Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Facebook may add end-to-end encryption to Messenger, report says

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Facebook Messenger may follow WhatsApp in implementing stronger encryption, according to a new report. 


The social network could add end-to-end encryption to its Messenger app later this year, even though it may come at the expense of some of Facebook's artificial intelligence features, The Guardian reports



The new encryption measures, which would make messages sent through Messenger more secure, will reportedly roll out as an "optional" encrypted mode that users would need to opt into in order to enable it. If true, that would differ from the encryption recently implemented by Facebook-owned WhatsApp, which turned on end-to-end encryption by default on all its apps last month Read more...


More about Social Media, Security, Encryption, Facebook Messenger, and Facebook


Monday, May 30, 2016

Facebook's director of product design on why websites may be a dying business

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It feels like we were facing the end of print only years ago, but the time may be ripe to begin lamenting the end of the website.


After the dominance of URLs, we're entering the platform era where more design diversity online is not necessarily better, Jon Lax, director of product design at Facebook, suggested at the design event Semi Permanent in Sydney Friday.


SEE ALSO: How Uber is designing an app that works in more than 400 cities


Increasingly, companies, news outlets and many others are providing their services by building in and on top of outside mobile platforms and operating systems that dictate how they should look. Mashable Australia sat down with Lax after the event to discuss how he sees the future of digital design in an era where Facebook and others act as aesthetic gatekeepers. Read more...


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5 Tips for Better Facebook Live Broadcasts

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Thinking of going live on Facebook? Wondering how to get the most out of your Facebook Live broadcast? With Facebook Live, you can show your expertise in real time, take people behind the scenes, and much more. In this article, you'll discover five tips to succeed with your next Facebook Live broadcast. #1: Promote Before [...]


This post 5 Tips for Better Facebook Live Broadcasts first appeared on .

- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

Will Intelligent Personal Assistants Replace Websites?

Posted by Tom-Anthony

[Estimated read time: 8 minutes]


Intelligent Personal Assistants (IPAs) are capable of radically disrupting the way we search for and consume information on the Internet. The convergence of several trends and technologies has resulted in a new interface through which people will be able to interact with your business. This will have a dramatic impact - if your long-term marketing/business plan doesn't account for IPAs, you may be in the same boat as those people who said they didn't need a website in the early 2000s.


Your website is an API to your business


If we look to pre/early Internet, then the primary interface to most businesses was the humble phone. Over the phone you could speak to a business and find out what they had in stock, when they'd be open, whether they had space for your reservation, etc., and then you could go on to order products, ask for directions, or place reservations. The phone was an interface to your business, and your phone line and receptionist were your "API" - the way people interacted with your business.




As the Internet matured and the web gained more traction, it increasingly became the case that your website empowered users to do lots of those same things that they previously did via the phone. They could get information and give you money, and your website became the new "API" for your business, allowing users to interact with it. Notice this didn't necessitate the death of the phone, but lots of the requests that previously came via phone now came via the web, and there was also a reduction in friction for people wanting to interact with your business (they didn't have to wait for the phone line to be free, or speak to an actual human!).


Since then, the web has improved as technologies and availability have improved, but fundamentally the concept has stayed the same. Until now.


The 5 tech giants have all built an intelligent personal assistant


The 5 tech giants have all built an Intelligent Personal Assistant


Intelligent Personal Assistants apps such as Google Now, Siri, Cortana, and Facebook M - as well as the newer appliances such as Amazon Echo, the new Google Home, and the rumored Apple Siri hardware - are going to have a profound effect on the way people search, the types of search they do, and the way they consume and act upon the results of those searches.


New entries, such as Hound and Viv, show that intelligent personal assistants are growing beyond just something phone makers are adding as a feature, and are becoming a core focus.


In the last couple of years we've discussed a variety of new technologies and their impact on search; a number of these are all feeding into the rise of these personal assistants.


Trend 1: More complex searches


The days of searches just being a keyword are long since over. The great improvements of natural language processing, driven by improvements in machine learning, have meant that conversational search has become a thing and we have seen Hummingbird and RankBrain becoming building blocks of how Google understands and handles queries.


Furthermore, implicit signals have also seen the rise of anticipatory queries with Google Now leading the way in delivering you search results based off of your context without you needing to ask.


Contributing technologies & trends:



  • Implicit Signals

  • Natural Language

  • Conversational Search

  • Hummingbird & RankBrain


Watch this video of Will Critchlow speak about these trends to hear more.


