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Originally Posted by Janak Parekh
"Got a view on the last film you saw or the last restaurant you ate in? Soon you may be able to post a review outside the front door using your mobile phone."
This set of technologies are cool, and promising, but problems including virtual spam and graffiti are unanswered (in this article, at least). Still, I could see text messaging be a new medium of psuedo-online communication.
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Well, something like this is already being applied...
Just like the Internet, you can moderate these things... so I think there is some form of SPAM control which can be implemented.
I wouldn't go so far as to claiming that there will be any problems as this is a far easier service to sift through and sanitize.
Here in the Philippines, SMS is widely used for so many things. I mean almost anything imaginable. Our Telcos outsource SMS service providers which can offer daily quotes, bible readings, daily jokes, news, stocks etc. You can switch te service on or off. You can report things via SMS. Part of a service offered by a Telco and a 3rd party service provider for example is the "air pollution watch" where you can send a message with all details by simple sending an SMS to a specified number. Several TV stations also use SMS for polling and comments. Comments are then displayed on the TV screen to be viewed by the public... of course these can be censored before it even shows on the TV screen.
I suppose the same thing can be applied to the service you described.
Here is how I see it work.
With mid-air messaging... you can still set your account/phone to receive or not to receive these forms of messages. You can control this over the air by sending commands via SMS. You can even specify categories via SMS.
Let's say you have it activated. And you have it activated for movies only... then you limit what you receive and you don't get unneccessary reviews/comments not related to movies. The reviews are sent to a dedicated server which is monitored by a 3rd party service provider. Foul language can then be edited, etc. These can then be stored in the SMS servers for a specified amount of time... let's say it self-deletes in about an hour, 6 hrs, 12 hrs, 1 day and so forth and so-on. This is also one way of managing content volume.
So you see, it ain't all that bad if you really are prepared to offer a service as such.
Oh... BTW, mid-air messaging is already being applied here in the Philippines... when you enter a localized area, they can send you... or you can receive messages specific to that local area... say within the vicinity of a mall, a building, a town, or a city.
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