Apple world’s most valuable brand

The Apple brand has clocked in at a robust $183 billion, making it the world’s most valuable brand, according to Millward Brown Optimor’s annual BrandZ study. The $183 billion figure is a 19% growth over last year, underscoring Apple’s continuing success, particularly with the iPhone and iPad.

Tech firms did well in this year’s study, with IBM coming in 2nd (swapping places with Google, who is in the three spot after sinking 3% in value).

McDonald’s and Microsoft round out the top five.

Facebook jumped 16 spots to the 19th spot – right behind Amazon.com.


Meet Priscilla Chan Zuckerberg, The Facebook Founder’s New Wife

Priscilla Chan Zuckerberg sprung into the spotlight on Saturday when it was revealed she had married longtime boyfriend Mark Zuckerberg — the Facebook founder & CEO (and billionaire after the Facebook IPO). The wedding had been planned for months and the couple was waiting for Chan to finish medical school, but the date of the IPO was a ‘moving target’ not known when the wedding was set.”

According to friends, Priscilla likes Target, the Food Network and sun-dried tomatoes. She loves taking pictures of her dog Beast, and admits to checking her phone “every five seconds.” She writes that she “loves cooking and soft things” and enjoys diet A&W. “I am a simple creature,” she writes.

The Monday before Facebook’s IPO, the same day Zuckerberg turned 28, he was in the audience at Chan’s UCSF School of Medicine commencement ceremony. He ‘checked in’ via Facebook, natch, at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, writing: “I’m so proud of you, Dr. Chan :).”

Dr. Chan was never going to be a stereotypical billionaire’s wife of the many-spouses-of-Donald-Trump variety. The 27-year-old bilingual Mandarin speaker graduated from Harvard in 2007, the year after Zuckerberg would have earned his degree if he hadn’t left to focus on Facebook — or thefacebook, as it was then known.

The couple met more than nine years ago while both were studying at Harvard. In a 2005 Harvard Crimson story about Mark leaving the university, he is quoted as asking Chan, identified as a “passing friend,” “Hey, Priscilla, do you want a job at the Facebook?” “I’d love a job at Facebook,” she responds while “offering him a Twizzler.” Priscilla never worked for Mark at Facebook.

According to her Facebook page, Chan speaks English, Spanish and Cantonese. The newlyweds also have a dog, aptly named Beast.


Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg marries Priscilla Chan

Facebook founder and CEO, an overnight billionaire, Mark Zuckerberg has married his longtime girlfriend Priscilla Chan.

The two met while studying at Harvard around 2004. It was the same year as Zuckerberg came up with the Facebook concept. Him and A Few friends That he Knew, including Chan, packed up and moved to California so he Could project his firm in the empire it is today to develop. Since then, it was Chan and Zuckerberg’s close, but Kept Their relationship secret for the most part.


Facebook IPO To Be Huge

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Facebook likely to be the fourth richest flotation in stock market history” was written by Charles Arthur, technology editor, for The Guardian on Monday 7th May 2012 14.34 UTC

The New York offices of stockbrokers JP Morgan flew a flag – with Facebook’s familiar blue background and white logo – on Friday.

Some onlookers were appalled that it was flying at the same height as the American flag beside it. But Facebook’s status as an American icon is about to be cemented by its stock market offering.

The “roadshow” – where executives, including the founder and chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, will seek to persuade institutional investors to buy shares before the flotation – began on Monday. The flag-flying JP Morgan is one of the underwriters, along with Goldman Sachs, with Morgan Stanley in the lead, of the initial public offering.

It should not be too hard a sell. Facebook’s IPO has been hotly anticipated for months, and underwriters are expected to snap up all the 338m shares that Facebook puts on offer at a price between $28 to $35 – which would raise between $9.4bn (£5.8bn) and $11.8bn (£7.3bn) in ready cash.

That will make it substantially bigger than Google’s 2004 IPO, which raised $1.66bn. Some think the company will push up the offer price even higher; beyond $38, it would be the fourth-largest IPO in history, beating Deutsche Telekom’s $13bn in 1996. The final pricing is expected on 17 May.

The social network is emerging into the sunlight after years in which its finances and operation has been surrounded by guesswork. It turns out to have a solid advertising model built around knowing precisely what people are interested in at any time – because its 900 million users tell it through their self-penned biographies, updates and connections with each other. In the fourth quarter of 2011, it earned $302m on revenues of $1.13bn, but profits dipped in the first quarter to $205m as it spent more on marketing, although revenues grew 45% year-on-year to $1.06bn.

