Subscribe

Stay In Touch

« September 2002 | Main | November 2002 »

7 posts from October 2002

Well, it looks like the

Well, it looks like the "DMA giving in" on Spam is not exactly what it seems. From my understanding of reports I've read over the last day or so, the DMA is calling for legislation, which is good, because we're at that stage now.

But they are suggesting (as they always have) that unsolicited e-mail is okay as long as you have a real From and Subject line and provide a street address.

The idea is that this law would get rid of all the dubious spam that gets sent, but would also clear the way for "legitimate" companies to spam anyone they wanted to. This was always their position and it is dead wrong.

The DMA should follow the strategy of the CMA which has had a very enlightened policy since 1997 (disclosure: I was one of the authors of the CMA policy).

This Wired News article called "Spam So Bad the Spammers Balk" gives a good overview.

Alexander Bosika wrote recently about

Alexander Bosika wrote recently about the DMA's decision to "crack down" on spam. Since he baited me to comment, I'll fall for the trap.

Spam is a big issue that I tend to look at from two vantage points.

1. As an individual.
2. As a marketer.

As an individual, spam is certainly a huge issue for most people. I think the issue has been somewhat exaggerated by the fact that the people comment on spam (journalistics, pundits, those active online) also tend to have the most exposure of e-mail addresses online and therefore tend to have their e-mail addresses harvested and passed around a bit more. Good luck using your inbox effectively if you used your main e-mail address to register a domain.

Still, for those less highly involved in online issues, spam is still a big problem for them. And certainly the rise of hard-core spam with really raunchy subject lines doesn't give anyone comfort that things are getting better.

As an individual, I use Spamnet by Cloudmark. This is the best solution I've seen to date, building on the P2P concepts of napster and some clever pattern recognition algorithms. The software is still buggy (it's in beta), but it is getting close to primetime and more and more I'm seeing it listed as one of the options people list when talking about "fighting spam". My guess is that 9 months from now (if not soon), Cloudmark will be the Google of spam-catching.

So as an individual I see Cloudmark as a gift from above and use it constantly, even with the bugs in the beta version.

As a marketer, Cloudmark scares the crap out of me. Because it allows users to determine what is spam, it has a tendency to give "false positives". A False Positive in this context is a legitimate opt-in e-mail marketer getting labeled as spam. Cloudmark tends to be better than most, but the false positives it gives are very interesting. Because people vote on each message in realtime rather than identifying in advance which IP addresses or domains to block, you see the internal workings of people's feelings on e-mail marketing.

When the NYTs sends me book or movie updates, they always get through. As soon as they send a "special offer to NYT subscribers", it invariably gets dumped. Amazon new release listings tend to get through Cloudmark, but the "affiliate updates" which contain a lot of promotional information, some of it for partners, gets labelled as spam.

This means that marketers need to live in constant fear of having any given message deemed as low enough value to be spam, even if every name is legitimate. And the problem will only get worse as these tools become more prevalent and more effective.

My guess is that e-mail marketing will change radically in the next 9 months as Cloudmark hits critical mass. When it tips, everything will change.

Usability (and Google) fans might

Usability (and Google) fans might enjoy this Good Experience interview with Marissa Mayer, Product Manager at Google. She was their first full-time usability person and offers interesting insights into how Google has managed to stay simple while adding features.

Jakob Nielsen is of course

Jakob Nielsen is of course always a sharp cookie. But in this recent article he focussed on the usability of e-mail newsletters and came up with a must read for any e-mail marketer or online publisher.

Keep it simple!

Here's a NYT article called

Here's a NYT article called Online Fans Start to Pay the Piper.

The article covers the increased acceptance of paid online music services like listen.com. This makes total sense as Listen is making baby steps to the musical nirvana - the day that we have a true celestial jukeboxes - all the songs you'd ever want, easily and instantly accessible via a simple, powerful interface.

I stopped attending Internet World

I stopped attending Internet World in 1998. (I started attending in 94). So this ClickZ article called "Internet World -- R.I.P." wasn't a shock to me, but it did make me a bit sad.

While the need for a universal "everything Internet" conference is probably not realistic anymore, I pine for the days when I could know pretty much everything important about doing business online.

Here's a representative quote from the article:

"The economy" is too simple an explanation of why visitors and exhibitors alike stayed away in droves. From a marketing perspective, Internet World makes no sense. "It's simply not targeted," Topica CEO Anna Zornosa shrugged after surveying the sparsely populated hall, "everyone here is only talking about how empty it is."

If you're not from Toronto

If you're not from Toronto you may not know that our "New York City run by the Swiss" is often used as a body double for major US cities, particularly NYC. In fact over 1,365 films were shot in Toronto in 2001.

