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Harmon Leon : City Brights

Currently, Chatroulette is like the Wild West of live social networking, where deviant behavior becomes the unmonitored norm. A trip down Chatroulette Boulevard involves a constant stream of disturbing images spewed out that will forever be burnt into your retinas. The site's mainstream failing is to create a barrier to discourage bad behavior. The trouble incubates with users being able to anonymously broadcast from their webcams.

Cassidy predicts that over the then and there five years live interactivity will become an essential component of all web presence-not just in social networking and dating sites. "Therefore, the web will become more live and dynamically engaging than it is today," says Cassidy.

Review on Yelp can make or break a local business

A review on Yelp can make or break a local business. A bad, vengeful Yelp review can drive away clients or even shut a business down. To tell the truth, numerous businesses have joined a lawsuit against Yelp, afterwards contacting Yelp to have negative consumer reviews removed from the site. Although these were reviews that violated Yelp's site guidelines, Yelp declined to remove the reviews, until their salespeople followed up with the businesses, offering to hide the negative comments -- as long as they bought advertising from Yelp.

I thought it was time to reap vengeance on Yelp: the social networking / user review / local search site -- with over 39 million monthly users -- who wields mighty power, for both good and evil.

The land of the costumed

In the land of the costumed, the suited business man without warning became the standout freak--as office workers peering from their lofty high-rise buildings become the caged animal in the zoo; cunningly framed by the philosophy of the First Church of the Last Laugh.

With iPhones and Smart Phones at nearly everyone's disposal, the free weekly paper death march is so then underway. Look at the signs: it's nearly impossible to even find a copy of the Guardian in their designated paper dispensers, during stacks and stacks of the SF Weekly can always be found--not a great sign for either publication.

More information: Sfgate