The numbers are amazing: 125bn connections between those 900 million people (an average of 139 each). The “Like” button is pressed 2bn times a day. More than half – 526 million – of the users log on each day. And 488 million connect using their mobile at least once a month. Of the 526 million daily active users, 152 million are in Europe, and 129 million in the US and Canada. The adverts that generate most of its money can be carefully targeted by age, interests or location – although, to advertisers, Facebook is effectively a black box that they push their requests into; it does not sell them the data.

A video released to go with the roadshow gave a fascinating glimpse into Facebook’s advertising metrics. Globally, it makes $4.34 in advertising revenue per user per year. In the US, its most fruitful region, it gets $9.51 per user, Europe generates $4.86, Asia $1.79, and the rest of the world $1.42. Overall, advertising generates 82% of its revenues; the other 18% comes from payments, for example, its slice of the money people spend buying farm animals in games such as Zynga’s Farmville (Zynga alone generates 15% of its overall revenue).

Zuckerberg, 27, is joined on the 12-strong board (where he is chairman and chief executive, and the youngest by 10 years) by Mike Schroepfer, the vice-president of engineering, David Fischer, in charge of marketing, and Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer. Sandberg, 42, received the highest cash and stock compensation, worth just under $31m last year; 37-year-old Schroepfer’s package was worth $24.8m; Zuckerberg’s was a more modest $1.7m.

The pay is big – but so are the potential rewards. The main prize for Facebook is the largest internet population in the world: China. The company is still banned there, but Zuckerberg has made visits regarded as attempts to engage the authorities. Yet, if the experience of Google is anything to go by, the compromises needed to operate inside China’s authoritarian sphere can cause high-level disagreements (although Google eventually left after discovering China-inspired hacking against Tibetan activists).

Although Facebook would be able to drive its growth by moving into China, the censorship that would be required might be too much for Facebook to stomach – even though the network has famously blocked pictures of breastfeeding, and has a complex rulebook for its moderators to consult when deciding whether to delete uploaded photos if people complain about them.

But entering China may be a decision Zuckerberg will take solo. After the IPO, he will still hold 23.5% of the stock – and 57.3% of the voting shares, because of the two-tier structure which allows him to continue to make decisions in effect without reference to the other directors, as happened with the $1bn purchase (23m shares, $300m in cash) in April of Instagram, the mobile photo-sharing site, where the board was only informed after the fact.

The Instagram deal has raised some concerns about the company. “That made it look like [Zuckerberg] was a kid in a candy store who wanted to have anything he wanted,” said Francis Gaskins, president and editor of the research firm IPO Desktop.

“They’re moving into a different arena, and I don’t think they fully realise the subtleties in terms of how to deal with institutional investors and how to run a company on a very cost-effective basis. He talks about connecting people, but he’s just not connecting with the people who are going to be setting the value of his company.”

Facebook’s biggest threats, in fact, might not be external. Founded in Zuckerberg’s room while he was at Harvard University in 2004, the company has no true challengers outside China. Google’s attempts to move into the social space with Google+, launched last summer, have shown little sign of denting its rise or, more importantly, user engagement. And Zuckerberg is aware of the rapid rise and fall that befell earlier social networks such as Friends Reunited, Bebo, and MySpace; he has focused on broadening its appeal and building it into the fabric of the web through the “Like” button and similar systems.

But two big threats do exist: mobile and privacy.

The world’s shift towards using mobile phones, and especially smartphones, is the key one. Facebook makes no money from mobile advertising – but 40% of its users access it that way at least once a month. That is a gap it is determined to fill, and quickly. In February it announced it was planning to develop strategies to correct this. One challenge is that mobile advertising generates less revenue than that on personal computers (because phone screens are smaller, offering fewer placements). But as the numbers using mobile overtake those on the desktop – expected some time in 2013 – that could compensate.

Privacy has been a bugbear of both users and government agencies in the past couple of years. In Europe, the company is obliged to work closely with data protection commissioners after complaints about its ever-changing privacy policy. “The company’s financial success requires it to collect more personal information and make that available to advertisers,” Bill Kerrigan, chief executive of the privacy company Abine, said recently. But a growing proportion of Facebook users hide data such as their age or home town – up from 12% in 2010 to 33% in 2011. The company itself recognises the “threats” in its regulatory filing about “changes in user sentiment” about its “privacy and sharing, safety, security or other factors”.

On the other hand, the latest annual study by Consumer Reports, extrapolating from 1,300 US households, suggests that 13 million of its users have never touched their privacy settings.

That’s just how Zuckerberg would like it. As he prepares to take his giant idea public, the last thing he wants is his users becoming more private.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.


