Round Up: Apple And Flash, Comscore Joins Social Mix, Twitter Attack, Mobile Security And More

Round Up: Apple And Flash, Comscore Joins Social Mix, Twitter Attack, Mobile Security And More

Friday, September 24th, 2010 at 12:58 pm
Cody Barbierri

A week’s worth of digital engagement, social media and marketing news.

Apple and Flash: Friends at Last (For How Long?) - In an abrupt change of tune this month, Apple released a statement that they will reverse its ban on Flash-based mobile apps.  While app developers are still trying to decode Apple’s vague policy changes, a more flexible, developer-friendly climate seems to be approaching.  To understand this important change and its implications, I spoke with Piehead’s Technology Director, Clint Taylor.

ComScore joins social media monitoring mix with Social Analytx - Marketing research and measurement company ComScore today announced it has joined the social media monitoring mix with the launch of Social Analytix, a measurement service utilizing the Radian6 monitoring and engagement platform.

Protect Your Company By Empowering Your Employees – Recently, a security flaw affected Twitter users that happened to be on its main website. If you were using a third-party application, like TweetDeck, consider yourself lucky. The “Rainbows” malware was a nasty one. When a user hovered over a specific link, the virus was then spread to others.  Twitter has since confirmed on its status page that the issue has been resolved.

Pick your side: Flash or HTML5? – Until recently, I personally hadn’t heard much about HTML5.  But as a Flash Developer, I certainly had my concerns when I started hearing claims of HTML5 replacing Flash as a whole. While there’s no shortage of opinions on the Internet, after doing my own research,  my fears soon subsided. As much as I’d love to shout “Flash, always and forever!” I always try to be open-minded about anything.

Is Your Mobile Application Secure? Report Says Probably Not – A report released on Thursday by Veracode, an Internet security company, may have come as a shock to companies who have developed mobile applications. The report stated that more than half of mobile apps appear to be not secure according to the Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) top 10 maxims for security.