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theEweekly wrap: Takeovers, tracking and movie streaming

Movies on YouTubeYouTube is set to launch a film rental service, allowing users to stream movies from just £1.20. Starting in May, the video site will feature on-demand blockbusters produced by three major studios: Sony, Universal and Warner Brothers. The latter has also recently signed a deal enabling users to stream movies on Facebook, directly from the film's official fan page, for around £1.85.


Earlier this month, it was revealed that Google was to invest over £60 million in producing original YouTube content, as part of a drive to monetise the site's success. Google purchased YouTube for $1.65 billion (£990 million) in 2006 from founders Steve Chen and Chad Hurley; this week, the pair acquired social bookmarking site Delicious, reportedly intending to merge it with their own service, Avos.


Where am i?Since reports first emerged last week of Apple's iPhone tracking user locations, the company has decided to come clean. They protested that the file was "not tracking the location of your iPhone", but is being used to create "a database of Wi-Fi hotspots and cell towers around your current location". This crowd-sourced database is apparently quicker at finding a location than simple GPS.


Steve Jobs responded to the revelations by saying "we don't track anyone", but claimed Google do. In fact, a study in October 2010 showed that two thirds of Android apps track user locations. An Apple Q&A on the subject revealed the company is collecting locations for two purposes: an "improved traffic service" they are working on, and targeting for iAds.


The empire expandsRupert Murdoch's News Corp empire – comprising publications ranging from the Times to the Daily – is set to become even bigger. The company hopes to take over the 61 per cent of BSkyB that it does not already hold, making it the outright owner. News Corp's bid was 700p per share, but following BSKyB's strong growth in Q1 2011, Murdoch is under pressure to improve the offer.


The deal has to be given final approval by Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt. It was thought the deal would go ahead last month, but now Sheila Gilmore MP has raised questions over whether it should be put on hold while the News of the World phone hacking allegations are still being investigated. Hunt responded in the Commons: "The public must have confidence that in a free press, the press uses that freedom responsibly."

theEweekly Wrap: Weddings, unions, and ads meet previews

Let's ElopThe long-awaited mobile deal between Nokia and Microsoft was finalised this week, with Nokia CEO Stephen Elop reporting, "our product design and engineering work is well under way". Nokia handsets using the Windows Mobile 7 OS will be available in late 2011 or early 2012. Of course, the new relationship is not exclusive – Nokia will continue to make handsets using the Symbian and MeeGo platforms – but it will cut the company's costs by an estimated €1 billion per year.


Shares in the company rose three per cent following the announcement. However, despite financial results for Q1 2011 being better than expected, Nokia's year-on-year profits have fallen by ten per cent according to Marketing Magazine. The manufacturer also suffered a drop in mobile market share, taking it to 29 per cent – the first time in a decade it has been below 30 per cent.


Try before you buyGoogle has begun testing a preview button on PPC advertising. Similar to the organic search results preview button unveiled in November, the ad preview can be seen by clicking the magnifying glass icon on ads. The landing page is then shows in miniature, so users can ascertain whether it is worth visiting the site.


While previews on natural and mobile search results were only beneficial to the user – saving them time – this latest innovation may positively impact businesses and advertisers. As the preview does not count as a click, the number of non-converting clicks should go down. In theory, this would reduce CTR but increase the overall conversion rate, with the result that overall campaign costs would go down. If, of course, anybody actually uses the preview button.


Real-time royaltyThe public will be able to track the royal wedding on April 29th through various social media platforms. The official @ClarenceHouse feed will be tweeting in real time using the hashtag #rw2011, while images of the big day will be uploaded to Flickr. Meanwhile, viewers around the world will be able to view the BBC's live coverage as it happens, or any time afterwards, on the official royal YouTube channel.


YouTube said: "Google search trends show that in addition to the UK and the US, the top ten countries searching for 'royal wedding' include places like Singapore and the Philippines. In response, we've been working to make as much of the big day as possible accessible to everyone."

Sorry seems to be the hardest tweet

Twitter XI

Some of the most controversial footballers have been venting their over-paid spleens for some time now. This spring, the tweeting has hit fever pitch among the football Twitterati, which includes Carlton Cole, Michael Owen, Rio Ferdinand and Cesc Fabregas.

@cesc4official used his Twitter account to state that an article printed recently misquoted and twisted his words about Arsenal's aims for the future.

