New website launch

08 Apr 2009

It’s here. Finally. We’ve brought our full weight to bear and launched our new spangly website. Like this blog, we’ll constantly be updating it with new bits and pieces. New functionality, new features, new content. And we want your input. This might be our showroom, but you tell us what you want in it.

The website follows our principles of launching a basic version, and adding stuff on as it’s needed. I believe a few others have the same thoughts – quick to market, don’t worry if it breaks, but fix it when it does.

New websitePlease comment here, email us, twitter us or call us for a chat. We really appreciate the feedback we receive.

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Just today one of my colleagues received an email from the “Community Drugs Team”. She read it, re-read it. Then said “I’ve only just moved to Shepherds Bush. This isn’t right! I’ve not been involved in any of this.” She was referring to this:

What a great way to get your message across!

Looking at the links, the code behind them, you’d never think it was a fake. Clicking on them, however, told a different story:

Shifty - The MovieWell. It was definitely an interesting way to get the point across. The mark of a good advertising campaign is one that gets people talking about it, in my mind, and this one uses some of the most basic elements of digital technology to deliver that. A great example of KISS

Everyone in the office is talking about it. Oh, and stitching their mates up… Kudos to the team that did that.

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This is the first part of our transformation. We’ve got a few little tricks up our sleeve we’re going to be adding here in the next few days and weeks. Keep your eyes peeled for them.

We love our new blog design. Please tell us what you think of it too!

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We’ve known about Akamai, who’ve been long regarded as the leaders in CDN technology for some time now. As of a few weeks ago, there’s a new kid on the block.

Amazon released CloudFront on the 19th November, and it’s what I think has been lacking in their S3 storage solution that now makes Amazon a key competitor on the CDN front. That of what Amazon have termed “Edge Zones”. Nothing particularly complex in the definition: You upload your content, and you can have Edge Zones in the USA, Europe, Hong Kong and Japan. Amazon will automatically fetch the data from S3, cache it at the Edge Zone location, and from that point forward the transfer time for your users will be blistering!

I fully expect to see some really innovative uses coming out of this and we’ll keep tabs on it here and keep you abreast of the happenings. If you’ve got a project you’re working on that uses CloudFront, feel free to comment here. It would be really good to see the different uses people have for CDN tech.

For now, that is all. Back later with more fresh goss from the Tech world.

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Yesterday, peering to McColo, an ISP accused of providing the transit for 75% of the world’s spam, was shut off. VNUNet and The Washington Post both talk about where the figures come from. I’d like to explain what this can potentially mean to the advertising world, and some realities that need to be checked first.

Connectivity

With 75% less email travelling through the pipes that make up the Internet, there is a huge amount of space freed up for people visiting legitimate sites, chatting on IM services, or sending legitimate email, amongst all the other things that happen on the Internet. That means potentially faster connections to websites that are located elsewhere around the world.

Email advertising

With less spam being sent, emails sent for legitimate marketing purposes will slowly get better and better spam ratings as less spam means it will be easier to spot the rogues coming through. This means more flexibility with email content, and therefore a greater ability to be creative in email campaigns.

Realities

This is great news. One problem though. Botnet owners (the people who “own” the networks that send the spam out) are a bit like parasites. They’ll quickly enough find another ISP to latch on to and reconnect with their zombie machines.

On the other hand, one email provider kindly gave me a graph from their spam filter over the last 7 days. It clearly shows a massive reduction in spam coming through the system in the last couple of days – the time in which McColo has been off-line:

7 days of spam

How spam works

Spam is one of the very reasons why spyware (malicious software that sits on your machine) exists. Often, it turns your computer into a zombie machine. Ever found that your downloads are stupidly slow or you just can’t access websites? That may be because you’ve installed something and one of the botnets now controls part of your machine. They call home, and await instructions. When someone gives out those instructions, every zombie connected goes and sends mail out. This reduces the workload of the botnet owners and the requirement for them to have a whole host of computers for sending spam out. They just use us, like a virus uses us.

Can we expect change?

Maybe. If peering providers (the major ISPs that provide backbone services to the Internet) are quick enough to notify each other of the botnets, and they’re cut off at the source. However, if this particular set of botnets have lasted this long, how long would they last with a new provider. I guess we’ll find out soon enough, if spam levels return to normal in the next few weeks.

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