Showing posts with label Aims. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aims. Show all posts

Friday, March 21, 2014

Who Aims to Benefit From Ukrainian IMF Bailout?

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Who Aims to Benefit From Ukrainian IMF Bailout?

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

UPDATE 1-Atomico aims $476 mln fund at tech start-ups outside Silicon Valley

UPDATE 1-Atomico aims $476 mln fund at tech start-ups outside Silicon Valley
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/db98b__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif




Tue Nov 19, 2013 1:27pm EST



By Mia Shanley


Nov 19 (Reuters) – Atomico, a European venture capital firm that has invested in the likes of Angry Birds developer Rovio, plans to spend its new $ 476 million fund on technology start-ups outside Silicon Valley, it said on Tuesday.


While the United States has long dominated venture capital investments in technology, investors have been increasingly drawn to opportunities in Asia and Europe, especially in areas such as e-commerce and gaming.


“Ten years ago people thought you had to be in Silicon Valley to build a global technology business. That is no longer the case,” said Atomico founder Niklas Zennstrom, a Swedish entrepreneur who co-founded Skype, a web phone service which was sold to Microsoft Corp for $ 8.5 billion in 2011.


“We see entrepreneurs from all over the world achieving global success faster than ever before and across every sector of the global economy. Our new fund is aimed squarely at this opportunity,” he said.


Reuters reported last week that London-based Atomico had wrapped up its third fund, citing a document filed with the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission.


The venture capital firm said on Tuesday the fund, three times the size of its previous in 2010, would be dedicated to helping entrepreneurs outside Silicon Valley scale their businesses globally.


Asked which sectors the money could be spent on, Mattias Ljungman, an Atomico partner who also sits on the board of Finnish mobile game maker Supercell, pointed to a current portfolio of investments which includes online games, payments, travel and e-commerce services.


“This is what’s so exciting. What we’re seeing now is the transformation of the old economy into the new economy, which is a digitised economy,” he said, adding that there were a lot of interesting opportunities in the mobile phone space.


He said Atomico would stay focused on big markets where it is present such as Europe, China, Japan, Brazil, Turkey and South Korea.


“But that’s by no means exclusive,” he added. “We want to work with outstanding entrepreneurs wherever they are.”


The firm said the fund was oversubscribed and had broad backing from investors in Asia, the United States and Europe.


According to Thomson Reuters data, venture capital firms have made $ 35.7 billion in tech investments so far this year, with the United States taking up the lion’s share at almost 60 percent followed by Asia at 31 percent and Europe at 9 percent.


Atomico, which is seven years old, has made more than 50 investments including Jawbone, maker of the Up fitness tracker, and Swedish payments service Klarna.


Supercell, one of its earlier investments, was recently given a $ 3 billion valuation after Japan’s SoftBank snapped up a 51 percent stake in the three-year-old firm.






Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate




Read more about UPDATE 1-Atomico aims $476 mln fund at tech start-ups outside Silicon Valley and other interesting subjects concerning Real Estate at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, August 29, 2013

NJ Senate Hopeful Steve Lonegan Aims for Unique Fundraiser

Donors can shoot big guns in return for big donations in an unusual fundraiser for New Jersey GOP Senate candidate Steve Lonegan.

The Sept. 21 event is being hosted by the New Jersey Second Amendment Society, a gun rights advocacy and lobbying group, philly.com reported.


Lonegan is a staunch opponent of gun control.


According to the Sunlight Foundation, which first reported the event, Lonegan contributors are being invited to a “Fundraiser Shooting Event” at the South Jersey Shooting Club in Winslow, N.J.


“As opposed to a more run-of-the-mill congressional fundraiser, the event offers contributors a clear — and immediate — return on investment,” the foundation wrote on its blog.


“Instead of tying contribution levels to cheesy titles like ‘Friend’ or ‘Platinum Level Sponsor,’ Lonegan is literally providing a bigger bang for bigger bucks: The amount donors give directly corresponds to the amount of firepower they’ll get your hands on at the firing range.”


The Foundation says donors will choose from rifles or pistols.
For $ 40, a contributor gets to shoot five rounds from a Desert Eagle 50, or 20 rounds from an AR15.