@Kevindaviesbwfc is more innocuous in his tweets than he is with his tackling. He apologised publicly on Twitter for his team's performance in the FA Cup semi final against Stoke where Bolton were thrashed 5-0. In the other semi final, @rioferdy5 apologised for losing his temper after Manchester United's loss to City at Wembley, when Mario Balotelli celebrated by showing the Man City badge towards United supporters after the final whistle. This makes a pleasant change from the usual inane banter he has with @RobbieSavage8 who is on Twitter more than he is on the pitch these days.

Moving on from that defeat, @themichaelowen expressed his disappointment at Newcastle United fans for booing him on his return to St James' Park. This followed congratulating Jack Wilshere on his Young Player of the Year award by spelling his name wrong with a rogue T in the middle. @jack_wilshere himself took to his Twitter account to announce the birth of his first child and said he would support it even though he is no longer with the mother.

Tweeting generalisation

@Carlton9Cole made jokey, yet inappropriate, remarks regarding immigration following the England-Ghana game and has since taken back his barbed comment, again on Twitter, and offered to donate his £20,000 fine to a Ghanaian children's charity.

Rangers forward El-Hadji Diouf doesn't have an official Twitter account but he's never far away from controversy and his latest comment, which has been heavily retweeted, is that he feels sorry for Colonel Gadaffi. The Senegal striker said: "Gaddafi is a man I have always admired. I am telling the truth. I know him, and I know his son Saif well. They are my friends." He added: "I do not honestly know what is really happening in Libya at the moment but it must be very hard for Gaddafi and his family."

Cole, who is usually more media-savvy than Diouf, commented about the large number of Ghana fans at Wembley for the friendly international. He tweeted: "Immigration has surrounded the Wembley premises! I knew it was a trap! Hahahaha." He continued: "The only way to get out safely is to wear an England jersey and paint your face w/ the St. George's flag!"

Cole's fine is twice that handed to @RyanBabel, who while at Liverpool earlier this year posted a mocked-up picture of referee Howard Webb wearing a Manchester United shirt following their defeat at Old Trafford.

PFA wary of social media

Following the verdict on Cole, the PFA's deputy chief executive Bobby Barnes urged his members to take care when using social networking sites. He stated on the PFA's website: "This case, along with the recent Ryan Babel case, highlights the need for players to be vigilant when using social media. It is ironic that at a time when players are accused of being distant and out of touch with supporters that attempts to communicate can bear such potential sanctions. The PFA holds the view that whilst the use of social media, such as Twitter and Facebook, can be useful and an inevitable communication vehicle in these times, clear guidelines need to be applied. We would advise players not to stop tweeting but to bear in mind that this is not an intimate private conversation but a medium open to a potentially wide audience."

Earlier this year, Darren Bent received death threats via his Twitter account @DBTT39 following his big £24million move from Sunderland to Aston Villa and more recently, @AaronLennonpsl (Spurs)– dismissed Harry Redknapp's claim that he rested the player because he was unwell before the ill-fated 1st leg against Real Madrid.

So, who on Twitter could manage this unruly bunch? Maybe it could be the fictional @TheBig_Sam. Sometimes, however, fact is stranger than fiction and reporting pundit @chris_kammy is such a likeable character with such a lack of self awareness that his comments couldn't be made up. Twitter needs people like him - perhaps more than he needs it himself.

theEweekly Wrap: Streaming, sales and Panda Power

SpendifyMusic streaming service Spotify has announced in an official blog post that services for non-paying users are to be reduced. Once loved and celebrated as a place to listen to new music for free, this will now only be unlimited for the first six months.


From 1 May 2011, users with accounts more than six months old will be able to listen to just 10 hours free per month, and can only listen to each track five times. Spotify claimed this would not affect most users, and that the changes were essential in order to continue providing a free on-demand service. The paid options, Unlimited and Premium, will remain unchanged, and will be offered to users as a short free trial. Spotify reached one million paying subscribers in March.


Panda powerGoogle's Panda algorithm update was unleashed on the UK this week, with some sitemasters already reporting its impact on their search results rankings. The update was intended to damage the ranking of content farms: sites that simply copy or gather content from other sites, and sites full of low-quality content aimed at search engines and littered with ads. In theory, this would enable sites with high-quality original content to overtake them.


