Penn professor's new book raises questions about digital privacy



Tom Paine




Joseph Turow, a professor and associate dean at Penn's Annenberg School, has a new book out, The Daily You, that is garnering considerable attention (see excerpt from The Atlantic) .

In it, Turow challenges the premise that the Internet would promote individual freedom, and "that the consumer is king in the new media environment", by exploring the extent to which data is being collected about us and how it is being used to target us. Nothing new about that; marketers have been using data to target people for a long time. Historically, though, that was mostly done through loosely grouped demographic data that revealed little about you as an individual. Now, through information collected from individuals' activities on the Web, marketers can discern an intricate pattern of your behaviors and habits and use it to target you (and perhaps manipulate you) in very specific ways.

Turow seems to focus not as much on everyone's favorite punching bags, Google and Facebook, but rather on what he calls the transformation of the media buying function through what might be referred to as the advertising technology revolution. (While largely centered in New York, the ad tech business has some important Philadelphia connections.) Turow writes that "the rise of digital profiling and personalization has spawned a new industrial jargon that reflects potentially grave social divisions and privacy issues".

Turow will give talk on the subject tomorrow evening from 6 to 7:30pm at the Penn Bookstore.



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Daily Links 2/7/2012: ShopRunner buys Shopsanity



ShopRunner Buys Shopsanity to Help Retailers Take on Amazon (PandoDaily)

Oracle demands retrial in SAP slurp spat
Snubs paltry $272m payout, wants full $1.3bn in damages
(The Register)

Bill and Jim’s Bright Shiny Penny: Understanding SAP’s Success and the Challenges It Brings (Joshua Greenbaum/Enterprise Applications Consulting)

SAP to Offer Hana Analytic Software to Smaller Companies in 2012 (Bloomberg)

With federal loans blocked, Fisker halts work on Project Nina, lays off 66 workers (Engadget)

Meet Spongecell, a Profitable Ad Tech Company With $10 Million in New Funding from Safeguard Scientifics (All Things Digital)

EPAM downsizes IPO, prices below range-underwriter (Reuters)

InterDigital anticipates Q1 revenue shortfall (Forbes)

Vishay Q4 Revs, Profits Miss Estimates; Shares Stumble (Forbes)

Coinstar Soars on Profit, Buyout of NCR Unit (Bloomberg via San Francisco Chronicle)

Redbox and Verizon Face Key Decisions for DVD-and-Streaming Service (Ad Age)

Customers rate Comcast in first of 4 meetings (Savannah Morning News)

Fed may decide on Cap1-ING merger Wednesday (Delaware Online: Delaware Inc.)

DreamIt Ventures seeks five Israeli start-ups (Globes)


SaaS Changes to Higher Ed ERP Market
(Delta Initiative Blog)



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Highlights: Last week on Philly Tech News (1/30/2012 to 2/5/2012)



Reports that surfaced in the New York Post a week ago that Philadelphia Media Network, owner of the Inquirer, Daily News, and Philly.com, was for sale again turned out to be true, with a group led by Ed Rendell and Ed Snider and another led by members of the Perelman family mentioned to be among the candidates to acquire it.

Exton-based SaaS insurance provider iPipeline"s latest funding round, announced in January, turned to be for $71.4 million, according to its SEC filing.

Scrutiny of the proposed spectrum sale and reseller agreement between Verizon Wireless and Comcast and other cable companies intensified, with a Senate committee planning hearings for later this month. Meanwhile, the joint marketing arrangement continued to roll out, expanding into the Bay area.

The closing of SAP AG's $3.4 billion acquisition of SuccessFactors could be delayed for weeks, possibly even months, as the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS) investigates it, for some reason.

Philly-based ad agency Red Tettemer & Partners (Century 21) and local crowdsourcing site Poptent (Dannon) both had ads they produced run during the Super Bowl, which ad people say is two more than Philly's ever had before. And Nielsen said NBC's 2012 Super Bowl broadcast was the most watched program in TV history.

And Comcast may invest, through its partial ownership of the SNY cable network, $40 million to help bail out the New York Mets. Traitors.



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Daily Links 2/6/2012: NBC's Super Bowl most watched TV program ever



Kenexa Agrees To Acquire OutStart, a Leading Provider of Next Generation e-Learning Solutions (Business Wire)

Kenexa Announces Financial Results for Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2011 (Business Wire)
Company says it paid $38.9 million for OutStart, from which it expects $13.5 million in GAAP revenue for 2012.

Local company's acquisition puts it on the global map (Wilmington News Journal)

NBC's Super Bowl XLVI most-watched show in TV history (USA Today)
What kind of bounce will NBC get?

Verizon to set up streaming service with Redbox (AP via LA Times)

Verizon teams up with Redbox to cash in on video (Gigaom)

Hands on with AnyPlay: Live Comcast video on your iPad (The Unofficial Apple Weblog)

Is Workday Silicon Valley's Next Big IPO? (Daily Beast)
Workday certainly deserves some hype, although this article perhaps provides too much of it.

