Posts Tagged ‘google

For about a year ago we’ve been exited by how fast Magento was growing and how many people were looking for Magento online.

To make a long story short, last March we’ve used Google Trends to compare what open source shopping carts were the most popular with net surfers. It turned out that Magento was getting more and more searches while osCommerce, Zen Cart and CRE Loaded have been enjoying the same level of success or even losing their power.

March 2009

magento-by-google-trends (2009)

A year has passed from the day of our research, so let’s see if something has changed since then.

March 2010

magento - google trends (2010)

Wow, the results are shocking! Magento continues its growth and osCommerce gets fewer searches every months.

Does it mean Magento becomes even more popular than osCommerce? It seems so.

Does it mean you should take a closer look at Magento if you haven’t done it before? Yes, definitely!

2010 has not been a kind year so far to Yelp. The popular customer reviews website is now facing not one, not two, but three separate lawsuits which essentially allege that the company has built a business by extorting local businesses.

They claim that, in an effort to turn listed businesses into paying advertisers, Yelp salespeople have offered to remove bad reviews, and that they’ve also removed good reviews when businesses turn down advertising solicitations. Not surprisingly, Yelp has vigorously denied the charges leveled against it. And it’s not waiting for a court date to make the case that it’s innocent.

Yelp’s CEO, Jeremy Stoppelman, has published several posts on the Yelp blog answering some of the lawsuit claims, and now Yelp has hired a production studio to produce a ~3 minute video explaining how Yelp works, and in particular, how it filters the reviews that are submitted by its users.

The video explains that reviews are filtered, the reviews that are displayed on a business’ Yelp page are constantly changing based on a variety of variables (such as user trustworthiness) even though they’re always available on the reviewer’s Yelp profile, and that the innermost workings of the Yelp filter can’t be publicly detailed because, as with, say, Google, doing so would simply make it easier for shills and scammers to game the system.

It’s easy to sympathize with Yelp when it comes to the difficulty in explaining the technology of filtering. It’s unclear how many of the plaintiffs suing Yelp (and their attorneys) truly understand that Yelp has a filtering system in place and that the reviews displayed on their businesses’ Yelp pages are not static. It’s certainly plausible that some of the plaintiffs alleging that positive reviews were removed after they refused to purchase advertising were removed as part of Yelp’s normally filtering but simply made the obvious assumption that the removals were some form of retaliation.

Unfortunately for Yelp, it can fight lawsuits in the court of public opinion, but it can’t win them there. The allegations that have been made against Yelp are serious, and they involve more than just Yelp’s filtering. Yelp, for instance, will be forced to defend its sales practices, which also factor heavily in the complaints.

What I think is most interesting about Yelp going on the offense to defend itself is that it should have gone on the offense a lot sooner. More than a few business owners have complained about Yelp over the years, and there has been talk of lawsuits before. Frankly, it’s somewhat surprising that it took so long for lawsuits to be filed. Yelp may not have been able to avoid them, but in my opinion, it would have done itself a favor by making a better effort to explain its filtering system earlier, considering making changes to how reviews are displayed to eliminate the appearance that reviews just disappear, and reevaluating when and how its salespeople approach business owners.

Notwithstanding all of these things, I also think it’s worth considering the primary challenge that Yelp faces as a standalone customer reviews website: the businesses it is trying to sell advertising to are the same businesses Yelp users may be fairly or unfairly criticizing. That puts Yelp in a sticky situation; at the same moment, its own business interests could be opposed to the interests of the businesses it courts as advertisers and the users who trust it to remain impartial.

If Yelp learns anything from these lawsuits, it may be that building a popular customer reviews website is easy, but turning it into a long-term business is a lot harder.

Photo credit: InternetDefamationBlog.

Google Analytics is one of the most popular analytics services for online publishers, especially smaller publishers. And for good reason: it has most of what the average publisher needs, and it’s free.

But Google Analytics is offered, of course, by Google, and Google is no stranger to privacy complaints. That means that Google often has to look for ways to prove to the world that it cares about privacy. One way it’s planning to ‘protect’ user privacy: allowing internet users to opt out of being tracked by Google Analytics.

In a post on the Google Analytics blog, Google Analytics product manager Amy Chang explains that Google has been exploring the best method for making this happen, and details the solution:

We concluded that the best approach would be to develop a global browser based
plug-in to allow users to opt out of being tracked by Google Analytics. Our
engineers are now hard at work finalizing and testing this opt-out
functionality.

According to Chang, the plugin will be available to the public in the “coming weeks“.

A browser-based plugin makes sense from a technical perspective. Allowing users to opt out of Google Analytics tracking with a cookie, for instance, would not be so effective since cookies get deleted all the time. A user with an opt-out cookie who deletes his browser cookies on a regular basis would be forced to repeatedly opt out. Other analytics providers, such as Coremetrics and Omniture, offer this sort of cookie-based opt-opt mechanism.

Unfortunately for publishers using Google Analytics, Google’s solution will mean that users who really want to opt out of Google Analytics tracking will be able to do so easily. And once they’re opted out, they’ll ostensibly remain opted out unless they have a change of heart and decide to uninstall the plugin. Needless to say, publishers using Google Analytics will probably not be thrilled at the prospect that certain data won’t be collected from a potentially larger number of users. After all, when it comes to web analytics, more is better for most publishers.

The good news is that the number of users who will know about the plugin and actually install it is probably minimal. But this does highlight the fact that relying on Google can come with some drawbacks because of the scrutiny Google’s privacy practices receive.

Photo credit: alancleaver_2000 via Flickr.


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This blog delivers stylish and dynamic news for designers and web-developers on all subjects of design, ranging from: CSS, Ajax, Javascript, web design, graphics, typography, advertising & much more. Our goal is to help you communicate effectively on the web with an engaging website or functional interface.

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