According to stats in a Searchmetrics blog, original news sites including the Mirror, the Independent, TechCrunch, Mashable and Metro have all seen large improvements. Other winners include eBay (+42 per cent) and the Google-owned YouTube (+18 per cent). Meanwhile, the algorithm change has resulted in severe ranking drops for tech news sites, several voucher code sites, and Ciao.co.uk (-94 per cent) – a Microsoft-owned price comparison site.


PCs plodSales of PCs are on the decline, according to statistics from US technology research firm Gartner. Worldwide, 84.3 million units were sold in the first quarter of 2011; however, this translates to a one per cent decline on the same period in 2010. In terms of individual companies, Acer saw a 12 per cent drop, while Chinese company Lenovo gained 16 per cent on Q1 2010.


Gartner blamed the decline in PC sales on several factors. In India, consumers spent their money on televisions in preparation for the Cricket World Cup. In Japan, the earthquake and tsunami were cited as reasons for slow sales. Latin America, home to Brazil's emerging economy, actually saw growth this quarter. However, in the US and Western Europe, Gartner believes consumers were preoccupied by cutting-edge devices such as media tablets; indeed, both continents were buzzing with the iPad 2 launch hype last month.

How the voluntary sector can use social media (with examples)


The voluntary sector is always starved of funds. Unfortunately, it costs hundreds of pounds to design and print even the most basic posters and flyers and, if you're thinking of running billboard campaigns or broadcast ads, publicity costs can easily spiral into the tens of thousands. Since many small voluntary sector organisations rely on unpredictable sources of income like grants and donations to make ends meet, this is clearly out of reach.

Publicity on a shoestring

For the last 15 months, I've experienced the consequences of this tight budgeting first-hand. As the press and publicity officer at Green Chorlton, a volunteer-run group that organises events such as Chorlton's Big Green Festival 2011, I've had to raise awareness of our activities on a shoestring. This year, we managed to print a few thousand flyers and a few dozen posters to promote the festival but then our publicity budget maxed out.

Thankfully, social media is free – Twitter, Facebook, Flickr and YouTube allow us to promote our activities without spending a penny. In this article, I will suggest ways in which you can use social media marketing to your advantage, along with real-world examples to help you get started:

Twitter

  • Tweet news from your organisation, event invitations and even requests for help

  • Follow relevant people using Twitter Search, such as those who live nearby and those following similar organisations

  • Retweet posts from appropriate organisations, for example other voluntary groups and local businesses

  • Create Twitter lists for members of your organisation and useful Twitter accounts

  • Invent hashtags for key events and encourage Twitter users to include them on their tweets


Twitter example

On the official Chorlton's Big Green Festival Twitter account @biggreenfest, we've begun using hashtags for the first time.

Local news stories are now followed by #Chorlton and our interactive Twitter game is centred on the hashtag #14DaysOfChorlton. We also launched an official Chorlton's Big Green Festival hashtag, #CBGF, followed immediately by a tweet for new Twitter users explaining how hashtags work.

Facebook

  • Create a group for your organisation (better than a page because you can message all members directly)

  • Message members to promote key activities but don't post more than once a fortnight to avoid information overload

  • Create individual event pages for each of your events

  • Invite friends and family members to join pages first to create a groundswell of support

  • Upload an event poster to Facebook and ask people to tag themselves and set it as their profile picture, so you get free publicity whenever they update their status


Facebook example

Not only is there the official Chorlton's Big Green Festival Facebook group, there are also event pages for each of our main activities.

So the What Next? Forum - Going Through the Roof Facebook page gives users an idea of what to expect on the night and a wall to post messages. They can also indicate whether they plan to attend and, doing the hard work for you, invite friends to come along.

Flickr

  • Add all your posters, flyers and event photos to an official Flickr photostream

  • Use free photo editing software to show your photos in the best possible light (a good choice for beginners is Picasa with its one-click 'I'm Feeling Lucky' auto-correct button)

  • Enter a title, tags and/or a description for each image and include keywords so they can be found in searches on Flickr and Google Images

  • Separate photos into Flickr sets, either for individual events or time periods

  • Encourage different people within your organisation to take photos but upload them yourself to maintain consistency


Flickr example

The Chorlton's Big Green Festival Flickr photostream features a mix of posters, flyers and event photos.

