Monthly Archives: May 2011

Smile Saturday

Social media use in Ireland

If you are itching to get your hands on the latest data on social media usage in Ireland, then you won’t want to miss this Neworld report.

Highlights include:

  1. Twitter has almost doubled its Irish accounts
  2. Facebook is adding 900 new Irish profiles per day
  3. LinkedIn is growing at a much faster than Facebook – in percentage terms at least (11% versus 4%)

Click here to read the full report.

Exploding Media Conference

Last week I attended the Mash 2011: Exploding Media conference in the Croke Park Conference Centre and I came home buzzing with new ideas and contacts.

20 speakers from Ireland and abroad came together to give us their take on how the media has changed in the last 5 years and how it’s set to change in the next five.  It was a superbly run conference and well done to the organizers for hosting such a terrific two days.

I loved the digital media lab, run by ten journalism students from DIT. They did a fantastic job blogging, interviewing and reporting and you can check out the results on the Mash Storify page, YouTube channel, blog and  Flickr account to see just how  its done. Well worth a look!

Spamalot! Where does spam come from?

Why is spam called Spam?   This term comes from a Monty Python skit here where a couple go into a restaurant, and the wife tries to get something other than Spam. In the background are a group of Vikings that sing the praises of Spam. Soon the only thing you can hear in the skit is the word ‘Spam’.

Similarly, if we didn’t put a halt to inappropriate postings on forums, blogs and websites, pretty soon, our own messages would be drowned out in a chorus of Spam.

How to spot the spam scam

Spammers try to disguise their efforts sometimes with seemingly legitimate comments to get a comment approved but it is generally easy to spot them.

Look at the email address and site the commenter links to, which are often dead giveaways.

How to avoid the spammers

If you’re using a blog hosted service like TypePad or WordPress.com, these services have anti-spam countermeasures already set up.   If you are self hosting, you’ll need to install the anti-spam plug-ins yourself. Akismet is a popular choice.

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