How LVMH is Managing Its Brands on Facebook

Curious of the social media strategies of LVMH? The Paris luxury colgolmorate (Louis Vuitton, Dom Pérignon, Marc Jacobs) shares their Facebook strategies with the WSJ:

One of the ways it manages those brands is through a carefully managed social media campaign, primarily focused on Facebook pages. Thomas Romieu, group digital director for LVMH, told CIO Journal that given “the very strong engagement of people on the Internet generally speaking, it makes sense for brands to want to engage there.” But he said it’s not enough to simply gin up a Facebook page and leave it at that. “Brands have to increase the value of the relationship with their customers through this medium,” he said. – read more at WSJ


Mark Zuckerberg: You know what’s cool? A billion organ donors

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Mark Zuckerberg: You know what’s cool? A billion organ donors” was written by Brian Braiker, for guardian.co.uk on Tuesday 1st May 2012 17.09 UTC

Facebook has access to your info, photos and browsing habits. Now the social media giant wants your organs, too.

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s CEO, announced today that the social network is making it easier for its one billion users to register to donate and broadcast their organ donor status to their networks.

The hope is that the viral effect of do-gooder peer pressure will move thousands of people to become donors to one of the more than 114,000 Americans waiting for livers, hearts, kidneys or other organs.

Every day an estimated 18 people die waiting for a transplant, according to the US department of health and human services.

“Medical experts believe that a broader awareness about organ donation could go a long way toward solving this crisis,” Zuckerberg wrote in a statement with Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg. “And we believe that by simply telling people that you’re an organ donor, the power of sharing and connection can play an important role.”

During an interview with Good Morning America, Zuckerberg discussed some of the inspirations behind the move, including Facebook’s role in organizing after disastrous tornadoes in Missouri and the Fukushima quake in Japan.

“So, we figured could we do anything to help people solve other types of issues, like all the people who need organ donations?”

Zuckerberg also said that he had his friend, former Apple CEO Steve Jobs, in mind when they were designing the tool. Jobs, who died last year, had been the recipient of a liver transplant.

Users can now go into their Facebook timeline, click on “Life Event”, select “Health and Wellness”, and add the option “choose Organ Donor”. Users are encouraged to relate a personal story or include a video.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.


Mark Zuckerberg: Steve Jobs, girlfriend inspired social organ donor tool

Conversations over the dinner table with his med-student girlfriend helped Mark Zuckerberg formulate his latest big idea — harnessing the power of Facebook to help eliminate the critical shortage of organs for patients desperately in need of life-saving transplants. And it was his friendship with Apple founder Steve Jobs, whose life was extended by years following a liver transplant, in part, that spurred the 27-year-old Facebook founder and CEO to help put that idea into practice. “Facebook is really about communicating and telling stories… We think that people can really help spread awareness of organ donation and that they want to participate in this to their friends. And that can be a big part of helping solve the crisis that’s out there,” Zuckerberg told ABC’s Robin Roberts in an exclusive interview at the company’s headquarters. – read more via ABCNews


Google’s Sergey Brin Warns Against Facebook and Apple

Google CEO Sergey Brin warns against “restrictive” walled gardens such as Facebook and Apple. Instead, he’s pushing an “open Internet.”

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Web freedom faces greatest threat ever, warns Google’s Sergey Brin” was written by Ian Katz, for The Guardian on Sunday 15th April 2012 17.07 UTC

The principles of openness and universal access that underpinned the creation of the internet three decades ago are under greater threat than ever, according to Google co-founder Sergey Brin.

In an interview with the Guardian, Brin warned there were “very powerful forces that have lined up against the open internet on all sides and around the world”. “I am more worried than I have been in the past,” he said. “It’s scary.”

The threat to the freedom of the internet comes, he claims, from a combination of governments increasingly trying to control access and communication by their citizens, the entertainment industry’s attempts to crack down on piracy, and the rise of “restrictive” walled gardens such as Facebook and Apple, which tightly control what software can be released on their platforms.

More on the battle for the internet

Revealed: US and China’s cyber war games
Washington’s plan to beat web censors
China struggle to regain control of the internet
How open is your internet? An interactive map

The 38-year-old billionaire, whose family fled antisemitism in the Soviet Union, was widely regarded as having been the driving force behind Google’s partial pullout from China in 2010 over concerns about censorship and cyber-attacks. He said five years ago he did not believe China or any country could effectively restrict the internet for long, but now says he has been proven wrong. “I thought there was no way to put the genie back in the bottle, but now it seems in certain areas the genie has been put back in the bottle,” he said.

He said he was most concerned by the efforts of countries such as China, Saudi Arabia and Iran to censor and restrict use of the internet, but warned that the rise of Facebook and Apple, which have their own proprietary platforms and control access to their users, risked stifling innovation and balkanising the web.

“There’s a lot to be lost,” he said. “For example, all the information in apps – that data is not crawlable by web crawlers. You can’t search it.”