A day after our Beauty and the Bike fringe film night, for instance, we uploaded the top five photos taken at the event. Each one has a searchable title (Beauty and the Bike 1-5) and each has been placed in the 2011 set to make them easier to find.

YouTube

  • Create an official YouTube channel and include details such as the logo, profile and website of your organisation

  • Buy a cheap handheld recording device to record footage on the move

  • Use free video editing software like Windows Live Movie Maker to enhance your videos and create slideshows

  • If other members of your organisation have uploaded relevant videos, favourite them from the official account

  • Arrange your videos to ensure the most valuable footage appears on the channel's homepage


YouTube example

The GreenChorlton YouTube channel contains teaser interviews with volunteers and event footage to show prospective visitors what to expect.

There are also some more creative ideas. After obtaining an mp3 of a recent radio interview, for example, we added photos on Windows Live Movie Maker to create a slideshow and called it the 'Chorlton's Big Green Festival 2011 preview'.

Conclusion

Social media has completely changed how voluntary organisations promote their activities. Money is no longer the barrier it once was. So if you want to publicise your organisation but lack the necessary funds, why not take advantage of the free social media marketing opportunities on Twitter, Facebook, Flickr and YouTube?

Chorlton's Big Green Festival starts at 11am on Saturday, 16 April 2011. There are events right through to 11pm, including the Green Chorlton Ceilidh and the Chorlton's Big Green Festival After-Party. Meanwhile, the What Next? Forum – Going Through the Roof takes place at 7pm on Thursday, 14 April and the interactive Twitter game 14 Days of Chorlton continues until midnight on Saturday. For more information, go to the Green Chorlton website or look on Twitter, Facebook, Flickr and YouTube.

Richard Frost

Tweet Gig: Stand-up comedy embraces Twitter

Working the Twittersphere

Using social networking to sell a product is an avenue which has been fully exploited since Facebook came to prominence. Hundreds of multinational companies now use the site to keep consumers in the loop, often inundating inboxes and home page feeds with news on costs, features and release dates. The introduction of Twitter naturally had a similar effect, albeit in a much more streamlined way. Celebrities are now just a click away, for better or worse, and this gives both consumer and product an immediacy previously unattainable.

For a stand-up comedian, however, the micro-blogging service can offer a deluge of options not just in marketing and promotion, but also in the development and refinement of an act. Comedians are now using Twitter to establish stage persona and even trial jokes, using reactions and retweets during the day to judge the strength of a gag, then trying it out before a live audience that night.

Follow funnies

Gary Delaney


Gary Delaney (@garydelaney) is a well-respected one-liner comic with television writing work to his name, and has tweeted quips to his impressive 20,000 readership as one way of judging a joke's worth before taking them to the stage. He says: "One big advantage of Twitter is the instant feedback you can get on a joke; you can go from initial idea, to wording, and posting the joke, to watching it get RT'd (or not) all within two or three minutes. Shutting myself away in my office with a blank piece of paper to come up with ideas to test at a later date never seems quite as appealing in comparison."

Before Twitter, it was common for comedians to set up a website or mailing list to help get their name out there. While an online presence is useful, it usually only preaches to the converted. With Twitter, the middle man is cut out. Indeed, Delaney credits the tool with helping him build a strong fanbase and attract people to his shows – something he believes wasn't possible from the standard mailing list or website approach.

"Twitter has always had one big advantage for me, namely the convention that when someone retweets a joke they credit the original author. Thus people will end up following you because they like your jokes and then maybe come and see you live. With Facebook, mailing lists etc people will only join up if they have already seen you live. This is very handy if, like me, you're a good joke writer but with minimal TV/radio exposure, because you can reach your potential audience direct."

Dying online

However, Delaney freely admits that he has become a victim of his own Twitter success. Last year, television star Keith Chegwin was taken to task by a number of stand-ups after stealing jokes they had previously written and tweeted.

"As the number of people on Twitter increases," he says, "idiots start cutting and pasting jokes they like instead. There are lots of accounts who just take other people's jokes and retweet them as if they were their own. This may represent the moment when Twitter jumped the shark and its value to comics started to decline."

Now Delaney subscribes to the belief that Twitter is best used for marketing and building a fanbase rather than a straightforward gag tester, going as far as to attribute a quarter of the ticket sales for his Edinburgh Festival show to the service. But that doesn't mean that his account is joke-free, far from it; Delaney now sees the value in posting 'exclusives' that won't see the light of day on stage. "Twitter audiences are generally a lot cleverer than comedy club audiences so you can get away with a wider range of material. It gets marketing value from material that otherwise would go unused."

