Posted on Wednesday 29 November 2006
Below is the final installment of our FTC staffer’s report from the Web 2.0 Conference in San Francisco. Feel free to comment on this entry!
The third day of the Web 2.0 summit emphasized the Internet’s role in facilitating social interaction. The focus will be providing consumers with the tools needed to interact and share information easily, whether through social networking websites, video and music sharing platforms, news stories, or email. Also, speed is paramount to Internet users, even if it means less information. Marissa Mayer of Google discussed research showing that speed correlates with increased use of Google’s services. Google therefore provides information to users in small, fast interactions. She predicts that the “need for speed” will drive innovations in browser support and mobile.
Another focus is “harnessing the collective intelligence” of consumers using Web 2.0 services. For example, when increases in spam occur, some web sites tap into the experiences of their users to identify spam and protect against it.
Sun Microsystems is exploring how digital rights management (DRM) technologies can benefit consumers, not just business. It is developing ways in which consumers can use DRM to protect their information. For example, a consumer could use DRM to restrict access to her health information.
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