Guests also have the option of paying $ 50 for the chance to take one of the event’s two “mystery rifles.”


For the big gun donors, forking over $ 125 will buy five shots from the Barret M107.50 BMG, a semi-automatic sniper rifle that is used by the military, the foundation promised.


Lonegan faces an uphill battle against Newark Mayor Cory Booker in the Oct. 16 election to replace the late Democratic Sen. Frank Lautenberg.


Lonegan made headlines this week with his comments about the “weird” comments of his Democratic opponent.


Lonegan started his campaign in August with just $ 150,000 cash on hand, The Hill reported.


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – Politics



NJ Senate Hopeful Steve Lonegan Aims for Unique Fundraiser

NJ Senate Hopeful Steve Lonegan Aims for Unique Fundraiser

Donors can shoot big guns in return for big donations in an unusual fundraiser for New Jersey GOP Senate candidate Steve Lonegan.

The Sept. 21 event is being hosted by the New Jersey Second Amendment Society, a gun rights advocacy and lobbying group, philly.com reported.


Lonegan is a staunch opponent of gun control.


According to the Sunlight Foundation, which first reported the event, Lonegan contributors are being invited to a “Fundraiser Shooting Event” at the South Jersey Shooting Club in Winslow, N.J.


“As opposed to a more run-of-the-mill congressional fundraiser, the event offers contributors a clear — and immediate — return on investment,” the foundation wrote on its blog.


“Instead of tying contribution levels to cheesy titles like ‘Friend’ or ‘Platinum Level Sponsor,’ Lonegan is literally providing a bigger bang for bigger bucks: The amount donors give directly corresponds to the amount of firepower they’ll get your hands on at the firing range.”


The Foundation says donors will choose from rifles or pistols.
For $ 40, a contributor gets to shoot five rounds from a Desert Eagle 50, or 20 rounds from an AR15.


Guests also have the option of paying $ 50 for the chance to take one of the event’s two “mystery rifles.”


For the big gun donors, forking over $ 125 will buy five shots from the Barret M107.50 BMG, a semi-automatic sniper rifle that is used by the military, the foundation promised.


Lonegan faces an uphill battle against Newark Mayor Cory Booker in the Oct. 16 election to replace the late Democratic Sen. Frank Lautenberg.


Lonegan made headlines this week with his comments about the “weird” comments of his Democratic opponent.


Lonegan started his campaign in August with just $ 150,000 cash on hand, The Hill reported.


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – Politics



NJ Senate Hopeful Steve Lonegan Aims for Unique Fundraiser

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Free Software Tool Aims To Fight Government Secrecy


This crowdfunded Freedom Of Information Act algorithm seeks to liberate guarded knowledge.



The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), first enacted in 1966 provides a way for citizens, activists, and journalists to coax information out of the government. The Government doesn’t make this easy, but a new, already-successful crowdfunding project hopes to provide a solution by largely automating the FOIA process.


Nine kinds of documents benefit from explicit exemptions to FOIA requests, including national secrets, personal medical information, and others. Those exceptions aren’t the only obstacle to releases of public information. Labyrinthine rules, procedures that vary by state and agency, and the general absence of any desire to reveal more information faster than is legally required all create a challenge for the enterprising citizen looking to shed some sunlight on what happens behind closed government doors.


A project of the The Center for Investigative Reporting, FOIA Machine is a software solution to the nitty-gritty of submitting FOIA requests. Much in the same way that Turbo Tax offers a universal platform for navigating complex and varied state rules, FOIA Machine is a broad platform that can navigate the particular procedures of each state, as well as federal regulations.


FOIA Machine grew out of a project designed “to collect statistics on government response times to public records act requests.” So the Center for Investigative Reporting plans to gather data on how the machine is used, and how responsive the government is to information requests.


Of course, the real fun will be when faster, better, and more frequent FOIA requests reveal the true nature of the Reptilian Illuminati running our government. Kidding! Maybe.




Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now



Free Software Tool Aims To Fight Government Secrecy

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Honda aims to make Acura in China by 2016


Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Putin aims to keep ties with U.S. on track in Snowden case

CHITA, Russia (Reuters) – President Vladimir Putin signaled on Wednesday that he would not let former U.S. spy contractor Edward Snowden’s application for temporary asylum in Russia derail relations with the United States.



