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MobileIron Launches Anyware, A Service For Managing Apps And Devices Through Salesforce.com
MobileIron is launching Anyware, a service that gives Salesforce administrators the ability to manage devices, provision them and give users access to a personal app store.
With Anyware, a CRM administrator configures devices through an interface that MobileIron has made simple enough to use without needing IT to implement.
Once configured, the user has the ability to download apps through a store with features found in most app stores such as comments, ratings and recommendations.
The Anyware service installs a certificate on the user’s device that secures it and gives administrators control. The apps are removed when the user leaves the company.
The administrator gets a record of the user, the device, the apps they are using and the content they can access on the corporate network.
The administrator can also define how the store is distributed to the user.
Anyware comes with a management platform that provides analytics that details how people are using the platform.
The basic Anyware service starts at $2 per user per month and includes the ability to configure email and passwords; distribute apps through the catalog and a limited number of documents that the user can access. The price of the service tops at $8 per user per month and includes advanced security features, the ability to buy apps in bulk and granular control over document availability
Anyware is a service that combined app stores with mobile device management. It’s distinctive in comparison to other mobile management services and app store providers by combining security that protects the organization and gives users the ability access to apps they need to get their work done.
The service can be managed by IT but it’s the simplicity of Anyware that makes it distinct. IT should not have to be spending their time managing devices and apps. That’s work that can be done by administrators in an organization’s various business groups.
Judge Approves Facebook's $20M “Sponsored Stories” Settlement
A U.S. District judge has granted final approval to a settlement in which Facebook will pay $20 million for including users’ names and profile photos in its “Sponsored Stories” advertising program without their approval.
The class action lawsuit was first filed by five Facebook users in April 2011, three months after Facebook introduced the targeting advertising program. U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg in San Francisco initially rejected Facebook’s proposed settlement, however, stating that offering cash payments to class members was impractical because it included up to 100 million Facebook users and citing concerns about the deal’s proposed $10 million payout to the plaintiffs’ attorneys.
The revised deal includes a $20 million settlement fund from which the approximately 614,000 users who responded to Facebook’s class action notice can make a claim to receive a cash payment. The settlement also eliminates the “clear sailing” provision, which means that Facebook is now allowed to oppose petitions for fees and expenses from plaintiffs’ attorneys. Any remaining funds will be awarded as cy pres (residual funds from class action lawsuits that are distributed among charities) to organizations proposed by either side and approved by the court. A previous ruling by Seeborg ordered Facebook to let users opt out of having their information used as endorsements in Sponsored Stories.
The lawsuit is significant because it underscores the challenges Facebook will continue to encounter as it balances monetizing its mobile business with users’ privacy concerns. Despite the controversy that the program generated, Sponsored Stories’ model quickly proved successful–in Facebook’s first earnings call last July, the company revealed that the program was selling $1 million ads each day.
Sponsored Stories worked because it replicated the feel of word-of-mouth recommendations by including user names and info, even though that feature was what prompted the class action lawsuit. As the company continues to develop its mobile monetization strategy, it has been developing ways to use its wealth of targeting data without upsetting users by creating advertisements that feel instrusive.
Facebook’s app install ad program has proven successful and helped fuel the growth of its mobile income as a percentage of ad revenue to 41% in its 2Q2013 earnings, up 11% from the preceding quarter. After a botched IPO and rocky first year, investors are now showing more confidence in Facebook’s potential: the company’s shares have recovered $58 million in market capitalization since last fall and hit an all-time high today.
As Alex Wilhelm noted, however, shares are currently at a very high valuation, which means that a market correction might happen as investors take profit and keep a keen eye on any signs of slowing revenue growth in Facebook’s next quarterly earnings report.
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