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Tag: real-estate-2-0

French company MeilleurAgents.com (”best agents”) has released a mobile Android application that displays the value of every single building in Paris (value is displayed in price per square meter). Here’s a quick video demonstrating it in action:

Click here to view the embedded video.

The application is very similar to Zillow’s iPhone app (see Zillow Takes Zestimates to the Streets); which also displays home values – but for me, the street level view is far more visually exciting than the top-down, satellite view presented in Zillow’s app.

The MeilleurAgents.com app uses the Layar Reality browser, and the app will be available shortly for the iPhone 3GS in France.

The release of iPhone 3.1 update now technically allows apps to overlay graphics on a live video stream, so we’re inching closer to true augmented reality. Some apps in the US already take advantage of this, the Yelp app’s hidden monocle feature for example.

The promise for augmented reality real estate applications is certainly exciting; virtual for-sale signs and property descriptions, even the layering of interior room photos over exterior views of home.

I’m sure  we’ll be seeing much more of these sort of apps in the months to come.

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Augmented Reality Real Estate Valuations

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Augmented Reality Real Estate Valuations

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Dothomes.com is for sale.

Google PR 4. Yours for the right price.

Dothomes was one of a number of overseas property portal sites that tried in the last few years to make their way on to US shores. Turns out playing in the US market is much more complicated than they thought.

Much ballyhooed at the time (see DotHomes is in the Running), Dothomes was a product of BytePlay Ltd, which also had a presence in the UK and South Africa – no word if those sister sites will stay active though.

The reason for the sale? From the founder directly, “real estate was never our cup of tea…”

So the company is changing their strategy to provide “enterprise data acquisition solutions in UK.” The sale of Dothomes will be conducted by private auction and will conclude October 1st. I’ve asked for a link to the auction site, and will post here as soon as I can.

Globrix, the News Corp backed site, is the only overseas portal that I’ve heard is still pondering a US based entry. News of Dothomes’ retreat may make them a little more wary however.

Photo courtesy of wizardofthefiretopmountain

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Wanna buy a web site?

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Realestate.com, the online real estate destination owned by the online mortgage giant LendingTree, rolled out a new sitewide redesign last week.

The new design is clean, fast and eminently usable. And while not as tricked out as some of its competitors, the site is a very capable competitor. Results are returned in a very easy to understand fashion.

However, Realestate.com is not a pure search play. Like its online counterparts Redfin and ZipRealty, it also maintains a number of local offices and a “boots on the ground” (call it “sign in the yard”) brand.

Realestate.com maintains local offices in a dozen or so states across the country.

In addition to the redesign of its search tool, Realestate.com has also launched a community section on their site, which they’re calling Town Square.

Town Square will bring the worlds of online and in-person real estate together in an interactive social community. By visiting Town Square, consumers can access valuable insight from agents, share their experiences, learn about emerging real estate trends and search an A-to-Z encyclopedia about all-things-real estate. For real estate professionals, Town Square offers an opportunity to connect with interested homebuyers and sellers, network with other agents, share tips and best practices and blog about the latest real estate news and happenings in their area.

Frankly, they’re probably a little late to the party to get Realtors to engage in yet another platform; ActiveRain, Zillow, Trulia, Homegain and Realtor.com all offer blogging platforms.

That said, many of those platforms are already saturated with participants and so for folks looking for a new place to stake a claim, Town Square might very well be virgin territory. Especially if Realestate.com can drive some traffic to those conversation.

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Realestate.com Goes Social, Launches Town Square

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Estately has been playing the slow and steady game, but it’s one that I’m increasingly convinced is working out for them.

Today, they announced the addition of their tenth metropolitan market as they bring Atlanta under their fold. Adding 127,000 listings from two Georgia MLS databases, it now brings the total number of properties for sale on Estately.com to over 459,000. In addition to Georgia, Estately covers California, Illinois, New York, Oregon and Washington.

Estately’s search tool is a very robust and impressive product, as I’ve noted a number of times in the past. It’s one of my favorite search destinations on the web. I especially like their transit search tool which calculates a property’s distance from a particular transit line (see Estately Comes to Portland). In Atlanta, you can now do these kind of searches in proximity to the MARTA line.