Reuters: Top News



Putin aims to keep ties with U.S. on track in Snowden case

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Bits: Stealth Wear Aims to Make a Tech Statement


Adam Harvey/ahprojects.com


“Stealth wear” makes a countersurveillance fashion statement. Hoodies made of reflective fabric are intended to reduce one’s thermal footprint.




THE term “stealth wear” sounded cool, if a bit extreme, when I first heard it early this year. It’s a catchy description for clothing and accessories designed to protect the wearer from detection and surveillance. I was amused. It seemed like an updated version of a tinfoil hat, albeit a stylish one.





Bits

More Tech Coverage


News from the technology industry, including start-ups, the Internet, enterprise and gadgets.
On Twitter: @nytimesbits.





Adam Harvey and DIF Magazine

The CV Dazzle hairstyling and makeup program aims to camouflage a person’s face.





Adam Harvey/ahprojects.com

A purse fitted with an electronic device reacts to a camera’s flash with lights so bright that the subject’s face is obscured.





Fast-forward a few months. Flying surveillance cameras, also known as drones, are increasingly in the news. So are advances in facial-recognition technology. And wearable devices like Google Glass — which can be used to take photographs and videos and upload them to the Internet within seconds — are adding to the fervor. Then there are the disclosures of Edward Snowden, the fugitive former government contractor, about clandestine government surveillance.


It’s enough to make countersurveillance fashion as timely and pertinent as any seasonal trend, like midriff tops or wedge sneakers.


Adam Harvey, an artist and design professor at the School of Visual Arts and an early creator of stealth wear, acknowledges that countersurveillance clothing sounds like something out of a William Gibson novel.


“The science-fiction part has become a reality,” he said, “and there’s a growing need for products that offer privacy.”


Mr. Harvey exhibited a number of his stealth-wear designs and prototypes in an art show this year in London. His work includes a series of hoodies and cloaks that use reflective, metallic fabric — like the kind used in protective gear for firefighters — that he has repurposed to reduce a person’s thermal footprint. In theory, this limits one’s visibility to aerial surveillance vehicles employing heat-imaging cameras to track people on the ground.


He also developed a purse with extra-bright LEDs that can be activated when someone is taking unwanted pictures; the effect is to reduce an intrusive photograph to a washed-out blur. In addition, he created a guide for hairstyling and makeup application that might keep a camera from recognizing the person beneath the elaborate get-up. The technique is called CV Dazzle — a riff on “computer vision” and “dazzle,” a type of camouflage used during World War II to make it hard to detect the size and shape of warships.


Mr. Harvey isn’t the only one working on such products. The National Institute of Informatics in Japan has developed a visor outfitted with LEDs whose light isn’t visible to the wearer — but that would blind some camera sensors and blur the details of a wearer’s nose and eyes more effectively than a pair of sunglasses.


And Todd Blatt, a mechanical engineer in New York, is working on a lens-cap accessory for people who don’t want to be recorded while talking with someone who is wearing Google Glass. Instead of asking that the computer glasses be removed entirely, they could instead hand the wearer the lens covering. Presto. No taping or photographing would occur during the conversation.


Mr. Harvey likened his work and that of others to the invention of the rivet in denim jeans. “That was a practical way of making them more durable,” he said. Stealth wear, he said, is an “updated way of thinking about making your clothes more resistant to your environment and adapting them to protect you a little bit more.”


But these designers face a challenge: although technology has inspired some new fabrics and materials, high-tech fashion of any kind has yet to really take off.


There simply isn’t much of a market for tech-savvy haute couture, said Becky Stern, an artist and the director of wearable electronics at Adafruit Industries, a company in New York that sells do-it-yourself electronics kits. Ms. Stern noted that a few years ago, clothing embedded with illuminated lights was relatively popular, but that interest later “kind of fell off.”


Some of the most exciting experimentation is in the world of sports, she said, where athletic wear is being developed that can monitor a player’s vital signs. Such products are commercially viable, she said, and the technology could eventually migrate to clothing designed specifically to protect the privacy of its owner.


