Gamescom: Mehr Fläche, mehr Merkel und mehr Andrang

Die Gamescom 2017 befindet sich weiter auf Rekordkurs: Veranstalter Koelnmesse gibt eine Vergrößerung der Ausstellungsfläche bekannt – die allerdings vor allem Fachbesuchern zugutekommen dürfte. Privatbesucher gelangen inzwischen kaum noch an Karten. (Angela Merkel, Gamescom)
Quelle: Golem

A Consumer Group Is Asking The FTC To Investigate Celebs For Shady Instagram Ads

In March 2017, the FTC sent “educational” letters to 46 celebrities who it believed weren’t properly disclosing ads on Instagram. Since receiving their letters, all but one celebrity continued to post ads that are not FTC compliant, according to the advocacy group Public Citizen. Today, the group is sending a new letter to the FTC asking it to do something it’s never done before: crack down on individual celebrities — not just brands — doing shady Instagram ads.

“The only way to get people to follow the rules is enforcement action,” Kristen Strader, campaign coordinator for Public Citizen’s Commercial Alert, told BuzzFeed News. “Without consequences, influencers and advertisers have no incentive to follow FTC policy and be honest with consumers.”

The group also wants the FTC to do an broad investigation into the current state of influencer marketing, including working with Instagram to come up a better solution than the new “paid partnership with” feature.

It’s unclear if the FTC will take Public Citizen’s advice and start an investigation or any other enforcement actions. The FTC has no comment on the letter.

Historically, the FTC has only ever gone after brands and advertising agencies over undisclosed social media ads. It’s never actually filed lawsuits or done any enforcement over individual people. In fact, it’s really rare that the FTC does anything at all. Since 2011, the FTC actually brought action only five times, and each time it was about the brand or advertisers, never the individuals. Sending “educational” letters to celebrities was something completely new.

Why the change? Perhaps it’s because the amount of deceptive influencer marketing on Instagram has increased a lot, and the government is finally dropping the hammer. As BuzzFeed news reported, a recent study showed that out of the top 50 most popular celebrities on Instagram, the majority did ads — and of those ads, 93% did not comply with the FTC’s guidelines. Sending those 90 letters this spring indicates a different direction for the FTC: Instead of filing costly and time-consuming legal action once a someone acts badly, tell people how to follow the rules and have popular influencers set an example.

From May 1 to June 12, Public Citizen tracked the 46 celebrities who received the warning letters. In those six weeks, all but two of them (basketball player Allen Iverson and NFL player James Harrison) posted more ads. Most posted just a few ads, but some posted a shitload. Fashion blogger Rachel Parcell, model Tiona Fernan, and model/pro basketball player Valentina Vignali all posted more than 30 undisclosed ads each. All together, 412 ads were posted, and 79% of those were not properly disclosed.

One of the confusing things Rachel Parcell does is to tag brands in a photo — are we to assume she is just letting fans know where she purchased it? Or that she got it free? Or that she was paid? We have no idea. And in this photo, it seems like it’s very possible that her vacation was also a gift — notice how she hashtags the hotel:

instagram.com

The types of ads in these posts aren’t as straightforward as someone holding up a bag of diet tea and forgetting to say “#ad”. Free gifts or long-term deals like a celebrity creating their own product line for a brand are particularly thorny. In the report that looked at undisclosed ads of the top 50 Instagrammers, it was these kinds of tangled relationships that were the most common offenders.

For example, Scott Disick posted about riding a private plane company called Jet Luxe Life that often gives free rides to celebrities in exchange for them posting about it on Instagram. He simply says “thanks @jetluxlife” – what is the average person supposed to assume this means? That he enjoyed the flight he paid for himself, or that he got a free ride, or he got a free ride AND payment for posting? It’s not clear at all, and that’s the problem.

Instagram: @letthelordbewithyou

Another one of these celebrities on Public Citizen’s list is Zendaya, who also posted about Jet Lux. In what I can only imagine is an admirably passive aggressive move, Zendaya doesn’t show herself on a luxurious plane — rather, she’s huddled in her sweats on the couch, without even showing her face. Not exactly the kind of photo that Jet Lux probably expected when giving a beautiful starlet a free ride.

Instagram: @zendaya

Another confusing example that is cited in the letter to the FTC is Jennifer Lopez posting her outfit from the Met Gala. It’s hard for the average person to guess what’s going on here. Was she paid money by Valentino to post this? Was she just loaned a free outfit? Did she actually buy it herself and just wants to tell people who the designer is? Is she a spokesperson for the fashion brand? Unless you work work in fashion PR, you’re probably confused.

Instagram: @jlo

Some celebrities are doing more obvious ads where they do make some effort to say it’s an ad — but their disclosure still fails to meet the FTC’s guidelines, which say that terms such as “partner” aren’t clear, and that the disclosure should be in the first 3 lines of the caption so that it doesn’t get cut off in the […] when you’re scrolling through your feed. For example, Real Housewives of Beverly Hills star and TV actress Lisa Rinna uses the hashtag #teamipartner” at the end of her post, but that doesn’t meet FTC standards. Public Citizen’s stance here is that by now, both Lisa Rinna and the diet drink company know the rules, they’re just willfully ignoring them.