Estately works on a referral basis – matching pre-screened Realtors with leads coming off its site. When a client who comes from Estately completes a successful transaction, the agent is charged a 20% referral fee. If you’re in any of their markets and want to work with them you can find out more at Estately for Agents.

At this point Estately’s closest parallel is probably Roost (see Roost Redesign Radically Changes Experience) and it’s interesting comparing the two MLS driven sites’ traffic patterns. Seems like there is quite a horse race developing there!

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Continued here:
Estately Heads South

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Gahlord Dewald writes today over on Inman.com about Tweetlister – a new service that helps you market your listings on Twitter.

The main advantage? Tweetlister takes all the listing details you input in to the site and automatically creates a 140 character “tweet” for you and gives you a landing page for the property.

Dewald writes…

With all of the variables and attributes in a real estate property listing, trying to get it shortened to the 140-character limit of a Twitter post can be a challenge. One thing which TweetLister does well is shorten the listing information for you.

You enter the broad-stroke information via pull-down menus and a few text boxes. You can also select a repeating schedule with start and end dates. TweetLister shortens it all into a classified-ad-style Twitter post. Nothing fancy, no snappy copywriting or anything. Just short and simple.

I’m a big fan of any service that makes life easier – but like Nik Nik at MyTechOpinion I had a hard time wrapping my head around Tweetlister initially.  Certainly, using Twitter to promote a property can be an effective way to launch a listing into the conversation — as long as it’s not the only thing you’re tweeting! — but as NikNik said, much of this could easily be accomplished with a URL shortener and link tracking service like Bit.ly.

Also  I think I was reacting to the idea that I’d be using my network to drive traffic to a third party destination. Personally, I’d want to send any visitors to my own website. I suppose if I were a Realtor that didn’t have a personal website that showed off my listings or already own a single-property website for the home, Tweetlister might make an quick and dirty alternative. But I’m betting most readers of this blog are doing at least one of the former however.

That said, combine Tweetlister with service like vFlyer that already does some of the heavy lifting of syndicating listings to multiple destinations online (including social networks like Twitter) and you’ve got a really interesting product. Especially if you roll in all the back end analytics functions that something like vFlyer offers.

As traffic to social networks continue to soar, they do become viable syndication destinations in addition to the real estate portals – but as Gahlord also writes in his piece, “don’t confuse automating your listing promotion via TweetLister with being an engaged social-media-expert real estate professional”. Engaging on Twitter or Facebook or any other social network is a big responsibility – and there are no short cuts there.

For more on how to use Twitter in real estate, check out the Tomato’s post, Twitter Explained for the Real Estate Blogger.

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Tweetlister Promotes Properties Over Twitter

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MLS powered search site Roost launched a brand new redesign last week (see Roost.com announces redesign).

Unfortunately, it undid a lot of what I thought made the old site great. But hopefully we only seeing the first iteration of this next generation site and the site will continue to evolve.

Here are a couple things I picked up on:

Speed. The old Roost used to blaze — it was one of the very fastest search tools out there. Search a zip code and the results would pop up very, very quickly. Now it takes a great deal longer for the results page to return and when changing search filters there is a noticeable lag. Hopefully this is just a hiccup in the database that can get optimized over time.

Photos. In the old Roost – photos thumbnails were inline with the results and you could expand the listing to see more images. Now the photos have been moved off to the side and buried below the map. I like the new slide show option but I really couldn’t get over how they seemed to be so hidden on the page – I kept forgetting to look down there as I clicked through listings. To my mind they would be much better above the map in that right rail.

Listing Details. I love that Roost now hosts all the details themselves and doesn’t push you off to a broker site like it used to (see Roost Changes Up Their Game) but the new pop up windows don’t work for me. In fact, I couldn’t even see the listings until I disabled my pop up blocker. Again. hopefully this is only temporary until they can do some kind of inline display like Estately. Also I found it very hard initially to find the View Details button for any listing until I found it at the very bottom right of the page.