Jan Chipchase, executive creative director of global insights at Frog Design, says he sees tremendous potential for an eventual stealth-wear market. He described current prototypes as “provocations,” saying they raise “issues that are impacting our cities and public spaces that need more discussion and debate.”


Mr. Harvey’s items have not yet been thoroughly tested by intelligence firms or security experts. Most are still concepts, not ready for mass production. But he said he hoped that awareness of his designs might “empower you to control your identity a little more.”


AND the mere fact that such designs are attracting attention online could pave the way for development of a mass market, said Joanne McNeil, a writer who covers Internet culture.


On her blog “Internet of Dreams,” Ms. McNeil says that videos and mock-ups of not-yet-developed products, whether clothing or futuristic smartphones, are often popular online and may reflect the desires of a populace that larger corporations haven’t tapped.


“Dreams outpace physical realities,” she said.


In other words, even if stealth wear never becomes a viable or commercial reality, the newfound intrusiveness it responds to is genuine enough.




NYT > Global Home



Bits: Stealth Wear Aims to Make a Tech Statement

Friday, June 28, 2013

NASA’s IRIS Mission Aims to Answer Solar Questions


NASA.gov
June 28, 2013


NASA’s Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) solar observatory separated from its Pegasus rocket and is in the proper orbit. This followed a successful launch by the Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. It was the final Pegasus launch currently manifested by NASA. NASA’s Launch Services Program at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida managed the countdown and launch.


IRIS is a NASA Small Explorer Mission to observe how solar material moves, gathers energy and heats up as it travels through a little-understood region in the sun’s lower atmosphere. This interface region between the sun’s photosphere and corona powers its dynamic million-degree atmosphere and drives the solar wind.


This article was posted: Friday, June 28, 2013 at 1:52 pm


Tags: science









Infowars



NASA’s IRIS Mission Aims to Answer Solar Questions

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Obama aims to tackle pollution, climate change

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama declared the debate over climate change and its causes obsolete Tuesday as he announced a wide-ranging plan to tackle pollution and prepare communities for global warming.
Science Headlines



Obama aims to tackle pollution, climate change

Obama aims to tackle pollution, climate change








President Barack Obama wipes his face as he speaks about climate change, Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington. The president is proposing sweeping steps to limit heat-trapping pollution from coal-fired power plants and to boost renewable energy production on federal property, resorting to his executive powers to tackle climate change and sidestepping the partisan gridlock in Congress. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)





President Barack Obama wipes his face as he speaks about climate change, Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington. The president is proposing sweeping steps to limit heat-trapping pollution from coal-fired power plants and to boost renewable energy production on federal property, resorting to his executive powers to tackle climate change and sidestepping the partisan gridlock in Congress. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)





President Barack Obama speaks about climate change, Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington. The president is proposing sweeping steps to limit heat-trapping pollution from coal-fired power plants and to boost renewable energy production on federal property, resorting to his executive powers to tackle climate change and sidestepping the partisan gridlock in Congress. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)













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(AP) — President Barack Obama declared the debate over climate change and its causes obsolete Tuesday as he announced a wide-ranging plan to tackle pollution and prepare communities for global warming.


In a major speech at Georgetown University, Obama warned Americans of the deep and disastrous effects of climate change, urging them to take action before it’s too late.


“As a president, as a father and as an American, I’m here to say we need to act,” Obama said.


Obama announced he was directing his administration to launch the first-ever federal regulations on heat-trapping gases emitted by new and existing power plants — “to put an end to the limitless dumping of carbon pollution.”


Other aspects of the plan will boost renewable energy production on federal lands, increase efficiency standards and prepare communities to deal with higher temperatures.


Even before Obama unveiled his plan Tuesday, Republican critics in Congress were lambasting it as a job-killer that would threaten the economic recovery. Obama dismissed those critics, noting the same arguments have been used in the past when the U.S. has taken other steps to protect the environment.


“That’s what they said every time,” Obama said. “And every time, they’ve been wrong.”


Obama also offered a rare insight into his administration’s deliberations on Keystone XL, an oil pipeline whose potential approval has sparked an intense fight between environmental activists and energy producers.