Promoted Tweeps

The Boy With Tape On His Face


While it makes perfect sense that the average Twitter user would want to follow a stand-up, it's not quite so simple for promoters. Lee Martin set up Gag Reflex (@gag_reflex) in 2004, and has nurtured it into one of the biggest comedy agencies in the north west. This year alone has seen two of his acts, The Boy With Tape On His Face (@tapefaceboy - a mime artist who tweets in Morse code!) and Steve Shanyaski (@steveshanyaski), appear on ITV's Comedy Rocks and generate much interest online. A curious Twitter search on the night of Shanyaski's performance opened his eyes to the potential for marketing his acts, and his company, using the service.

"The Twitter response to Tape Face and Shanyaski was astounding," he says. "People from all over the UK were tweeting about them for days after their performances. Of course, television will always generate word-of-mouth interest but with Twitter it can be quantified, so we could personally thank them for their feedback and invite them to follow us and the acts. The audience was clearly there to get in touch with and inform whenever the two performed around the country."

The savings in time and money that can be made using Twitter are plentiful. Every August, agencies take their acts to the Edinburgh Festival, with bills, prices and even venues subject to frantic last minute changes. What was once a scramble to cut-and-paste alterations onto flyers and posters can now be done in an instant online, while promotional offers can also be used to get punters through the door. Even flyering, a longtime staple of the festival, could be threatened by the emergence of well-run agency accounts promoting shows. However, Martin knows full well that people may be reluctant to follow a comedy agency, and offers something in return:

"I try to my hardest to keep the official Gag Reflex account from being too dry. Nobody wants to follow someone who is constantly trying to sell them something. So I reward followers with pictures of acts live on stage, daft stuff, and tweets about what I'm up to as well as the promotions and offers for shows."

You've been a great audience, please RT

Just like a multinational company promotes its wares, the comedy industry is slowly coming around to the idea of Twitter as a quick, easy and very accessible marketing tool. And as mobile internet ascends, this trend shows no signs of dying online. Those who make a living from comedy, both on-stage and off, should look to reap the rewards this unique method of audience interaction offers.

Michael Thornton

theEweekly Wrap: Positions, privacy and presidents

All ads are equalGoogle has announced in an official blog that the AdWords Position Preference feature is being withdrawn. The tool automatically sets bid levels so that ads will reach a certain position; however, from May onwards, this can only be done by setting up an automated rule.


According to Search Engine Land, Google is now "seeking to dissuade advertisers from putting an emphasis on the position of their ads". This was supported by a report from Google's chief economist Hal Varian, describing the pitfalls and misconceptions around PPC ad positions. He warned: "An ad in a more prominent position on the page will tend to get both more clicks and more conversions than an ad in a lower position, but the conversion rate (conversions/clicks) will tend to be about the same for the two positions".


Tube plans on holdPlans to create provide passengers on the London Underground with mobile and 3G signal have been put on hold indefinitely. Intended to be ready in time for the London 2012 Olympics, the Tube network scheme was backed by firms such as the Chinese mobile giant Huawei, O2, Vodafone, Thales, and of course London Mayor Boris Johnson.


However, this week the plans were shelved as it seems the technical complexity and financial scale of the task was simply too much. Transport for London revealed that the intention to fund the project through mobile operators, with no cost to fare or taxpayers, was not viable. Meanwhile, a separate scheme to introduce Wi-Fi in Tube stations is still going ahead.


Google says NonGoogle has thrown its weight behind the French Association of Internet Community Services, an organisation set to take the French government to court next week. More than 20 firms, including Google, Facebook, Dailymotion and eBay, are united against a new law obliging websites to gather the personal data of users. If the government, police, or tax authorities should so desire, sites must hand over the names, addresses, telephone numbers and passwords of users.


The case follows drives for improved privacy in other EU countries concerning Google, such as Germany banning Analytics, and Spain requesting that links to censored or libellous articles are removed from search results. Google itself often acquiesces to government requests, for user data to be used in court cases or for the removal of certain web pages.