Refining Search. Roost’s blades (see Roost Redesigns Search Results) were not universally loved. But they were a novel way to quickly adjust the number of listings you were looking at. Now it took me a few minutes just to figure out how to change the price range, before I spotted Refine Search link next to the search box. Personally I found the green on white text very hard to see.

On the plus side. I did really like the new map search view. You can access that by clicking on the Expand Map link.

In addition to a revamped Roost.com, the company is now offering its search tool to brokers and agents, co-branded of course. So participating partners can benefit from any traffic generated at the main site as well as offer a greater experience to visitors to their own sites.

If they can clear up a few of those nagging issues I mentioned above, I think it could become a very competitive offering to other IDX solutions.

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Roost Redesign Radically Changes Experience

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The nice folks at Scripps sent me an email fleshing out more detail about Frontdoor’s Facebook Connect integration. I’ve excerpted a few sections below since they give some greater context to the feature.

As you surmised, the Facebook Connect rollout is a work in progress. Truth be told, we’re about 50% finished with the actual rollout and we expect to have everything buttoned up by June 1.

However, there are a few nuances to what is live now that I’d like to point out:

Work in Progress
As you note, a person’s MyFrontDoor and Facebook accounts are not fully integrated yet. This is the final stage of our build that will go live very early June. When that happens, you will be able to authenticate and gain access to certain features more quickly than going through a FrontDoor-only registration process. For example, we’ll be able to pre-populate certain registration fields without a user having to fill those in. That said, there are limitations in their API that will force us to continue to require a select few pieces of information, such as email addresses and zip codes. Email addys are particularly necessary because Facebook doesn’t pass that info along to us and we need that as a backup unique identifier to maintain their account in the event (God forbid) that Facebook should go POOF or somehow alter how Connect works. In any case, however, it will be faster and friendlier with Facebook Connect than without it.

Very cool. Exactly how I would want it to work.

What’s Live Now
Right now our Facebook Connect features allow you to do some subtle, yet key, things:

On every listing on our site there is a Facebook share function. With Connect, that share function becomes much richer than standard FB share functionality (non-FB Connect) that other sites use. For example, with FB connect on FrontDoor, when you click “share” we can pre-populate the share text and personalize it with your name and extend an invitation for your friends to interact with it. The standard non-FB Connect share function simply pulls in meta tags from the site. We think the FB Connect approach makes for a more personal, social experience because it shows a user being actively engaged and we can actively ask for your friends’ feedback.

On the editorial side, you have even more options with the FrontDoor-FB Connect combo. From every article on our site, you can not only share an article (again with personalization), you can also directly update your Facebook status from the right rail of the page. Again, just two more ways to personalize the experience and invite your friends to join in. I invite you to give it a try. We’re pretty sure that all these opportunities create a better environment for sharing without getting in the way of the search / reading experience.

All in all it shows that the FD folks are really thinking this through. I still come back the fact that they are integrating a widely popular social networking tool into their site; to streamline the interaction with the site rather than relying on cumbersome profiles or proprietary user accounts that aren’t portable.

I would love for this approach to be more widely adopted by brokers websites particularly and/or some of the more progressive website vendors. Making your sites easier to interact with. What a concept. Your consumers will thank you for it.

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More on Facebook Connect and Frontdoor

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Mobile real estate poised to take off? Palm seems to think so.

On a side note, I’m kind of digging the Pre… but doubt I’m ready to give up the iPhone. Yet.

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Google recently flipped the switch on a new service called Latitude; which takes Twitter-like status updates and mashes it up realtime location data. The premise is Latitude will let you share your location and see where your “friends” are anywhere on a map.

It’s pretty easy too. Using your mobile browser (Android, Blackberry, Symbian S60, and Windows Mobile handsets are currently supported – iPhone coming soon) visit google.com/latitude and ping the service with your location. You’ve then just broadcast that location to all of your contacts (those you’ve opted-in, of course).

Google Talk is integrated with Latitude, so you and your friends can update your status messages and profile photos on the go and see what everyone is up to. You can also call, SMS, IM, or email each other within the app.