The White House has insisted the State Department is making the decision independently, but Obama said Tuesday he’s instructing the department to approve it only if the project won’t increase overall, net emissions of greenhouse gases.


“Allowing the Keystone pipeline to be built requires a finding that doing so would be in our nation’s interests,” Obama said. “Our national interest would be served only if this project does not significantly exacerbate the problem of carbon pollution.”


A top aide to House Speaker John Boehner said the remarks indicated that the pipeline should be approved.


“The standard the president set today should lead to speedy approval of the Keystone pipeline,” Boehner spokesman Brendan Buck said.


Still, environmentalist took heart in Obama’s remarks, noting it was the first time the administration had directly linked approval of the pipeline to its effect on pollution. The White House has previously resisted efforts by environmental groups to link the Keystone project to broader effort curb carbon pollution from power plants.


Obama touted America’s strengths — research, technology and innovation — as factors that make the U.S. uniquely poised to take on the challenges of global warming. He mocked those who deny that humans are contributing to the warming of the planet, adding that he “doesn’t have much patience” for anybody who refuses to acknowledge the problem.


“We don’t have time for a meeting of the flat-earth society,” Obama said.


Obama’s far-reaching plan marks the president’s most prominent effort yet to deliver on a major priority he laid out in his first presidential campaign and recommitted to at the start of his second term: to fight climate change in the U.S. and abroad and prepare American communities for its effects. Environmental activists have been irked that Obama’s high-minded goals never materialized into a comprehensive plan.


By expanding permitting on public lands, Obama hopes to generate enough electricity from renewable energy projects such as wind and solar to power the equivalent of 6 million homes by 2020, effectively doubling the electric capacity federal lands now produce. He also set a goal to install 100 megawatts of energy-producing capacity at federal housing projects by the end of the decade.


Obama also announced $ 8 billion in federal loan guarantees to spur investment in technologies that can keep carbon dioxide produced by power plants from being released into the atmosphere.


But the linchpin of Obama’s plan is the controls on new and existing power plants. Forty percent of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions, and one-third of greenhouse gases overall, come from electric power plants, according to the federal Energy Information Administration. The Obama administration already has proposed controls on new plants, but those controls have been delayed and not yet finalized.


Tuesday’s announcement came just weeks after Obama’s nominee to head the Environmental Protection Agency, Gina McCarthy, assured senators during her confirmation process that the EPA was “not currently” developing any regulations on existing sources of greenhouse gases. McCarthy said if EPA were to look at such regulations, it would allow states, the public and others to “offer meaningful input on potential approaches.”


Republicans quickly dismissed Obama’s plan, calling it a “war on coal” and a “war on jobs,” reflecting the opposition to climate legislation on Capitol Hill that prompted a frustrated Obama to sidestep lawmakers and take action himself.


“It’s tantamount to kicking the ladder out from beneath the feet of many Americans struggling in today’s economy,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said on the floor of the Senate.


Environmental groups offered a mix of praise and wariness that Obama would follow through on the ambitious goals he laid out. Bill Snape of the Center for Biological Diversity described it as too little, too late.


“What he’s proposing isn’t big enough, doesn’t move fast enough, to match the terrifying magnitude of the climate crisis,” Snape said.


Others hailed the plan, galvanized by the fact that Obama was taking action on his own after Congress’ reluctance to tackle the issue using legislation.


“The president nailed it: this can’t wait,” said Frances Beinecke, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council. “We will cut this carbon pollution today so our children don’t inherit climate chaos tomorrow.”