Trend 2: More complex results


Search results have moved on from 10 blue links to include the Knowledge Graph, with entities and direct answers being a familiar part of any search result. This has also meant that, since the original Siri, we've seen a search interface that doesn't even do a web search for many queries but instead gives data-driven answers right there in the app. The earliest examples were queries for things like weather, which would turn up a card right there in the app.


Finally, the rise of conversational search has made possible complex compound queries, where queries can be revised and extended to allow the sorting, filtering, and refining of searches in a back and forth fashion. This phase of searching used to be something you did by reviewing the search results manually and sifting through them, but now search engines understand (rather than just index) the content they discover and can do this step for you.


Contributing technologies & trends:



  • Entities / Direct Answers

  • Faceted search

  • Data driven answers


You may like Distilled's Searchscape which has information and videos on these various trends.


Trend 3: Bots, conversational UI, and on-demand UIs



More recently, with the increased interest in bots (especially since Facebook's F8 announcement), we can see a rise in the number of companies investing in various forms of conversational UI (see this article and this one).


Bots and conversational UI provide a new interface which lends itself to all of the benefits provided by natural language processing and ways of presenting data-driven answers.


Note that a conversational UI isn't limited to purely a spoken or natural language interface, but can also provide an "on demand" UI for certain situations (see this example screenshot from Facebook, or the Siri/Fandango cinema ticket example below).


Contributing technologies & trends:



  • Conversational UI

  • Bots

  • On-demand UIs within the IPA interface


Trend 4: 3rd-party integration


Going back to the first versions of Siri or Google Now, there were no options for 3rd-party developers to integrate. They could only do a limited set of actions based on what Apple or Google had explicitly programmed in.


However, over time, the platforms have opened up more and more, such that apps can now provide functionality within the intelligent personal assistant on the same app.


Google Now, Amazon Echo, Cortana, and Siri (not quite - but rumored to be coming in June) all provide SDKs (software development kits), allowing 3rd-party developers to integrate into these platforms.


This is an opportunity for all of us integrate directly into the next generation search interface.


What's the impact of all this?


More searches as friction reduces


Google published an (under-reported) paper on some of the research and work that went into Google Now, which when combined with their daily information needs study indicates how hard they're trying to encourage and enable users to do searches that previously have not been possible.


The ability of intelligent personal assistants to fulfil more complex search queries (and of "always listening" search appliances like Amazon Echo and Google Home) to remove the friction of doing searches that were previously "too much work" means we'll see a rise in search queries that simply wouldn't have happened previously. So rather than cannibalizing web-based searches that came before, a large segment of the queries to IPAs will be wholly new types of searches.


Web rankings get bypassed, go straight to the top


As more and more people search via personal assistants, and with personal assistants trying to deliver answers directly in their interface, we'll see an increasing number of searches that completely bypass web search rankings. As 3rd-party integration becomes more widespread, there will be an increasing number of dynamic queries that personal assistants can handle directly (e.g. "where can I buy The Martian?," "flights to Berlin," or "order a pepperoni pizza").


This is a massive opportunity - it does not matter how many links and how much great content your competitor has to help them in "classical SEO" if you've integrated straight into the search interface and no web search is ever shown to the user. You can be the only search result shown.


The classic funnel gets compressed; checking out via IPAs


This part is probably the most exciting, from my perspective, and I believe is the most important from the impact it'll have on users and businesses. People have modeled "the funnel" in a variety of different ways over time, but one common way to look at it is:




The search is separate to the browsing/checkout process, and that checkout process happens via a website. Apps have had some impact on this classic picture, but so far it hasn't been a big part.


However, conversational search/UI combined with the ability for developers to integrate directly into IPAs opens up a huge opportunity to merge the interfaces for the search step and the steps previously fulfilled by the website (browsing and checking out). There are already examples of the funnel being compressed:




In this example, using Siri, you can see I was able to search for movies playing nearby, pick a particular movie and cinema, then pick a particular showing and, finally, I can click to buy, which takes me to the Fandango app. I am most of the way through the checkout process before I leave the intelligent personal assistant app interface. How long until I can do that final step and actually check out inside the personal assistant?


Integrating with intelligent personal assistant apps currently normally happens via the app model (i.e. you build an app that provides some functionality to the assistant), but how long until we see the possibility to integrate without needing to build an app yourself - the intelligent personal assistant will provide the framework and primary interface.