There are a number of other location-based social network platforms out there (Loopt springs to mind) but Latitude is the first that I am aware of that also brings a desktop component to it. Adding the Latitude gadget to your iGoogle page lets you see at a glance, from your desk, exactly where everyone is.

 

This is where the potential for real estate search gets really interesting. Imagine the ability to get real time updates from your clients as they are conducting a home search. Alternatively, as a home buyer, you could location-tag properties with “search update” and view them all collectively once you return to your computer. 

Location awareness is a growing trend that we’ve seen in closed ecosystems like the iPhone so far, but that we’re starting to see go cross platform. I suspect we’ll be seeing much more in this arena soon.

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Latitude Takes Location Awareness Cross Platform

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In what should surely spur another burst of creativity from the real estate developer set, the New York Times announced this week a brand new Real Estate API.

The Times API contains real estate data from the NYC Department of Finance dating back to 2003 and all the classifieds data from the Grey Lady dating back to 2007.

What exactly does it offer?

The API offers aggregate data divided into two sets: listings and actual sale prices. You can get the number (”counts”) of listings and sales per ZIP code, neighborhood and borough, for various building types and date ranges. You can also get percentile prices for listings and sales per ZIP code, neighborhood and borough, again for various building types and time periods.

You could mash that up with a simple Google Map to get an elegant heat map of how prices in Manhattan have changed over time or go a step further and layer in the data from the Trulia API or the Zillow API too.

This may even be a cool project to tackle at Connect Create this summer in San Francisco. What is Connect Create?

From the Inman News web site:

72 hours. A room of developers. One killer app. Watch innovation come to life during Connect as technologists compete to create something amazing for you to take home.

Winner gets to strut their stuff on stage the final day of the conference. Pretty cool opportunity!

Any other APIs out there folks can talk advantage of? Leave ‘em in the comments and I’ll update this post.

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Read more:
Dabbling in Real Estate APIs

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There was, for a while, a sense of stalemate that had hit real estate search on the web. Frankly these days, you could be forgiven for not finding much difference between the map based searches on most of the major property portals.

It seems like a map-based view of search results and the much older list-view of homes returned seemed to be all we could expect out of search. But let’s be honest. It’s not the most exciting way to view properties on line; staring from space or reading down a list of houses.

That’s why I was genuinely excited when I first saw the Hawaii Property Galleries on Hawaiilife.com. It’s a particularly innovative and one might say, obvious way of displaying properties online. But I’m surprised I haven’t seen more do it.

It’s simple really. It’s all about the photos.

The properties are all organized into generic photo buckets; ocean views, condos, acreage etc. and once you click through to view, you can slide through each of the properties — up to 18 properties a page — indivdually. So if you want to compare all the photos of the master bedroom in each property you can, likewise if you want to compare all the kitchens. You get the picture. It’s fantastic.

I love the concept – but would love to see a little more finite control handed to the user. Right now the properties that are highlighted are chosen by Hawaii Life so it would be great to be able to tap the entire MLS and apply any sort of filter and create your own galleries. That would make for an incredibly powerful research and comparison tool.

Nevertheless, it’s a fun way to look for homes and more importantly, really makes me want to go to Hawaii!

Interestingly enough – Hawaiilife is an example of a former web-only play that has parlayed its skill at building search experiences on the Net to real world success (Blueroof is another that comes to mind).

When it first hit my radar Hawaiilife was a straight referral based play (see 10 Kick Ass Real Estate Search Sites). It’s since opened its first brick and mortar brokerages in Kauai and the Big Island. And, according to a company spokesperson, in just under 8 months they’ve secured close to $100 million in listings and brought on more than 20 agents. They plan on opening two more offices on Oahu (Honolulu) and Maui later this year.

So it begs the question, shall we see this sort of search experience on the Continent someday or, more pressingly, will will see Hawaiilife’s mainland counterparts borrow its business model too?

