia.com? Not really.”
Indeed, it was important to Macromedia that its blogs seemed true, that readers perceived them as the thoughts of very helpful community managers instead of corporate shills. If the effort felt disingenuous, like the company was merely jumping on the blogwagon, it could have backfired.

Not putting the sites on Macromedia.com just underlines that they think of the site as a very limited (and unitary) thing, notwithstanding the hugeness of it. It’s weird for a company that’s supposed to be all about creativity to not be creative enough to envision a macromedia.com that was both credible and had small weblog-esque sections. More likely they’re hedging their bets, giving themselves the opportunity to pull the plug quietly later if needed.

Plus, I think it does reek of astroturfing. Putting a blog on Macromedia.com would have been big news. This isn’t corporate blogging. It’s not corporate blogging until they are open to the idea of mingling official corporate messages with more informal information all on one site.

Tags: Blogging, Business, Wired

As has been widely reported

May 2, 2002 by Michael Boyle

As has been widely reported

, the publishers of DallasNews.com seem to need a smack with the clue-stick. Check out 4B: “If you operate a Web site and wish to link to this Site, you may link only to the home page of the Site and not to any other page or subdomain of us.”

Uh, sorry, but which page I link to on the open internet is my business, not yours. If you don’t want links to your content, don’t put it on the internet. And if you can’t figure out a way to make money off putting material on the open internet, that’s your problem. Deal with it.

Tags: Business, Internet, Links, Opera, Web

Via Doc Searls:

April 12, 2002 by Michael Boyle

Via Doc Searls:

Shell gets a clue. Doc links to an article by David Weinberger about Royal Dutch/Shell’s online forum. Unlike most representatives of the genre, it isn’t a tightly controlled and highly sanitized bit of fluff but a really open forum for comment and criticism. Importantly, it’s not just a handful of Shell employees who are authorized to respond either – anyone can add their commentary in response to posts. Even when they accuse Shell of murdering people.

Tags: Business, Community, Doc Searls

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