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Posts Tagged ‘japan’

Yahoo tops in Japan, Google close behind

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

ComScore on Wednesday released its ranking of the top search properties in Japan during the month of September 2008. And although the same two leaders in the U.S. — Google and Yahoo — top the list, it’s Google that’s trailing in Japan.

According to ComScore’s qSearch data, 5.9 billion searches were conducted in Japan in September and the average person searched 96 times during the month. Yahoo led the way in search query volume with 3 billion searches and 51 percent market share, but Google wasn’t far behind with 2.3 billion searches and 39 percent market share. Microsoft, which makes the third-most popular search engine in the U.S., only mustered 90 million queries during the month to take the fourth spot in the country behind Japan-based Rakuten.

“The search market in Japan is dominated by Yahoo and Google, which combine for more than 90 percent of the market,” Maru Sato, managing director of ComScore Japan said in a statement.

Yahoo’s control over the Japanese market comes in stark contrast to the U.S. search market, which is dominated by Google. According to ComScore’s September data, Google controlled 62.9 percent of the search market, compared to Yahoo’s 20.2 percent.

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Yahoo tops in Japan, Google close behind

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eZ Systems Extends Its Presence to Japan

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

eZ Systems Opens Office ini Japan

eZ Systems, an Open Source Web CMS vendor, joined forces with its Gold Partner Mitsue-Links Co., Ltd. to open an eZ Systems office in Tokyo, Japan, this November.

Although eZ is not new to the Japanese market, the new initiative will further promote eZ Systems’ Open Source Content Management System (CMS) eZ Publish in Japan.

According to eZ CEO Aleksander Farstad, the company has been active in the Japanese market for the last two years, building a partner network and working with “significant” customers. With an accelerated growth in the market, the next step is, obviously, to get direct representation in Japan to support further growth.

eZ Systems Japan will focus on the following:

* Serve as the base for eZ Publish marketing activities in Japan
* Provide specialized for the Japanese market development and support
* Provide consulting services
* Train Japanese eZ Partners

The grand opening of eZ Systems Japan is scheduled for November 5, 2008.

eZ Systems Extends Its Presence to Japan

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Former DoubleClick exec to head Glam Media’s Japan division

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Glam Media has continued its international expansion, appointing former DoubleClick and Excite executive Yukihiro Yamamura as CEO of its Glam Japan division. Glam Japan hasn’t actually launched yet, but is slated to go live later this year.

Yamamura had been head of DoubleClick Japan previously, and before that he had been CEO of Excite Japan since 1999.

“The appointment of Yukihiro Yamamura is a strategic addition to the Glam team as we continue to leverage the fragmentation of the Web globally,” Glam CEO Samir Arora said in a release Monday. “With an accomplished background in online advertising and operations from DoubleClick and Excite Japan, Yamamura brings local expertise that will be invaluable as Glam Media expands its position as the leading vertical content network.”

Flush with venture cash, Glam has been growing like crazy–hiring former Google sales executive Michael Adair as vice president of corporate development and finance, acquiring overseas properties to help fuel international growth, and launching new divisions.

Former DoubleClick exec to head Glam Media’s Japan division

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Street View throws Japan for a loop

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

Does Google know judo? Maybe. Google Street View has pulled a sutemi–a judo throw in which you launch yourself at the ground, risking disadvantage, to topple your opponent–on the entire Floating Kingdom. Even though Japan knew that the controversial Google Street View was coming to Japan, the tech savvy country was caught off-guard by Google’s willingness to involve itself in yet another privacy imbroglio.

A photo shoot in Japan, captured by Google Street View.

(Credit: Google)

The pattern is familiar. Cars mounted with the Google Street View cameras scoot through a neighborhood, taking 360-degree shots of all they surveil. When the feature finally goes live, amused Netizens find images of people in compromising positions, while others decry the end of innocence–uh, privacy.

In Japan earlier this week, the real-world Google Street View effect saw images of two high-school lovebirds playing dentist, a photo shoot in a park, a person collapsed or asleep in a street, the wife of a CEO of a major Internet services company, and the expected shots of couples entering love hotels, which is basically a motel with hourly rates and vibrating beds. The irony of this is that the Japanese are often obsessive about their privacy and ‘’saving face” can often be taken literally, where people will cross their arms in a big X in front of their bodies or faces when you threaten an unwanted photograph. When I was living there, I even had a shop owner come out and demand that I not take a photo of the exterior of his trendy shoe store. That’s quite a different attitude from what we experience in the U.S., and ironic given the popularity of photography there.

An uncontroversial bird caught in flight by Google Street View in Japan.

(Credit: Google)

On message boards, the debate has mirrored that of other countries, from the expected, ”new technology is ruining our way of life,” to a bear-hugged embrace of finally being able to see what the place you’re supposed to be going to looks like. That’s no small accomplishment in Tokyo’s notorious neighborhoods, where warrens of streets zig, zag, and loop back upon themselves seemingly without logic.

Still, Japanese IT professional Osamu Higuchi was so horrified by Street View that he wrote an open letter to Google explaining how it has acted out of disregard for local standards and could encourage more crime. He called the effects of Street View ”evil.” Heavy stuff.

Despite being a country with one of the lowest per-capita crime rates anywhere in the world, Japan’s media is obsessed with reporting on any change that could lead to an increase. As such, Higuchi’s letter isn’t surprising. His concerns that laundry left out to dry and car parking spaces revealed in Japan’s densely packed and often-empty-during-office-hours residential neighborhoods could lead to higher theft rates are not without some merit, at least in theory.

While it’s not as crazy a theory as the Hadron Collider destroying the planet, I’ve yet to see any reports of increased crime anywhere being linked to Google Street View. Also, as JapanProbe and others have noted, Google has been quick to remove offending images and has been using face-blurring algorithms to try to add a modicum of privacy protection.

Street View throws Japan for a loop

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Google Street View goes live in Australia, Japan

Monday, August 4th, 2008

Street View, the driver’s-eye view on Google Maps, made its debut in the United States, but it’s now available in Australia and Japan, too.

Sydney, Australia now can be explored with Google Maps' Street View, shown with blue lines where available. (Click to enlarge.)

Sydney, Australia now can be explored with Google Maps' Street View, shown with blue lines where available. (Click to enlarge.)

(Credit: Google)

The Street View service has raised privacy hackles in some quarters, but it’s helped me navigate in areas I’ve never visited: What does the house I’m visiting look like? Or the street corner where I’m supposed to get off the bus? Or where exactly is that big-box retailer?

Google also is extending Street View to Europe, and in the process is gathering data that will let it create 3D models as well.

To alleviate privacy concerns, Google blurs faces in Street View.

(Via Google Blogoscoped.)

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Google Street View goes live in Australia, Japan

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