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Continued here:
Hawaii Life Makes Me See Paradise

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Roost logo

We haven’t heard much from Roost, the IDX driven search portal, as of late. Last we heard of them they had redesigned their search pages to deal with a growing overabundance of search filters (see Roost Redesigns Search Results).

But news this week that they have expanded the markets they serve (see Roost Makes Its Nest in Jacksonville, FL) caused me to go back and take another look at the web site.

Turns out they’ve been really busy.

Roost has totally revamped the way that listings are displayed on their site. Under the old system you’d get an abbreviated property description and a handful of photos. For more information you’d click through to their preferred broker’s landing page for that individual property.

While I always liked the speed and functionality Roost provided, this aspect of the search experience was always somewhat problematic.

Any time you pass of that visitor to the broker site the problem is those landing pages are a mixed bag – some look half-decent, most downright miserable. This has been particular beef of mine for a while (see Building a New Real Estate Home Page).

It also causes the user hop back and forth between search results and property pages, making for a confusing and less than optimal experience. Frankly, the same holds true for Trulia too. And this was one of the reasons I’d moved my own personal searches off these sites and onto a more contained experience.

Seems like Roost recognized this problem and has taken steps to rectify this while at the same time changing up the value proposition they deliver to their advertisers.

Under the old model they ultimately were trying to sell the brokers the traffic they generated on their listings but it was up to the broker to capture and convert any visitors into leads.

Now pulling up a property on Roost gives you the full listing description straight from the MLS. No need to go anywhere else.

However, Roost’s advertising brokers show up as the contact information for the listing, brand and all. As a prospective buyer you can choose to schedule a showing or ask that broker for more information on the home. Clicking on any of these links pulls up a more traditional lead capture form, which is then presumably delivered to the advertising broker as a hot lead.

Interestingly, the listing broker is noted but is displayed in tiny grey text. And there is no longer any link to the listing brokers website either.

Other IDX driven search sites certainly use similar lead generation models (Estately comes to mind). But none, to my knowledge, go to quite so great a length to brand and establish other brokers as the primary point of contact for a listing. Certainly many broker web sites do just this when they display IDX listings on their own sites, but it’s definitely interesting to see a third party adopt this type of model.

Nevertheless, as a user, the new experience is far more pleasant and brings it more in line with some of the other online portals. And Roost definitely still rules with the speed it returns its queries.

It may have just regained a spot in my home searching arsenal.

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Go here to read the rest:
Roost Changes Up Their Game

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A guest perspective from Ashfaq Munshi, co-founder and CEO of Terabitz.

Tough times call for critical thinking.

Real estate broker – if you are dedicated to the brick-and-mortar brokerage office, but seek to change it up either to reduce cost or create an environment that infuses a spirit of change for customers and agents, you are not alone.

Brokerage office case study: Intero Andare

Silicon Valley California: In the popular, high-end retail / residential development known as Santana Row, you’ll find Intero’s flagship Andare office. This 3,000-square-foot space is a minimalist hub of modern style and consumer traffic. Gone are the catacomb of cubicles, replaced by communal areas with rich leather sofas and chairs, cafe tables and a large central work console equipped with a power and data conduit from the ceiling.

The front receptionist’s desk has been replaced with a retail-display-quality glass window, where Intero features resort properties and high-end homes from development partners broadcast on high-definition flat-screen TVs.

For developers, this serves as a localized space where they can create awareness of upcoming projects.

For agents, this modern space sparks a discernible energy that turns it from vanilla office into a hub of positive activity. Now it’s a convenient place to meet clients who are out shopping in the area already, check email and go over contracts (which are conveniently and securely stored online).

Agents plug into Web-based transaction management software enabling them to manage entire client files online, eliminating the need for paper and storage — hence the absence of copy machines, printers and the lasso of leases that hogtie their P&L.

For consumers, the Andare office emits an air of difference offering a beckoning invitation to come in and see what’s on the market while enjoying a cup of coffee, high-speed Wi-Fi, or meet with their agent to sign a contract. All without the threatening scent of sales.