___


Follow Matthew Daly on Twitter: https://twitter.com/MatthewDalyWDC


Follow Josh Lederman on Twitter: https://twitter.com/joshledermanAP


Associated Press




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Obama aims to tackle pollution, climate change

Friday, May 17, 2013

A year after IPO, Facebook aims to be ad colossus







FILE – In this May 18, 2012, file photo, provided by Facebook, Facebook founder, Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, center, rings the opening bell of the Nasdaq stock market, from Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif. Amid the hype and excitement surrounding Facebook’s initial public offering, there were looming doubts. Potential investors wondered whether the social network could continue growing its advertising revenue without alienating users. One year later, much has changed at Facebook in a year, including the addition of mobile advertisements, the launch of a search feature and the unveiling of a branded smartphone. (AP Photo/Nasdaq via Facebook, Zef Nikolla, File)





FILE – In this May 18, 2012, file photo, provided by Facebook, Facebook founder, Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, center, rings the opening bell of the Nasdaq stock market, from Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif. Amid the hype and excitement surrounding Facebook’s initial public offering, there were looming doubts. Potential investors wondered whether the social network could continue growing its advertising revenue without alienating users. One year later, much has changed at Facebook in a year, including the addition of mobile advertisements, the launch of a search feature and the unveiling of a branded smartphone. (AP Photo/Nasdaq via Facebook, Zef Nikolla, File)













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(AP) — It was supposed to be our IPO, the people’s public offering.


Facebook, the brainchild of a young CEO who sauntered into Wall Street meetings in a hoodie, was going to be bigger than Amazon, bigger than McDonald’s, bigger than Coca-Cola. And it was all made possible by our friendships, photos and family ties.


Then came the IPO, and it flopped. Facebook’s stock finished its first day of trading just 23 cents higher than its $ 38 IPO price. It hasn’t been that high since.


Even amid the hype and excitement surrounding Facebook’s May 18 stock market debut a year ago, there were looming doubts. Investors wondered whether the social network could increase advertising revenue without alienating users, especially those using smartphones and tablet computers.


The worries intensified just days before the IPO when General Motors said it would stop paying for advertisements on the site. The symbolic exit cast a shroud over Facebook that still exists. Facebook’s market value is $ 63 billion, some two-thirds of what it was the morning it first began trading. At around $ 27 per share, the company’s stock is down roughly 30 percent from its IPO price. Meanwhile, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index is up 27 percent over the same period.


Despite its disappointing stock market performance, the company has delivered strong financial results. Net income increased 7 percent to $ 219 million in the most recent quarter, compared with the previous year, and revenue was up 38 percent to $ 1.46 billion.


The world’s biggest online social network has also kept growing to 1.1 billion users. Some 665 million people check in every day to share photos, comment on news articles and play games. Millions of people around the world who don’t own a computer use Facebook, in Malawi, Malaysia and Martinique.


And much has changed at Facebook in a year. The company’s executives and engineers have quietly addressed the very doubts that dogged the company for so long. Facebook began showing mobile advertisements for the first time just after the IPO. It launched a search feature in January and unveiled a branded Facebook smartphone in April. The company also introduced ways for advertisers to gauge the effectiveness of their ads.


Even GM has returned as a paying advertiser.


Now, Facebook is looking to its next challenge: convincing big brand-name consumer companies that advertisements on a social network are as important — and as effective — as television spots.


“We aspire to have ads, to show ads that improve the content experience over time,” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told analysts recently. “And if we continue making progress on this, then one day we can get there.”


To achieve those aims, the company has rolled out tools to help advertisers target their messages more precisely than they can in print or on television. Companies can single out 18- to 24-year-old male Facebook users who are likely to buy a car in the next six months. They can target 30-year-old women who are researching Caribbean getaways.


Analytic tools like these weren’t available a year ago. But last fall Facebook hired several companies that collect and analyze data related to people’s online and offline behavior. Facebook’s advertisers can now assess whether a Crest ad you saw on Facebook likely led you to buy of a tube of toothpaste in the drugstore. The services take what Facebook knows about you and what ads you saw and combine this with the information retailers have about you and what you’ve purchased through loyalty cards and the like.


Advertisers are also making use of Facebook’s partnership with audience measurement firm Nielsen Co. Nielsen introduced a tool last fall that helps marketers discover “not only who saw their ad online and who saw their ad on TV, but also how these audiences match up,” says David Wong, vice president at product leadership at Nielsen.


Sean Bruich, Facebook’s head of measurement platforms and standards, believes the new tools are paying off.


“What we can see conclusively a year after the IPO is that ads on Facebook really do help drive people into the store and help them make purchasing decisions, help influence their purchasing decisions,” he says.


A recent Nielsen analysis found that consumers are 55 percent more likely to recall “social ads” than traditional online ads.


