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Posts Tagged ‘social media’

Ever bought something on the strength of an Amazon review? Be wary of Vine…

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

I haven’t bought a book or piece of software for years without reading about it in the Amazon reviews. Many people must be the same. But recently I’ve noticed that “Amazon Vine” reviews have appeared that violate a fundamental strength of the social web – unbiased, unincentivised, honest feedback.

Here’s what Amazon themselves say about Amazon Vine:

“Amazon Vine™ is a programme that enables a select group of Amazon customers to post opinions about new and pre-release items to help their fellow customers make educated purchase decisions. Customers are invited to become Vine Voices based on the trust they have earned in the Amazon community for writing accurate and insightful reviews. Amazon provides Vine members with free copies of products that have been submitted to the programme by publishers or manufacturers. Amazon does not influence the opinions of Vine members.”

Why Amazon Vine is a bad idea
If you are given a free copy of something to review, you may feel obliged to give it a favourable review. Amazon counter with the fact that only trusted reviewers reach this status, and that’s fair enough – except of course, to quote Lord Acton: ”Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”

But who’s most disappointing is that on the product I was viewing (an accounts package), a decent proportion of reviews were from the Amazon Vine source. They ranged from thinly disguised rehashes of the back of the box features list to short, superficial reviews from people who do this for a living. The only negative review from this source said “I couldn’t get it to work” (well you wouldn’t try very hard if it was free, would you?).

I know all about this, as I used to do the same thing years ago reviewing books and records for a local newspaper, and I can recognise a review knocked up in 10 minutes from a mile away.

Amazon Vine is well intentioned but ultimately fails
So while this scheme is obviously designed to help publishers, software house etc shift units, could generate reviews for niche items where formerly there were none, and is well intentioned insofar as it attempts to only allow reviewers with some integrity to write these reviews, for me the Amazon reviews just got a lot less useful. I wish you could filter out these new semi-paid-for reviews as the ring of authenticity is not there. Amazon vine represents an unfortunate turn for the worse.

By Phil Morse

Confession: Just added my first ever post to YouTube

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

Just added my first ever post to YouTube. Got to keep your head down in a web design and internet marketing agency with a confession like that, buy hey, I’ve always had people around me to do this kind of thing, I’m not a video person, if you ask me to remember pop songs from 20 years ago I normally can easily, but remember the video, it ain’t going to happen blah blah…

Point is, I did it. And like much “social media”, turns out getting stuck in is the best way to learn. Explaining Twitter, Facebook etc to non-believers is kind of hard, but once they fall, they fall like dominoes.  Like analysing comedy instead of just repeating good jokes, explaining social media is a little beside the point – social media is by definition something you do. It just isn’t social otherwise and often doesn’t make a whole lot of sense.

So, I wanted to show a friend a video clip from a TV show. Now as YouTube point out, you, erm, can’t do this. It’s copyrighted material. Try telling that to the 15-24 year old population of the world with broadband internet, I thought! So ignoring that one, I downloaded a bit of editing software from the web (Googled it and went for the #1 option – which wants me to pay for it after 21 days, so looks like I’ll be finding another choice soon), chopped out my chunk of video (bit fiddly, but only took 10 mins) and joined up.

A couple of clicks and a 5-minute wait later, and my clip (of some good old God-fearing Northern English humour from a favourite TV show) was proudly on YouTube for all to see. I emailed a link to my friend (email? Well, I am still a bit of a heathen) and presto! Done.

I now feel closer to my friend and to the TV show I promoted. Gotta love social media. Next stop, work out how to use the video feature on my phone and do some original stuff. I am now officially no longer a YouTube virgin.

(By the way, top marks if you´re clever enough to find out what I posted, it’s not exactly appropriate for here…)

Phil Morse