For Intero brokers, all this traffic, interest and excitement came with a price. A reduced price. 70 percent less to be precise compared to Intero’s larger 7,000 – 11,000-square-foot offices, which have been part of the Bay Area landscape and part of the company’s brand identity. Andare was more than an experiment. It was a bold move during a year when most of their local competition buckled down, stopped spending and cut, cut, cut everything without replacing with anything new, different or better.

It was a move that sent a loud and clear message to their agents that evoked the type of leadership that makes them want to participate and do what they can to support.

It was a move that sent a renewed message to the public that real estate is not mom and pop, backward and dated but instead, concerned about enhancing the experience of anyone with even a remote interest in houses.

Still convinced your old brokerage office is getting the job done?

Part 1 of this article, Fashion Trends for real estate challenged the notion of office space for brokers, agents and consumers. In it I suggested replacing the terrestrial office altogether for a virtual one as the most cost-effective and absolutely doable approach in today’s networked world. But for those brokers who are still convinced they need office and seeking alternatives, Intero Andare stands as a beacon.

While I herald the merits the virtual world offers brokers, office space can make sense today and find itself home on Main Street creating brand awareness and brand experience for the consumer and a magnet for career minded agents searching for a progressive place to work.

And as I have learned from Intero, all of this can be acquired for price that is too good to pass up.

If you’ve ever dreamed of cutting cost and removing that large retail monkey from your back but never thought it possible to fit your organization inside a few thousand square feet, think again.

Lose the cubicles. Lose reception. Go completely wireless. Invite the public to use your machines and access your information. Give the agents couches to work on, coffee to sip and place this in the center of town. Then sit back and watch what happens.

Andare is an idea come to life. 
An experiment with a remarkable yield. 
And for Intero, just the beginning.

Interested in contributing a perspective to FOREM? Please send your submissions to futureofrealestate [at] gmail.com.

Photo by Mr. Greenjeans

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Rethink your real estate space

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In an important case for bloggers and real estate sites in general, real estate aggregator Blockshopper got its hand slapped heavily this week for doing what many of us do… that is, publishing and linking to publicly available sources on the Internet.

blockshopper

Blockshopper, a site that was launched in 2006, was built to aggregate real estate data in a number of metro cities around the country. One of the main features on the site is a daily news summary of real estate transactions each city. (Italian anesthesiologist drops $1.3M in Riverdale is an example of one of their stories.)

But this practice apparently raised the ire of a local law firm. Writer Wendy Davis brings the issue to light in an article on Slate Magazine.

BlockShopper was following standard operating procedure by linking to publicly available Web sites. But Jones Day got mad. The law firm (a big one, at 2,300 lawyers) has never publicly said why it sued; maybe the powers that be there thought the posts compromised their lawyers’ privacy. Housing records are public documents, but the Web turns public into accessible, and the firm presumably wasn’t thrilled about having its attorneys’ home purchases broadcast. Jones Day demanded that BlockShopper remove the items. When BlockShopper refused, the firm sued the 15-staff startup for trademark infringement. Jones Day’s legal theory was that BlockShopper’s link would trick readers into thinking that Jones Day was affiliated with the real estate site.

On the surface, the allegations of trademark infringement seem dismissable. But unfortunately, the judge in the case didn’t seem to agree and allowed the case to continue.

So rather than pursue a costly court battle, and having already spent six figures in its own defense, Blockshopper settled out of court this week and agreed to a cumbersome URL structure when linking to the law firm’s attorneys (i.e. not using the firm’s name in the anchor text).

Writer Davis argues the ramifications of this case mean companies may, in future, seize the opportunity to dictate to web publishers how and what they can link to. That is a truly frightening prospect.

But I also think the heart of the issue is ultimately the sphere of privacy that surrounds where people live. That notion which has largely been turned on its head in Real Estate 2.0 (see “Transparency” hits home).

Blockshopper’s practice of blogging individual’s purchases may have offended the attorneys in the law firm. But really, is it much different from Zillow publishing a Zestimate or Google providing a Street View of that same home. They are all pulling from sources that are ultimately in the public domain.

Google itself has stated that “satellite-image technology means that…complete privacy does not exist,” and today won a privacy suit based on that principle. Indeed, it seems not even the US military is immune from this new world.