So powerful is Facebook’s new analytic arsenal that privacy advocates are growing concerned about the potential intrusiveness of merging consumers’ online and offline experiences.


People “are getting served ads based on things they didn’t put on Facebook and maybe wouldn’t be comfortable putting on Facebook,” says Rainey Reitman, activism director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit civil-liberties firm. Facebook says mechanisms are in place to protect privacy.


“We’ve never had anything like Facebook,” Reitman says. “We’ve never had an entity that was able to collect so much information on so much of the world’s population, ever.”


Advertisers aren’t complaining.


“Anywhere that more than a billion people spend time with their friends each month is extremely valuable to us,” says Brad Ruffkess, connection strategist at Coca-Cola.


At Procter and Gamble, the world’s biggest advertiser, “we saw almost from the start that social media is the world’s largest focus group,” says Marc Pritchard, the company’s global brand building officer.


Both companies are important advertisers on Facebook and members of the company’s client council, a group of more than a dozen brands and ad agencies that have met regularly with Facebook executives since 2011 to talk about advertising and marketing on the site. Other members include Unilever, AT&T, Walmart and GroupM North America, a subsidiary of advertising agency giant WPP.


Still, some advertisers remain skeptical. Ryan Holiday, director of marketing at American Apparel, is critical of Facebook’s “sponsored stories.” These are messages from marketers that are interwoven into users’ news feeds. He says the clothing company spends less than 10 percent of its online advertising budget with Facebook.


One thing is increasingly clear: The future belongs to mobile advertising. And just a year ago, Facebook warned investors it was behind in capturing this market. In response, Facebook retrained engineers and rebuilt its mobile applications, which users complained were clunky. Now, there’s an explosion in the number of ads shoehorned in between status updates and cat photos.


“The transition to mobile happened even faster than we believed,” says Carolyn Everson, vice president of global marketing solutions at Facebook.


In the first three months of 2013, Facebook generated $ 375 million in revenue from mobile ads, about 30 percent of its total ad revenue. That’s impressive given that Facebook had no mobile ads at all just a year ago.


And there’s room to grow. Research firm eMarketer estimates that U.S. mobile advertising spending will grow to $ 7.29 billion this year, up fivefold from 2011. Facebook is expected to capture some 13 percent of the market, a distant second behind Google at nearly 55 percent, according to eMarketer. By 2015, the mobile ad market is expected to hit $ 16.2 billion.


Facebook’s stronger grasp of mobile advertising helped get General Motors back.


“Mobile was something GM was particularly passionate about,” says Everson, who joined Facebook two years ago from Microsoft Corp., where she headed global ad sales.


Everson says she sees Facebook as a future advertising empire. The goal is to help companies achieve so-called cross-platform marketing and target people with ads wherever they might be — in front of smartphones, tablets or TV sets.


“A lot of people might argue that TV is the first screen and mobile is the companion screen,” she says. Her take: Mobile is now the first screen. And Facebook’s hope is that advertisers will soon see it this way, too.


“Your customer is walking around with the most personal device they’ve ever had every single day, checking it 12 to, you know, more than 24 times a day depending on the market,” Everson says. “This is a mass medium.”


At the end of last year, 87 percent of Americans owned a cellphone and nearly half owned a smartphone, according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project. Worldwide, research firm Gartner puts the size of the mobile phone market at 4.4 billion, enough to give one phone to nearly two-thirds of the world’s population.


Of course, television still accounts for the biggest slice of worldwide ad spending, and nearly 96 percent of American households own a TV set. ZenithOptimedia, a forecaster owned by the ad agency Publicis Groupe SA, says television accounted for 40 percent of worldwide ad spending, compared with the Internet’s share of 18 percent. By 2015, the Internet is expected to grow its share to more than 23 percent, but largely at the expense of newspapers and magazines. TV is expected to hold steady.


“On any given day in the U.S. alone, you can reach 100 million people on mobile,” Everson says. “Those numbers are not seen across any TV or print opportunity. I think it’s going to take hold, this message.”


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Find Barbara Ortutay on Twitter at https://twitter.com/BarbaraOrtutay


Associated Press




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