Items from the estate of Stephen L. Flood, a man who “lived life large,” will be sold Feb. 15-16 by Alderfer’s
Last Updated on Friday, 3 February 2012 10:35 Written by External Post Friday, 3 February 2012 10:35
Read The Rest Of This...It took me years to write….
Last Updated on Thursday, 26 January 2012 02:55 Written by External Post Thursday, 26 January 2012 02:55
Read The Rest Of This...Beatles Crockery
Last Updated on Thursday, 26 January 2012 01:55 Written by External Post Thursday, 26 January 2012 01:55
Read The Rest Of This...The Google Search Optimization Truth You Aren`t Being Told
Last Updated on Monday, 23 January 2012 08:05 Written by External Post Monday, 23 January 2012 08:05
Read The Rest Of This...Two more McCartney signatures
Last Updated on Monday, 23 January 2012 04:55 Written by External Post Monday, 23 January 2012 04:55
Read The Rest Of This...Google Anti-Trust Investigation One Step Closer
Last Updated on Wednesday, 21 December 2011 01:10 Written by External Post Wednesday, 21 December 2011 01:10
To get a better understanding of where this is coming from, we need to go back in time to September. At that time, Google’s chairman Eric Schmidt testified in person in front of the United States Senate’s antitrust subcommittee. You can read a summary of the three-hour hearing from Greg Sterling at Search Engine Land. The subcommittee meeting was attended by both Herman Kohl (a Democrat, and the chairman of the subcommittee) and Mike Lee (a Republican). The latter went after Schmidt like a cross-examining lawyer at a trial, according to Sterling. So what is Lee’s problem with Google? Lee not…
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The Walmartization of the Web (Literally)
Last Updated on Monday, 12 December 2011 01:11 Written by a2e Monday, 12 December 2011 01:11
Walmart is getting much more aggressive with their online strategy:
With some 1.4 million employees on its U.S. payroll, Walmart’s world is about as large as the state of Maine. That’s massive by any standard, but when you consider how social media amplifies that number, it’s not simply a huge group but an influential one. No small wonder, then, that the earth’s largest employer is taking greater measures to motivate and mobilize its people — and opening up more opportunities for consumer brands to also reach them along the way.
These brands can not only leverage internal resources to further build off the boost Google offers them, but they can then take that attention and sell it back off to the highest bidder:
It’s not clear how much ad revenue Walmart World has made or whether MyWalmart.com will become a profit center. But the former already takes in millions of dollars annually in ads from vendors seeking an audience with Walmart employees, according to people familiar with the matter.
If Google consolidates markets too aggressively then ultimately they create competition for themselves through vertical ad networks. In some cases (say travel) Google can buy out the market plumbing & then reassert control:
Wertheimer drew some criticism when he explained that “our airline partners were very clear” that they wouldn’t participate in Google Flight Search if online travel agency booking links were included in the core flight-search results.
But Google doesn’t have that same influence over retail & each time they put the big brands front and center the more they reinforce that 3rd party dominance.
In addition to leveraging their workforce, it is also quite easy for these brands to use customer incentives to dominate social media.
Amazon.com is also carrying far more ads these days & they sell ads on 3rd party sites.

The above is another reason why Google is pushing so hard to control the second click. If they can taste the traffic again they add efficiency to their own model while introducing another layer of friction to other retailers.
When users finally manage to leave the Google click circus, Google tries to pull them back into Google with the Google Related toolbar

In the above quoted AdAge article there is some skepticism around how much a company like Walmart can get out of underpaid wage slaves:
“It’s really hard when you’re a person making poverty-level wages, just had your health-care premiums raised 60%, and you can only get part-time hours, to be a good ambassador for the brand, no matter how much you love it,” said Jennifer Stapleton, spokeswoman for Making Change at Walmart.
However I think that skepticism is misplaced, as the less a person has the more thankful they tend to be for the little bits they do have. Most people who have nothing do not realize how systems are engineered to screw them over.
It is only when you have free time to think & are not clouded by arbitrary short-term stress that you can ponder the bigger & more uncomfortable questions in life. As long as you don’t consider those uncomfortable questions it is far easier to push anything, because you don’t know any better.
“The entire web has become full of garbage. The web has become almost a digital Detroit.” – Roger McNamee.
If Walmart’s strategy works then this ultimately will be why Google’s brand-only approach to search will fall flat on its face. If this is successful I would then expect Google to put out some public relations drivel about celebrating the diversity of the web & move away from brand in the next 2 or 3 years.
In the meantime, I expect Google to keep increasing search complexity such that it’s prohibitively expensive to make & market a small independent commercial website. That will force many smaller companies to live inside the Google ecosystem, with Google ranking the Google-hosted pages/products/locations for those companies, so that they can serve ads against them and get a bigger slice of the revenues.
Google’s ad network is far more profitable than even the lowest waged employee, as it doesn’t need to be fed & is designed to be an agnostic & amoral yield optimization tool. And it is effective enough that the biggest retailers are now becoming ad networks.
Average products for average people – with ads everywhere.
Welcome to the WorldWideMart. ;)
Killing Cows in Montmartre
Last Updated on Friday, 28 October 2011 03:22 Written by a2e Friday, 28 October 2011 03:22
As of two days ago, it will have been a month since I last blogged to y’all.
I’m a degenerate worthless person, I know.
I figured there was only one way I could make this up to everyone, and that was by providing you with the most bizarre poster we have in our upcoming November [...]
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eBay Meg bitchslapped by Governor Moonbeam
Last Updated on Wednesday, 3 November 2010 01:40 Written by External Post Wednesday, 3 November 2010 01:40
Meg Whitman’s expensive bid for the governorship of California has failed: she lost out to Jerry Brown – aka “Governor Moonbeam” – who last held the job in 1975. Democrat Brown, previously the youngest person to hold the state’s top job, is now the
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Candidates campaign on Twitter before polls close
Last Updated on Wednesday, 3 November 2010 01:40 Written by External Post Wednesday, 3 November 2010 01:40
After a final push of campaigning in person, several candidates took to Twitter on Tuesday evening, urging followers to get out and vote if they hadn’t. Colorado Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet told his followers to call five others. Senate Majority
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