Tag Archive: communication


Google is being targeted by lawsuits and governments around the world with potential privacy invasions, so perhaps it wasn’t the best choice of words when Google CEO Eric Schmidt told the Mobile World Congress in a keynote address a few days ago: “We can literally know everything if we want to.”

Schmidt was absolutely right in what he had to say. The amount of information available about people is mind-boggling, particularly when people use social networking sites to post information about themselves. Just consider the site Please Rob Me. It scans Twitter streams for people who say they are not at home, and then publishes that information on the site. Why does the site do it? To let people know just how dangerous it is to publicly post information about themselves that is best left private.

Google has the capability to scan not just Twitter streams, but information from all social networks, and combine that with your search history, and information about you on the Internet. So Schmidt was not guilty of overkill when he spoke to the Mobile World Conference.

I don’t think Google quite yet understands just how dangerous many people think its power to invade people’s privacy is. But eventually, prodded by governments, I think they’ll get it.

 

Wow, check that out. What do you think about this “Please Rob Me” site?

It’s true, not only can you find out a lot about a person, with social media you can know things about them in real time. The other idea that is still difficult for me to comprehend the implications of is that information on the internet never dies – it can always be pulled up.

Whether we are conscious of it or not, we are always changing the things we want people to know about us and things we don’t. The internet puts a quick stop to that because once a thought or opinion is published, it’s on the record.

This doesn’t mean we should all get scared and run away from new technologies. We should embrace them with the implications in mind.

Posted via web from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

I've been running a business for 19 years.  When I started it off, progress was slow…most of my time was spent researching my market and learning about how things work.  10 years into the business, things started picking up, and 4 years later, it just took off.  Suddenly everyone wanted to do business with us!  Our turnover was great and in a matter of time, angel investors came knocking on our door.  This is the story of Me, Incorporated.

I say "we" and "us" because luckily I wasn't running this business alone.  Right before Me Inc. started, two people had done some other business, and became the Executive Vice Presidents of this one (ie. my parents).  Out of all of the things in the world, when it comes to making decisions about my life, my EVPs are my most valuable resource.

So as things in the business world go, so they do in my life as well.  When decisions need to be made, executives gather in the boardroom.  When my life decisions need to be made, my parents and I (and sometimes my sister, when she isn't busy becoming a doctor), gather in the family car.  That's right, the family car.  We go on a drive, flick the switch on in our minds, and talk about whatever is on my mind and discuss the path I should take moving forward.  I swear this is the secret of whatever little success I have had to date.

Today we did exactly the same thing.  With my own second year Medical exams in precisely one week, I decided it was time to plan the next 5 years of my life.  Call me insane, but hey, I love myself.  We went to our signature Tim Horton's coffee shop, and I started on my rant of ambitions I have and things I want to do in my life.  My parents helped me sieve through my thoughts and extract the ideas that would give me the most fulfillment and also still keep me on track to become a doctor.  (They have a tough job, because sometimes I'm very impractical, and decide I want to deliver youth leadership seminars around the world.  "You're on a demanding course, and Vaibhav, if you want to become a doctor, you have to focus on your studies!", they say.)  I decide to listen to them because I love medicine, I love my course, and I do want to succeed in it!

So the message here is, sometimes we must think of ourselves as a business.  Not in the way where our main goal is to make money, but in the sense that we must bring business efficiency into our life.  Just as business people hold meetings to discuss ideas and make decisions, sometimes we have to hold meetings for ourselves.  It is very helpful to have around you people who only think about your best interest, and help you decide the course of your life.

Try this concept and you'll see the result yourself.  I came out of the meeting feeling more assured about the direction I am heading in.  One of the outcomes of this meeting was keeping up my posts.  I have prioritized writing on this page because it gives me a chance to share some of my views, and maybe one of you will benefit from that!  Now I must balance my other priority – succeeding in school – by ending this post and going back to my books!!

Expect a post tomorrow (make that later today!) because I will make time for you, but wish me luck in my studying…there is so much to cover and my first exam is next Wednesday!

Posted via email from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

Read any newspaper article about Twitter and it won’t end without touching on the topic of how many followers one has. In fact, CNN and Ashton Kutcher had a competition with the sole purpose of amassing the most number of Twitter fans. Granted every person has the desire to feel valued, popular, and liked, but does that mean we should start cutting deals to get followers?

Allow me to digress for a second. This is comparable to counting the number of friends we have on Facebook or entries in our contacts. Is the point to hit the high score or have valuable connections that you can have a give and take relationship with?

I recently had someone tweet to me, “follow me and I’ll follow you back.” I was like…what? I checked his page out because maybe he had content he thought was relevant to me, but no…this was just someone trying to get more followers, and had written a similar message to many other users. Surprisingly (or maybe not), some 50-odd people liked the idea!

Why am I shocked? Saying “follow me” makes sense because you are just promoting yourself and your feed. But offering to reciprocate as incentive is just wrong! What is the point of human interaction? To share things we value; in this case, to read a feed that means something to us. And we follow someone to satisfy exactly that need.

Accepting the deal I was offered would be gaining a material entity. I don’t care purely about my number of followers! I care about all the people who find meaning in my tweets. If people followed me (@vgupta11) and didn’t care about my content, I would be wasting my time!

My message back to this person is…write some good things, share some good links, and you’ll get followers that will stay. Won’t get ‘em by cutting deals, innit?

On that note, find me on Twitter and follow me if you like what you read. I’ll follow any feed that is valuable to me :)
Vaibhav Gupta | Sent with my BlackBerry

Posted via email from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

blackberry
A couple points about the last post I made on here…

NotJustTheFuture.com reader Noor asked, what exactly is a BlackBerry and what are its benefits? View Full Article »

Switching from a standard mobile to a smartphone isn’t a small change.  It’s actually like a giant leap for mankind (or for the person who made said transition).

I recently bought my sister a Blackberry knowing its functional advantages, but I don’t think I appreciated what profound change it could bring in terms of our connectivity.  Before I could reach my sister most of the time, at the most waiting for a couple hours (if she’s on another continent away from her computer, which she often is!).  Now I can literally contact her 24 hours a day.

She can be on the train – I can message her.  On the plane just before it leaves – she can message me.  Best feature: I can get the scoop on the best deals at duty-free and pick out what I want her to bring me back when she comes home!

Now the exciting big: I bought myself a Blackberry a few weeks later!!  It will arrive tomorrow, and I’m waiting for it to change my life :D Expect more posts about this topic because I’m sure to comment on the positive changes it has brought to my life, the way it has AMAZED me, but also the drawbacks that such powerful connectivity brings.

The Age of the Blackberry has finally dawned on me.

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