Summary


Intelligent Personal Assistants bring together all the recent developments in search technology, and as integration options improve, we will see an increasing number of queries/transactions go end-to-end entirely inside the personal assistant itself.


People will conduct searches, review data, and make purchases entirely inside that one interface, completely bypassing web search (already happening) and even checking out inside the personal assistant (within the next 12 months) and thus bypassing websites.


IPAs represent an absolutely massive opportunity, and it would be easy to underestimate the impact they will have (in the same way many people underestimated mobile initially). If you've been on the fence about building an app, you should re-evaluate that decision, with a focus on apps being the way they can integrate into intelligent personal assistants.


What do you think? I'd love to have a discussion in the comments about how everyone thinks this will play out and how it might change the landscape of search.


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

Study helps explain why some new moms post nonstop on Facebook

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Several years ago, Sarah Schoppe-Sullivan noticed something curious as she scrolled through Facebook: Many of her female friends used an image of their child as a personal profile photo. Even Schoppe-Sullivan made the switch without fully realizing the implications.  


"It just kind of dawned on me at one point, 'Hey that's your identity, that's a really profound statement,'" she told Mashable. "It's saying, 'This is who I am right now.'" 



Of course, plenty of new moms see Facebook as simply a way of sharing joyous baby-related updates with family and friends.  Read more...


More about Social Media, Facebook, Babies, Children, and Family Parenting


Sunday, May 29, 2016

What's the best YA series of all time? Round 3 of #OneTrueYA bracket

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Our search for the Internet's favorite YA series continues, and the competition is as fierce as any YA Chosen One hero could be.


Round Three has begun, which will not only decide which four series move on to the semi-finals, but will also decide the winners in our four genre categories: Dystopian, Fantasy, Contemporary, and Supernatural. Is your favorite still in the running?



See the winners of Round Two!

Image: Vicky Leta

Fans across the Internet (and the world) have made their choices known, and the competition is getting more and more difficult.






Round Two is over (click here if you want to see more details about Round One's poll results), but Round Three has just begun! Vote on the match-ups below or on our Twitter account, and check back on May 31st for the Round Three winners! And keep tweeting using #OneTrueYA to tell us who you think should win. Read more...


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Saturday, May 28, 2016

EP46: 3 Facebook Changes Marketers Need to Know

Join the experts as they discuss 3 recent Facebook changes, what you need to know about them, and how you can use them in your business properly.

If you're running Facebook ads, you need this information to get ahead of the game.

 

IN THIS EPISODE YOU'LL LEARN:

  • How the new daily budget will allow Facebook to better optimize your ads.
  • How the 6th custom audience option will give you more insight into the customer journey, and will allow you to further segment people (<< There's so many ways to utilize this feature!).
  • The new framework for objectives that will allow you to dial in your advertising more effectively.

 

LINKS AND RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:

Episode 01: The Future of Paid Traffic

Episode 02: Acquiring Customers One Pixel At A Time

Episode 03: Facebook Video Ad Game Plan

Episode 39: 5 Cutting Edge Facebook Ad Updates

Episode 43: Ryan Deiss Shares 4 Steps to Crafting and Optimizing the Perfect Offer

 

Press and hold link to visit the page

Show Page Notes

 

Thanks for listening!

Thanks so much for joining us this week. Have some feedback you'd like to share? Leave a note in the comment section below.

Facebook Live Rolls Out Continuous Streaming: This Week in Social Media

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Welcome to our weekly edition of what's hot in social media news. To help you stay up to date with social media, here are some of the news items that caught our attention. What's New This Week Facebook Enables Continuous Live Video Support and Geogating: “Facebook will now allow non-stop, long-form broadcasting.” TechCrunch reports that the [...]


This post Facebook Live Rolls Out Continuous Streaming: This Week in Social Media first appeared on .

- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

Friday, May 27, 2016

Twitter begins to relax its 140-character limit, users rejoice... and complain

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Twitter users will soon be able to squeeze a few extra characters into some of their tweets.


The social network is changing up the rules surrounding its 140-character limit so that images, polls and user names won't count against the site's famous (or perhaps infamous) restriction. The changes are expected to roll out to Twitter's apps and website "over the coming months."



Though not technically an expansion of its character limit, the updates will allow users to create tweets in some cases that are slightly longer than what was previously allowedUnder the new rules, photos, videos, GIFs, polls and quoted tweets will no longer count toward a tweet's character limit. User handles in replies will also be excluded from a tweet's character limit. Read more...


More about Twitter, Social Media, Apps And Software, Tech, and Apps Software