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Traditional Media Uses Bullying Legal Tactics: Scrabble vs. Scrabulous and Hulu vs. Redlasso
By: Jerry Weinstein
(08/13/2008)
In 2005 Rajat and Jayant Agarwalla created Scrabulous; by 2007 it went nuclear as a Facebook app. The social networking aspect of Facebook brought it a half-million daily players, giving users the ability to joust with friends and family across the world. While it is undeniable that Scrabulous has the "look and feel" of Hasbro Corp's Scrabble, let's look at that game through the lens of copyright law. What was first conceived in 1938 by an architect became ubiquitous: One in three U.S. homes has a Scrabble set.
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FCC Anti-Comcast Decision is Pro-Business, Pro-Competition and Pro-Growth
By: Jerry Weinstein
(08/06/2008)
Last Friday the Federal Communications Commission bared its teeth. In a 3-2 decision led by Chairman Kevin Martin, and joined by his Democrats colleagues across the aisle, Commissioners Jonathan Adelstein and Michael Copps, the agency ruled against Comcast, finding that the nation's largest cable company had practiced discriminatory network practices – throttling file-sharing traffic – and did so with a lack of disclosure.
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Apple iPhone Ignites Mobile Marketing with Music, Gaming and Virtual World Apps
By: Jerry Weinstein
(07/23/2008)
To cut through the hype and hero worship surrounding the release on July 11 of the Apple iPhone 2.0 3G, JackMyers Media Business Report decided to take the pulse across the industry, speaking with players across the gaming and virtual world landscape as well as those creating solutions for mobile technology. Before a moratorium on all things iPhone is declared, there's more than anecdotal evidence that Apple's App Store is a gamechanger. Internet radio pioneer Pandora, for example, released an app that works seamlessly on the smartphone.
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Social Media Is The Future of Politics . . . and Independence!
By: Jerry Weinstein
(07/02/2008)
Lessons from Personal Democracy Forum, The "Davos of Technology": While the RIAA and MPAA have been frequent whipping boys in any debate on the failure of Big Media to embrace change in a timely fashion, they are positively visionary standing next to government. But that's changing. Just as media has grappled with, and now leverages, user-generated content (UGC), politics is experiencing its first brush with viewer-generated-activism (VGA).
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What Do Advertisers Want? "Spot Runner" Knows.
By: Jerry Weinstein
(06/25/2008)
Despite time-shifting and viewer erosion, television remains a $70B market, our most powerful advertising medium. That said, the steady trickle of ad dollars flowing from TV (and newspapers) to the Internet continues apace due to that platform's precision analytics and accountability.
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First Look at Peter Gabriel's The Filter: A Discovery Engine for All Things
By: Jerry Weinstein
(06/18/2008)
The Filter is the next step in Social Media. When The Filter went beta this past April, it received gushing press, based not only on Peter Gabriel's über-celebrity, but his successful track record in multimedia (CD-ROMs Xplora and Eve; On Demand Distribution).One week after its public launch, JackMyers Media Business Report exclusively spoke with CEO David Maher Roberts.
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