Instagram: @lisarinna

Only one person actually properly disclosed 100% of her ads since receiving the FTC letter: Real Housewives of New Jersey star Caroline Manzo.

Caroline Manzo, we salute you.

Instagram: @carolinemanzo

Quelle: <a href="A Consumer Group Is Asking The FTC To Investigate Celebs For Shady Instagram Ads“>BuzzFeed

Bright Cluster Manager now integrates seamlessly with Azure HPC capabilities

One of our key HPC partners, Bright Computing, has just announced the release of Bright Cluster Manager 8.0, the latest version of their flagship HPC cluster management solution. This new version gives customers the ability to extend an on-premises cluster into Azure for added capacity, or to easily build a cluster entirely in Azure.

Martijn de Vries, CTO at Bright Computing, commented about this release:

“We are pleased to offer this new integration to our customers and we are confident that the solution will be very popular with our user base. Cloud bursting from an on-premises cluster to Microsoft Azure offers companies an efficient, cost-effective, secure and flexible way to add additional resources to their HPC infrastructure. Bright's integration with Azure also gives our clients the ability to build an entire off-premises cluster for compute-intensive workloads in the Azure cloud platform.”

The cloud bursting scenario tends to be the one that our customers are interested in exploring first, and this release of Bright Cluster Manager makes it possible to do this effortlessly and within the cluster environment that Bright Computing customers are already familiar with. By bursting to the cloud, customers can continue to use their existing on-premises resources, while taking advantage of the flexibility and the elasticity of Azure to dynamically grow and shrink their HPC clusters.

Similarly, being able to stand up a cluster in the cloud that behaves and feels exactly like the one customers are used to having on premises is a perfect way to readily shift workloads to the cloud, deploy on-demand resources for a special project, or experiment with new technologies.

The cloud really does open many new possibilities, not just of scale, but also for access to resources that might not always be available on premises. With Bright Cluster Manager and Azure, you can utilize the latest InfiniBand network technologies, or run your workload on the most current GPUs, all on demand and paying only for what you use.

If you want to learn more about HPC technologies, and in particular about this new release of Bright Cluster Manager, you can listen to this episode of The Azure Podcast, which features Martijn de Vries, the CTO of Bright Computing.

Additionally, you can visit the Bright Computing website to learn about their HPC solution for Azure, or to arrange a live demo.
Quelle: Azure

What’s new with App Connect

At IBM, we’ve been busy advancing App Connect to enable business and technical users to achieve more. In this first installment of our new blog series on App Connect, I will highlight some of the new capabilities and detail our exciting new partnership with Salesforce.
Multi-action flows
Many business users are looking to integrate and automate data flow between their applications. App Connect now allows you to create multi-action and complex logic-based data flows. You can take action on multiple applications in response to a single trigger or build a flow which contains different branches to run based upon your predefined conditions.

Furthermore, you can keep your data in sync using the update actions that are now available. You will always get an up-to-date view of the information in your applications.
Let’s say I’m a marketer using Salesforce and I’ve just developed a new lead in Marketo from a campaign I’ve been running. I want to check if this lead already exists as a contact in my Salesforce CRM application. If it doesn’t, I want to create a new entry. But if it does exist, I want to update the existing entry with the new information captured by the campaign. With App Connect, this is now a faster, more straightforward process.
SaaS Application Connectivity
App Connect now connects to even more popular applications, including SurveyMonkey, Dropbox, Coupa and Magento. To help out users working in technical roles, we’ve also added smart connections to SAP, IBM MessageHub and ServiceNow.
There are many ways App Connect can simplify your workflow.  Add a subscriber to your Mailchimp list every time you get a new Salesforce contact. Add a ServiceNow ticket for a new Wufoo form entry. You can use these connectors to integrate across your organization, accelerating processes, driving efficiency and ensuring data is consistent and accurate across applications.
Create flows as APIs
For more technical needs, users can now create flows as APIs using a model-driven, code-free approach. This powerful new feature simplifies and accelerates the process of exposing flows. You can integrate complex enterprise systems as representational state transfer (REST) APIs which can be socialized with and consumed by developers quickly and easily.

Unlock the power of Salesforce with IBM App Connect
Earlier this year, IBM and Salesforce announced a strategic partnership to design and deliver joint solutions that leverage the power of their respective AI platforms. Organizations increasingly look to software as a service (SaaS) applications like Salesforce to deliver innovative and scalable solutions for their business requirements. The need for an integration solution that connects SaaS apps to other applications and data becomes ever more necessary.
With App Connect, users can integrate and manage critical data as it moves between the Salesforce platform and existing company systems, on premises and in the cloud. App Connect provides powerful tools to build integrations that expose enterprise systems which are easily consumable with Salesforce Connect. And developers working with lines of business can use these integrations to build employee-facing Lightning applications.
For more information about IBM Cloud Integration for Salesforce, click here.
Stay tuned for more blog posts on App Connect and how it can strengthen your business. For the latest information about IBM App Connect, you can head over to our website or follow us on Twitter.
The post What’s new with App Connect appeared first on Cloud computing news.
Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud