• Matomy Group Logo

    Matomy Media Group

    Matomy Media Group trabaja en plataformas web, de redes sociales y móviles para ofrecer a los anunciantes y las agencias una gama de oportunidades para integrar su publicidad digital en una única pasarela con el fin de obtener resultados extraordinarios.
  • Matomy Media Logo

    Matomy Media

    Matomy Media es una empresa global de display y marketing en buscadores que ofrece soluciones eficaces de medios para importantes anunciantes y agencias.
  • Matomy Money Logo

    Matomy Money

    Matomy Money ofrece a los anunciantes una forma sencilla de monetizar sus juegos y apps, al tiempo que brinda a los usuarios un modo interactivo de conseguir dinero virtual gratis.
  • Mobile Adverting Solutions - Matomy Mobile

    Matomy Mobile

    Ha llegado el momento de llevar tus campañas a la plataforma móvil. Amplía tu estrategia de medios en esta plataforma emergente con Matomy Mobile.

Anunciantes

Conviértete en un anunciante de Matomy Latam y extiende tu cobertura en múltiples canales de medios y mediante nuestro amplio inventario de afiliados y sucursales locales del mundo entero.

Cuenta Anunciante

Afiliados

Conviértete en un afiliado de Matomy Latam y disfruta de exclusivas ofertas, altas tasas de conversión y un equipo entero dedicado a que ganes dinero.

Cuenta Afiliado

Account Login

Please log in to your account here.

twitter

Facebook Privacy Settings Not to be Overlooked

Jan
25

Back in December 2009, Facebook changed their default privacy settings for users, pretty much revealing someone’s entire profile: photos, information, contact information, friends, etc. to the universe, including major search engines.  At the same time and throughout January, they announced the change on the site at the point of login, and users were given the option to change these defaults to protect their privacy.  But, how many of us actually did it?  Unless you log in to the site frequently, you might not have known about the changes for days, weeks, or months ( not that this would be an issue with Facebook marketers and affiliates who are hooked up to the site by IV…) and even frequent FBers are so used to seeing little banners and extra information that you might just ignore it.

Opening up Facebook in this way seems to be another wave in the current tide of making the web more transparent. Twitter’s power for marketers is based on it, and this change from FB is probably just a follow-suit move to cater to their advertisers, though how it will affect their total revenue remains to be seen.

Getting back to how this all affects us, the general Facebook community, Sarah Perez of The New York Times made some recommendations for protecting your privacy on Facebook, and here is her shortlist of the 3 most important profile items you should think about protecting:

1. Decide Who Can See The Things You Share (Status Updates, Photo, Videos, etc.)

If you accepted the new recommended settings then you voluntarily gave Facebook the right to share the information about the items you post with any user or application on the site. Depending on your search settings, you may have also given Facebook the right to share that information with search engines, too.

2. Decide Who Can See Your Personal Info

Facebook has a section of your profile called “personal info,” but it only includes your interests, activities, and favorites. Other arguably more p

ersonal information is not encompassed by the “personal info” setting on Facebook’s Privacy Settings page. That other information includes things like your birthday, your religious and political views, and your relationship status.

After last month’s privacy changes, Facebook set the new defaults for this other information to viewable by either “Everyone” (for family and relationships, aka relationship status) or to “Friends of Friends” (birthday, religious and political views). Depending on your own preferences, you can update each of these fields as you see fit. However, we would bet that many will want to set these to “Only Friends” as well.

3. What Google Can See – Keep Your Data Off the Search Engines

When you visit Facebook’s Search Settings page, a warning message pops up. Apparently, Facebook wants to clear the air about what info is being indexed by Google. The message reads:

“There have been misleading rumors recently about Facebook indexing all your information on Google. This is not true. Facebook created public search listings in 2007 to enable people to search for your name and see a link to your Facebook profile. They will still only see a basic set of information.”

While that may be true to a point, the second setting listed on this Search Settings page refers to exactly what you’re allowing Google to index. If the box next to “Allow” is checked, you’re giving search engines the ability to access and index any information you’ve marked as visible by “Everyone.” As you can see from the settings discussed above, if you had not made some changes to certain fields, you would be sharing quite a bit with the search engines…probably more information than you were comfortable with.

As an affiliate network with a significant portion of business in Facebook and Social Media, we strive to uphold the quality of affiliate activity in this area.   Part of that quality is an ethical commitment to the users on behalf of our advertisers, and so we recommend that you take a few minutes to follow the steps outlined in this post to keep Facebook a happy place!

zp8497586rq

Wub for Wibiya

Aug
13

The Adsmarket Blog is now in its 4th month.  Since our launch in April of 2009 we’ve seen our traffic increase each month, readers spending more and more time reading, and a genuine enthusiasm for our efforts!  Firstly, thanks are due to our excellent contributors and the affiliate marketing and online marketing insight they provide.  And also, thanks to the general energy of Adsmarket, a company with ideas up the wazoo and, needless to say, outside the proverbial box.   

 

I’d like to announce the addition of what I think it a totally fantastic feature for our readers.  For most of us online monkeys we have a repeating 5-minute online browsing cycle that we call our ‘break from work’:

  1. Check for new email
  2. Update status on facebook
  3. Check out what’s up on twitter
  4. Click links from either FB or twitter to read a blog or news article or two.
  5. Back to work…
  6. Repeat

So, we’ve recently installed the Wibiya toolbar, which displays on every page of the blog, doesn’t require installation and was brilliantly designed to keep things convenient.  What the Wibiya toolbar allows you to do is complete most of this obsessive cycle without leaving our blog!  Yay!  You can update your facebook  or twitter status  right from here, share one of our informative articles (like Maor’s post for marketers: Making a Pool out of a Puddle, which is the most popular article read on our blog, or How Green is Adsmarket? , if you are feeling particulary eco-communicative) on StumbleUpon, Mixx, or Digg, and even search Google.  It’s very convenient and my favorite, won’t open up a bunch of ugly browser windows like a lot of bookmarking clients do.
So as not to confuse you, we’ve kept some of the original functionality of the blog like our RSS in the upper right, but you are welcome to use them both.  We may remove the old ones if the toolbar proves a success so we can replace them with other useful widgets instead, but we’ll let you know.

Please let us know what you think!


Facebook and Twitter – down at the same time?!

Aug
06

I just tried to get into the Adsmarket Facebook Page to get ahold of their sweet FanBox for this blog, and I couldn’t do anything!  I tried logging out and that didn’t even work.  I searched online for “facebook down” and got nothing.  So I decided to tweet about it, thinking that SOMEONE out there would be able to tell me that life wasn’t over and that our page still existed.  But then, I was aghast to see that TWITTER WAS DOWN TOO!  Mashable covered it, thank god!

What’s that about? 

The feeling of having something really juicy to say, namely that facebook AND twitter were down simultaneously, had me aching to share it, but I had no voice without either one of them! 

So, I did things old-school-style: I started running down the halls at Adsmarket shouting, “Twitter and Facebook are down!  I can’t believe it!”

Nobody even looked up from their desks… I’m unfollowing them all right now!!

Here’s hoping life will go back to normal.  I’m sure our Facebook publishers are reeling!