Clearly we’re still stumbling through this new era of transparency and some people don’t like what’s happening. I don’t have all the answers to this issue, I just hope, when all’s said and done, it’s not the lawyers who end up telling us what can and can not be published.

(h/t 360Digest)

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Links, Lawsuits and Privacy in the Age of Real Estate 2.0

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I was out sick for most of last week so rather than regurgitate a bunch of old news; here’s a quick summary of the reaction to some of the bigger stories.

Redfin’s New (Old) Business Model

Redfin launched a referral-based business model that allows them to expand in to new markets. They also add data-rich review pages on all their agents.

Tech Crunch – Redfin Rolls Out The Welcome Mat For Foes Amidst Real Estate Crisis

With the real estate market contracting and credit tightening, Redfin has been forced to reconsider its business model. It seems that these partnerships with real estate agents was necessary for Redfin to expand throughout the country without having to hire more agents.

Redfin Corporate Blog – Redfin Creates a Marketplace for Agents

Sure, these guys work for traditional brokers like Century 21, Prudential, and Coldwell Banker, but they’re progressive: as part of the program, they agreed always to put the customer first, to let us publish all sorts of data about their performance — and to refund part of their commission too.

TechFlash – Once arch enemies, Redfin partners with real estate agents

The concept is not new. In fact, Seattle area companies such as Estately and Market Leader (Formerly HouseValues. Note: post has been updated to reflect the company’s current name) also earn money through agent referrals. But the program is a big switch for Redfin, which has always touted the customer service focus of its agents.

Rain City Guide – Redfin Circles Back to an Old Biz Model…

this is a business model that they’ve tried in the past… and it failed miserably the first time.

The Notorious R.O.B. – Redfin Transforms: The End of the Beginning?

Redfin was the pioneer of a new model, centered around a fantastic website, direct consumer engagement, and a novel refund concept. Their obsession with transparency, truly excellent user experience online, and “freakish depth” was the precursor to what the brokerage of the future might look like.

That chapter, I think, now comes to a close. The new real estate companies have found that they cannot make money directly from consumers.

Bottom line?

It sure does look like Redfin is getting back into the lead-gen game. But I think this a smart move for them. It’s a quick and easy way for them to ramp up service in areas they don’t already serve. And heck, why reinvent the wheel?

They already have the best search experience on the web (hands down) and this is the best way for them to leverage that asset.

Will it succeed? Who knows. But the agent reviews rock.

Trulia Takes On HomeFinder

Fresh from it’s recent dust up with Realtor.com (see Take the Trulia Challenge), Trulia seems to be picking a fight with another industry giant. This time it’s Classified Ventures Inc’s HomeFinder (formerly HomeScape) and last week Trulia snagged a crown jewel by snatching the Washington Post away from them.

Inman News – Trulia to power WashingtonPost.com searches

The Washington Post hopes a new partnership with Trulia will help the newspaper’s Web site become the “definitive source” for real estate information in and around the nation’s capital.

Local Onliner – Real Estate Coup: The Washington Post Quits HomeFinder for Trulia

The move from a Classified Ventures, Inc. (CVI) product is somewhat surprising, in part because The Washington Post Co. is a CVI shareholder, along with several other newspaper companies.

VentureBeat – Real estate sites like Trulia see record traffic and revenue

It’s yet another sign newspapers haven’t been able to figure out how to manage their once-lucrative classifieds offerings themselves. They’re dependent on startups like Trulia to do the work for them.

Bottom line?

Newspapers have, overall, done a pretty crappy job of creating a compelling online experience for consumers to replace their dead tree Sunday real estate sections.

More importantly however, they’ve done even less to attract the real estate advertising dollars that are fleeing print.

Now they’re desperate to claw back even a little bit of that revenue and help with their hemorrhaging budgets and Trulia’s offering stems the bleeding just a tiny bit.

At least it buys them a little time to figure out what they’re going to do. And they can’t beat the price (free).

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Redfin Refers While Trulia Targets New Markets

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