Be everywhere: Google’s real social strategy (ZDNet Blogs)
By Will Reynolds of Philly's SEER Interactive.

Newgrounds Undergoing Redesign (GameKudos.com)
Newgrounds is based in Montgomery County.

Fisker lays off workers in Delaware, California (Wilmington News Journal)

SAP community portal launch date unclear due to bugs (Infoworld)

Greenphire trying for larger place clinical-trial information business (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Someone’s Trying to Frankenstein a Sports Blog Monster That Will Crush Philly.Com (Philly Mag: The Philly Post)

Q&A: Russ Fadel, CEO, ThingWorx – “Hooked on Entrepreneurship” (Safeguard Scientifics Blog)


Poptent's Super Bowl ad for Dannon's OIKOS Greek Yogurt

Poptent, the Philadelphia-born agency that crowdsources video advertising production, has had its Super Bowl ad for Dannon's OIKOS Greek Yogurt prereleased prior to the game. Poptent received 34 fully-produced entries from its top producers, and a spot titled "The Tease", directed by Lewis & Clark College student Remy Neymarc, 21, was selected. The final spot was then shot at Poptent Productions, a division of Poptent.

Poptent's website also shows some outtakes and behind the scenes activity from the shoot. Poptent was founded in 2007 and received $6.8 million led by MK Capital in late 2010. Although it has a considerable presence in Conshohocken, its headquarters is now in San Clemente, CA according to its website.

Poptent joins Red Tettemer & Partners, with its ad for Century 21, as Philadelphia agencies producing ads for the 2012 Super Bowl.






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NBC sees pay dirt with Super Bowls ads, spin-offs (Philadelphia Inquirer)

NBC Channels Marilyn Monroe in Super Bowl Ads to Aid Network (Bloomberg)

A Sign Law Spurs Investment in Philadelphia (New York Times)




Investors see huge potential in Glassboro native's successful business, RJMetrics (Gloucester County Times)

Perelman family members squaring off over Philadelphia newspapers (New York Post)

Zach Nelson: A Decade in the Clouds (Vinnie Mirchandani/Deal Architect)


Red Tettemer's Super Bowl ad for Century 21



Century 21 Super Bowl ad produced by Philly's Red Tettemer and Partners




New York Post: Philadelphia Media Network owners hire investment bankers, sales effort already underway



Tom Paine


The New York Post, following up on its breaking story about the possible sale of Philadelphia Media Network (owner of the Inquirer, Daily News and Philly.com) this past weekend, reported today that the ownership group has hired an investment banking firm, Evercore Partners, to seek out potential buyers.

The article cites sources as saying that the company has met with at least three interested parties already, and some offers are expected in the next two to four weeks. It also says that the family of Raymond Perelman, the 94-year-old Philadelphia businessman who tried to acquire the papers two years ago, is again interested in bidding.

The Post says that investment firm Angelo Gordon initiated the sales process and hoped Alden Capital would buy its 30% stake, but that Alden, which holds a similar stake, decided it wanted to sell as well.

No word from the investors or PMN on these latest reports, the Post says.

The reported price tag of $100 million, compared to the $139 million the buyout group paid to purchase the properties in late 2010, suggests that the turnaround has not been going too well, although they have profited by the sale of the old Inquirer building. See the column by former Inquirer exec Rick Edmonds in yesterday's Poynter for one perspective.

Update: The Inquirer reports that former Philly Mayor and PA Governor Ed Rendell is among those putting together a group to make a bid.


Daily Links 2/3/2012: Comcast may invest in Mets, more Thursday Night Football to NFL Network



Financial Relief for Mets May Come From TV Partners (New York Times)
Comcast may invest in Mets so they can better compete against Phillies.


NFL Network Ups Thursday Night Football Games to 13 for 2012 Season (Hollywood Reporter)
NBC Sports had been reported to have had a keen interest in adding those games for its cable network.

Verizon’s cable spectrum mashup: evil genius or simply genius? (Gigaom)

Dish Asks Regulators to Reject AT&T Call for Rapid Network Build (Bloomberg)

DirecTV Stops Selling WildBlue
May be Working With Dish/Hughes On New Option
(Broadband Reports)

Take This Mitt, and Pass Me the Broadsword (New York Times)
Curt Schilling's expensive new video game close to debut.


Online retailers hoping Congress acts as PA delays enforcement of sales tax law (Delco Times)

Systems Management, Cloud Services Likely in Dell's Software Acquisition Plans (PC World)

SuccessFactors Announces Preliminary Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2011 Results (PR Newswire)

NetSuite looks to a bright 2012 (Dennis Howlett/ZDNet Blogs)

Newtown's EPAM Systems considered best of next week's IPO candidates (Dow Jones via NASDAQ.com)