Brin’s criticism of Facebook is likely to be controversial, with the social network approaching an estimated $100bn (£64bn) flotation. Google’s upstart rival has seen explosive growth: it has signed up half of Americans with computer access and more than 800 million members worldwide.

Brin said he and co-founder Larry Page would not have been able to create Google if the internet was dominated by Facebook. “You have to play by their rules, which are really restrictive,” he said. “The kind of environment that we developed Google in, the reason that we were able to develop a search engine, is the web was so open. Once you get too many rules, that will stifle innovation.”

He criticised Facebook for not making it easy for users to switch their data to other services. “Facebook has been sucking down Gmail contacts for many years,” he said.

Brin’s comments come on the first day of a week-long Guardian investigation of the intensifying battle for control of the internet being fought across the globe between governments, companies, military strategists, activists and hackers.

From the attempts made by Hollywood to push through legislation allowing pirate websites to be shut down, to the British government’s plans to monitor social media and web use, the ethos of openness championed by the pioneers of the internet and worldwide web is being challenged on a number of fronts.

In China, which now has more internet users than any other country, the government recently introduced new “real identity” rules in a bid to tame the boisterous microblogging scene. In Russia, there are powerful calls to rein in a blogosphere blamed for fomenting a wave of anti-Vladimir Putin protests. It has been reported that Iran is planning to introduce a sealed “national internet” from this summer.

Ricken Patel, co-founder of Avaaz, the 14 million-strong online activist network which has been providing communication equipment and training to Syrian activists, echoed Brin’s warning: “We’ve seen a massive attack on the freedom of the web. Governments are realising the power of this medium to organise people and they are trying to clamp down across the world, not just in places like China and North Korea; we’re seeing bills in the United States, in Italy, all across the world.”

Writing in the Guardian on Monday, outspoken Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei says the Chinese government’s attempts to control the internet will ultimately be doomed to failure. “In the long run,” he says, “they must understand it’s not possible for them to control the internet unless they shut it off – and they can’t live with the consequences of that.”

Amid mounting concern over the militarisation of the internet and claims – denied by Beijing – that China has mounted numerous cyber-attacks on US military and corporate targets, he said it would be hugely difficult for any government to defend its online “territory”.

“If you compare the internet to the physical world, there really aren’t any walls between countries,” he said. “If Canada wanted to send tanks into the US there is nothing stopping them and it’s the same on the internet. It’s hopeless to try to control the internet.”

He reserved his harshest words for the entertainment industry, which he said was “shooting itself in the foot, or maybe worse than in the foot” by lobbying for legislation to block sites offering pirate material.

He said the Sopa and Pipa bills championed by the film and music industries would have led to the US using the same technology and approach it criticised China and Iran for using. The entertainment industry failed to appreciate people would continue to download pirated content as long as it was easier to acquire and use than legitimately obtained material, he said.

“I haven’t tried it for many years but when you go on a pirate website, you choose what you like; it downloads to the device of your choice and it will just work – and then when you have to jump through all these hoops [to buy legitimate content], the walls created are disincentives for people to buy,” he said.

Brin acknowledged that some people were anxious about the amount of their data that was now in the reach of US authorities because it sits on Google’s servers. He said the company was periodically forced to hand over data and sometimes prevented by legal restrictions from even notifying users that it had done so.

He said: “We push back a lot; we are able to turn down a lot of these requests. We do everything possible to protect the data. If we could wave a magic wand and not be subject to US law, that would be great. If we could be in some magical jurisdiction that everyone in the world trusted, that would be great … We’re doing it as well as can be done.”

• Explore the seven-day special series on the Battle for the internet

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.


Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg Blows Off Pre-IPO Meeting With Wall Street

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg blew off a pre-IPO meeting with Wall Street analysts and bankers at the social network’s headquarters on Monday and does not plan to have a hands-on role in selling the stock listing to analysts and others, the Wall Street Journal reported. CFO David Ebersman said Zuck would focus his time on developing the social network’s services rather than play a financial market role. Sheryl Sandberg and Ebersman allowed Wall Street analysts to ask questions they may get from investors as they consider buying Facebook’s stock.

Facebook executives declined to go into detail on how the company plans to “monetize” or reap revenues from its growing user ranks, saying they are still in the early stages and will in effect “figure it out as they go along,” according to one attendee.” – via WSJ


Facebook Co-Founder Chris Hughes Buy buys New Republic

Chris Hughes, one of the co-founders of Facebook and a former online strategist for Barack Obama during the 2008 presidential campaign, has purchased a majority stake in The New Republic, the magazine said on Friday. Hughes, 28, will become publisher and editor-in-chief of the nearly 100-year old magazine which covers American politics. – via Reuters