The Oslo-based software company clarified its position on tomfoolery, gimcrackery, shenanigans, mischief, mayhem, but not hijinks.
Opera Software ASA, makers of the best browser in this, or indeed any, universe, today revealed the results of a five month process to determine this year’s April Fool’s joke. After considerable competitive analysis, structural synthesis, skilled observation, educated prognostication and blind luck, the management along with Opera’s Corporate Relations and Prevarication department determined there will be no April Fool’s joke for FY07.
Google’s Policy on No follow and Reviews
I’m not exactly sure what caused all this secondary fuss about no-follow and reviews lately but I think it’s time someone pointed out that Google is being extremely hypocritical about the entire thing and using fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD) to corral web publishers to their way of thinking.
Roundup: Digg Spam Policy
I wasn’t sure about posting about getting the nix from digg earlier this week, but apparently it was on many people’s minds.
Web 2.0 Policy Lacking in Communication Departments
The Peppercom and Bulldog Reporter Business Blogging Survey conducted on 1,200 marketing industry executives from the United States and United Kingdom, revealed some startling disconnects in corporate communication policy on both sides of the pond…
Web 2.0 Policy Lacking in Corporate Communication
PR left holding the baby when things go wrong.
Rocketboom’s Ad Policy Returns Power To People
Andrew Baron of Rocketboom fame may have sealed his position as an advertising visionary. His approach, detailed during a keynote address at the Podcast and Portable Media Expo, had everyone buzzing. A $20,000 discount for likeable commercials? Disney should shoot for an audience of 10,000?
Business Management: Honesty as a Policy
Business people often have a blind spot when examining their own companies.
Blue Hen Breaks Facebook Policy
Users of the popular Facebook college and high school networking site may not create accounts under fake names, and a reporter with the University of Delaware Review caught one school administration staffer doing just that.
Blogger Says There Is No Search Box Policy
Blogger Buzz has posted that the story from late last week, where a BlogSpot user said he was told to remove the MSN Search box from his blog, never happened.
Microsoft Revamps Blog Removal Policy
The company announced a new “policy framework” concerning the removal of blogs from its MSN Spaces services when requested to do so by a government.