Presidential tweetUS President Barack Obama is using social media as an integral part of his campaign to be re-elected in 2012. For the first time ever, a Presidential election campaign has its own hashtag – #Obama2012 – which is already picking up momentum. A promotional video has also been made, and posted to Obama's official website and Facebook page. The video only features members of the public expressing their support, and has garnered 19 million Facebook 'likes' and 7 million tweets.


Scott Goodstein, a key figure in Obama's 2008 presidential campaign, revealed that social media played an important part in its success; for example, voter questions would be directly answered by campaign staff. Meanwhile, rival Sarah Palin is seriously lagging in the Twitter stakes; @SarahPalinUSA has 474,000 followers compared to @BarackObama with 7,304,000.

Confusion, frustration, anticipation? It can only be the iPhone 5

Mystery surrounds the release date of the iPhone 5

Apple has almost recovered from the dreaded antenna-gate; not to mention cracked glass, lack of radio, Flash, storage space, etc. Now it has even more on its fancy plate.

Fanboys (and girls) have been hankering for the iPhone 5 since last June's Apple showcase. That summer haze of time soon comes round, and now we're all agonisingly close to getting our hands on its innovative Retina Display screen.

Thing is, this year's annual Apple summer conference is only focusing on software. This could mean no grand unveiling of hardware by the ailing Steve Jobs.

Where's the buzz?

There's usually a spring buzz of prototype designs, romanticised ideas and playful optimism surrounding the iPhone. Even Apple themselves supposedly got in on the action last year by leaking information. Remember that 'fake' ugly, cheap-looking square slab they found in a dingy bar in the States? Well that turned out to be the actual iPhone 4 which we grew to love, like a middle child.


Battling against the backlash

Fast-forward one agonising year, consumers have grown frustrated and some cynics believe the iPhone is purposefully built to be so flimsy that it needs to be fixed or replaced in quick succession at a high cost. Talking of which, it hasn't been long since the iPad 2 was unleashed to a frenzy of media coverage.

The techy tablet has actually been a great success but perhaps even Apple don't expect their customers to fork out for a new phone as well as the leading tablet. Maybe this is one of the reasons why Steve Jobs and co could be delaying the iPhone 5 release until at least September.

Meanwhile, the Apple rumour mill ISN'T in overdrive, it's grinding slower than ever; possibly due to smartphone buyers' eyes wandering to the temptations of Android instead. No longer are you simply either iPhone or Blackberry.

HTC's HD Desire crept up while the last iPhone snored away, sleeping through its alarm (yes, some of them got confused by our beloved British Summer Time). So how can it burst back to life? What's certain is that, if the iPhone 5 launch is delayed until the autumn, it will need to be something very special indeed.

theEweekly Wrap: Dorsey returns, and Microsoft complains

EU'll be sorryMicrosoft is to lodge a formal complaint with the European Commission about what it judges to be Google's anti-competitive behaviour. They accuse the search engine market leader of using technical measures to restrict Bing's ability to index websites, and of blocking YouTube on Microsoft smartphones, among other grievances.


In other news, Google has agreed to an investigation by the US Federal Trade Commission over privacy flaws in the Google Buzz network. Google has already been investigated for data collection by Street View cars; on the other hand, a Google operation known as the Bing sting seemed to prove that the Microsoft search engine was copying Google's results.


Prodigal founderTwitter co-founder Jack Dorsey has returned to the helm this week after a few years in the back seat. Dorsey sent the first ever tweet five years ago, and in the meantime has set up mobile payment company Square. However, this week it was announced that as well as remaining CEO of Square, he will be working day-to-day as executive chairman at Twitter.


Dorsey told the Wall Street Journal that "mainstream relevancy is still a challenge" for Twitter; earlier this month, head of API Ryan Sarver discouraged third party developers from building any more platforms in an attempt to move towards a more consistent user experience.


Tailored TVSky has written to customers advising them their information will be used to create targeted adverts on Sky Player, BSkyB's on-demand viewing platform. A new system called Sky AdSmart will use details such as postcode and previous viewing choices to determine which adverts will play, as well as which programmes are recommended to them. Although this service has been provided online since 2010, according to mediaweek.co.uk tailored ads will now be rolling out to Sky+ boxes.


However, May will see the introduction of the e-Privacy Directive, which will require brands to get consent from web users before using browser cookies. The cookies, which track the user's movements, enable targeted advertising similar to the ones promised by Sky. The Sky Player website explains that users can opt out of tailored ads if they would prefer.