I experimented with 'bluetooth marketing' back in 2003 with mixed results - I beleive that hypertag have taken it to the next logical stage with interactive posters - worth keeping an eye on this one. www.hypertag.com I haven't used them yet but it certainly looks interesting.
Posted by: Andy Sarfas at July 22, 2005 04:03 PM
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Spam is going to infect everything. Regulations and standards are definitly crucial. I live in Manhattan and everyone I see has a blackberry or sidekick... both in which are potential targets, Im sure. Here is an interesting article I found about blackberry and cells.
http://www.associatedcontent.com/content.cfm?content_type=article&content;_type_id=2858
Posted by: Mary at July 22, 2005 08:59 PM
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I started my latest entry on SPAM-To-Go (http://spamtogo.blogspot.com/) from a blog entry here on Adverblog from last week - this is a nice follow-on.
I did call and speak to AURA - the folks behind Hypertag - and have asked for their comment. I'm still waiting.
Keep up the good work!
Posted by: Troy Norcross at July 26, 2005 01:31 PM
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I don't agree to the leading opinion (any kind of pushing content to the consumers is concerned as spam), because everybody has the right _and_ the chance
- not to use BT at all, or
- to use it in the "invisible" mode.
Sending out digital files over 100 meters without letting the user know where the offer comes from, is definitly annoying. But first getting his opt-in, and afterwords sending him a file should be OK.
Mind the technique! The opt-in message (pop-up) is NOT send by the poster, nor from any terminal. It is created by the firmware of the user's mobile phone. So, the MMA is simply wrong.
Posted by: bt_user at December 6, 2005 09:27 PM
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...not too sure that the message is created by the users phone. Bluetooth marketing uses the OPP (object push) Bluetooth profile and the system works in the following way:
1. Search for all Bluetooth devices
2. Push the marketing message to found devices.
It is at the stage 2 when the phone asks the user if they want to accept the pushed message - this is directly due to the marketer pushing the message i.e. the marketer pushing the message causes the phone to prompt the user.
There are other styles of Bluetooth marketing - interactive walls - pictures here where the user must request the content hence it is permission based and opt-in.
Posted by: Greg at March 26, 2006 06:42 PM
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