One of the more disconcerting aspects of Toronto substituting for NYC is that it is not uncommon to be driving down the street and see a classic NY Yellow Cab driving down the street followed by an NYPD cruiser. Occasionally you'll step onto an otherwise ordinary street in Toronto's financial district and see street signs in MPH instead of KPH, or USA today newsboxes on the corner.

For those of us who have spent any time in New York, this can cause a bit of vertigo. There are times where you have to stop and think why what you see isn't quite right.

My Photo

About Ken Schafer

  • Widely seen as a pioneer of the Internet in Canada, Ken has tirelessly promoted the Net as a significant force in business and culture.

    Ken conceived and oversaw Sony Music Canada's early online initiatives. From their first site in 1995, Ken's team built a global web presence for 25 Canadian artists, by pioneering viral and e-mail marketing, rich media, and community building long before they had become buzzwords.

    In 1996 he co-founded (AIMS) where as President he helped it become Canada's largest organization for Internet decision-makers. In 1997 he co-authored the online portion of the Canadian Marketing Association's Code of Ethics.

    Ken's volunteer work was recognized in 2002 when he was named a finalist for "Volunteer of the Year" at the Canadian New Media Awards.

    More recently, Ken developed the curriculum and taught the 14-week CMA's Certificate in E-marketing program.

    Today, he is VP, Marketing & Product Management for Tucows and a contributor to One Degree, Canada's leading web site for Internet marketing professionals.

    Ken received his degree in Mathematics from the University of Waterloo and lives outside Toronto with his wife, parenting expert Alyson Schafer, and their two children.

I Agree

Bookmarks

Recent Non-Fiction

  • Gary Hamel: The Future of Management

    Gary Hamel: The Future of Management
    I found this very inspiring. We're working through a lot of these issues at Tucows and a few of us have now read this book. Really thought provoking and more pragmatic than I was expecting.

  • James Surowiecki: The Wisdom of Crowds

    James Surowiecki: The Wisdom of Crowds
    I can't believe how long it too me to get to this "must read" for the social media cognoscenti but it didn't disappoint.

  • Walter Isaacson: Einstein

    Walter Isaacson: Einstein
    Isaacson provides a comprehensive study of the great man, intertwining his personal and scientific lives effortlessly.

  • Chip & Dan Heath: Made to Stick

    Chip & Dan Heath: Made to Stick
    A fantastic resource for anyone who needs to clearly communicate anything. Probably my top business book of 2007. A must read.

  • Steven Pinker: The Stuff of Thought

    Steven Pinker: The Stuff of Thought
    Getting through the grammar lessons in the early chapters was a bit of a challenge but the sections on why we swear where absolutely worth it!

  • Nassim Nicholas Taleb: The Black Swan

    Nassim Nicholas Taleb: The Black Swan
    While Taleb's ideas are VERY important I have a hard time recommending the book to the average reader as it does delve pretty heavily into statistical and probabilistic thinking at times. If you don't mind a bit of hard work in the later chapters this will reward with some great insights into how much we are ruled by randomness.

Recent Fiction

  • Khaled Hosseini: A Thousand Splendid Suns

    Khaled Hosseini: A Thousand Splendid Suns
    The history of Kabul Afghanistan disguised as the harrowing stories of two women as they deal with oppression and injustice while finding time to love and learn.

  • William Gibson: Spook Country

    William Gibson: Spook Country
    I enjoyed this far more than I was expecting. I tried Neuromancer ages ago and couldn't get into it, but Spook Country was very much a page turner - heavy on plot, set in a futuristic "near past" (2006). Highly recommended.

  • J.D. Salinger: The Catcher in the Rye

    J.D. Salinger: The Catcher in the Rye

    Getting around to reading classics I should have read much earlier in life is a big goal for 2008. Finally meeting Holden Caufield was a great start.

    You can see why the book was radical in its time - in content and style, but it seems pretty darn quaint these days. Is it still banned anywhere?

  • Cormac Mccarthy: All the Pretty Horses

    Cormac Mccarthy: All the Pretty Horses
    A cowboy gothic starting and ending with a funeral. In between we get minimalist dialogue, pages of apocalyptic odes to equines and Mexican desert landscapes. Brilliant.

  • Cormac McCarthy: The Road

    Cormac McCarthy: The Road
    Incredibly powerful - probably one of my all-time favourite books despite the relentless bleakness.

  • Harper Lee: To Kill a Mockingbird

    Harper Lee: To Kill a Mockingbird
    Just wonderful. I've seen the movie many times but reading the book was a revelation.

...