Archive for April, 2008

Wouldn’t you like to be able to work just sitting on the beach?

Friday, April 11th, 2008

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Let’s face it, many people would love a job where they could sit out on the beach and claim that they were working.

Whilst it’s clearly not an option for everyone, there’s getting to be quite a growth in information jobs which would let you do exactly that. Well, in principle anyway: as always, it’s rarely so simple as it might appear.

If you consider the very popular route of blogging, you’ll find that the vast majority of blogs don’t make any sizeable amount of money. Why? Well, the normal route of using adsense doesn’t work particularly well with sites with dynamic content as it usually takes adsense a couple of days to get the keyword targeting right by which time your blog will have moved on and a different set of keywords would be relevant. Secondly, you need major traffic or very well targeted traffic for affiliate schemes to work.

However, there is the option of doing sponsored posts which can be profitable even with relatively low traffic volumes. Typically you can make around $20 per day on a site with PR2 or above by writing three or four articles each day of, usually, 50 to 200 words each. If your blog gets to PR5 or over you can do really well with this option.

Other potential options are selling e-books or charging for subscriptions which are popular with some making money online blogs. There’s even SubHub which might eventually evolve into a worthwhile venture for the participants although at the moment it’s mainly an article repository for Internet business articles with a sideline in running up and hosting custom blog templates (at a rather exorbitant price).

Naturally, you don’t need to choose one single route to making money online. Personally, I do sponsored posts on blogs (not, so far, on this one) and also have a range of adsense funded sites with subscription options.

Popularity: 30% [?]

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Copyright © 2008 by Arnold Stewart. All rights reserved.

Where did our personal privacy go?

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

Oh, you thought that you had some personal privacy? Sorry, it seems that you’re wrong and that you ARE being watched.

For example, if you’ve found this post by searching with google then they’ll have recorded that search against your name if you were logged in with your google account. If you’ve found it via StumbleUpon then they’ll have recorded that too. Both are “to enhance your browsing experience” or words to that effect but they certainly remove any privacy that you thought you might have in your Internet browsing.

If you’ve you’ve been using the Internet for a while no doubt you’ve commented on some forums or blogs by now. All those comments are available to everyone. Oh, you used a false name, did you? No good because the software will have recorded the IP address from which you made the comment and that can be linked to you. Ah, but your ISP allocates random IP addresses every time you login so you’re OK. Well, no, because the ISP records who gets what IP address so, yes, that comment could be linked to you.

Still, at least your e-mails are private. Not really. The Internet is structured as a network of linked computers so every e-mail you send will have gone through a series of computers to reach its destination and every one of those computers could easily record the contents and who sent it.

It seems like we’ve finally got the surveillance of 1984 and all we’re missing (in most of the world) is the totalitarian regime. Still, perhaps if we wait a few years we’ll have the complete set.

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Copyright © 2008 by Arnold Stewart. All rights reserved.

Should the Beijing olympics be held?

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

That’s a good question and one to which there’s no answer that’s clearly the right one.

Firstly, it’s very obvious that China is very far from the ideals of a free society that we take for granted in the western world.

To ensure that the games will go off well, the authorities are rounding up any dissidents that might cause even the slightest bit of trouble. The latest, Hu Jia, will be spending the next three and a half years in jail for “inciting subversion of state power”. What did he do to deserve that? Well, he posted five blog entries and was interviewed by two journalists. Isn’t it scary to think that you could be jailed just for writing a blog that criticised the government? That’s something that hundreds if not thousands of blogs do every day.

Should we be doing anything then that will surely be portrayed by the Chinese government as supporting their regime? Make no mistake about it, in the Chinese media it will be put over that foreign governments are supporting the regime even if it does take a lot of editing to prove it.

On the other hand, consider the amount of publicity that the regime in China is getting, pretty much all of it bad. Many people wouldn’t be aware of the issues in China today had it not been for the publicity that the games have generated.

In practical terms, I’m sure that it’ll all be ignored by the Chinese authorities. Well, perhaps not ignored: one wonders how many times they have tried to have the overseas protestors rounded up too. However, it’s unlikely to make any difference to what they do because in reality they just don’t care what the rest of the world thinks.

But they’re wrong. How many trips to China have already been cancelled? How many business details not made with the country? That’s what does make a difference.

Short term, I’m sure that we shouldn’t be supporting the regime yet long term the publicity that the event is generating can only be to the good. It’s a shame that little of that negative publicity will reach into the country (this will be yet another blog that they’ll be getting google.cn to ban, of course).

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Copyright © 2008 by Arnold Stewart. All rights reserved.