The Unstoppable, Unreasonable, Abominable Linchpin.
Yup, I’m talking about Kim Schmitz a.k.a Kim Dotcom of Megaupload fame. Like him or dislike him, his persona has been built on persistence, adaptability, resilience, enthusiasm and passion. No, this isn’t a discussion in support of piracy or whatever other charges has been laid. The focus is on the persona.
SMASH! CRASH! BANG! KERPLUNK! SNAP!

He’s irritating, he’s LARGER than life, and remains masterful in the art of BIG IS BETTER and confirms that AGILITY is a key trait to success. For a large guy, he’s proven that agility and being abominable can help you rumble in the Bronx. Even Joe Biden, the Vice President of the United States was ruffled if the story holds true. (See article)
He hasn’t stopped since his arrest with MegaUpload. He keeps on ticking like an Energizer rabbit! Heck, he even launched a music service called “Megabox”, according to GigaOM! (See article)
Look at his twitter profile. His most recent one?

Yes. Now.
I am an artist. • I take initiative • I do the work, not the job. • Without critics, there is no art. • I am a Linchpin. I am not easily replaced. • If it’s never been done before, even better. • The work is personal, too important to phone in. • The lizard brain is powerless in the face of art. • I make it happen. Every day. • Every interaction is an opportunity to make a connection. • The past is gone. It has no power. The future depends on choices I make now. • I own the means of production—the system isn’t as important as my contribution to it. • I see the essential truth unclouded by worldview, and that truth drives my decisions. • I lean into the work, not away from it. Trivial work doesn’t require leaning. • Busywork is too easy. Rule-breaking works better and is worth the effort. • Energy is contagious. The more I put in, the more the world gives back. • It doesn’t matter if I’m always right. It matters that I’m always moving. • I raise the bar. I know yesterday’s innovation is today’s standard. • I will not be brainwashed into believing in the status quo. • Artists don’t care about credit. We care about change. • There is no resistance if I don’t allow it to defeat me. • I embrace a lack of structure to find a new path. • I am surprising. (And often surprised). • I donate energy and risk to the cause. • I turn charisma into leadership. • The work matters. • Go. Make something happen.
— Linchpin Manifesto, Seth Godin
When you’re reasonable, you use the same strategies everyone else uses. You do things like set your goals a bit higher than last year’s, say yes to things because everyone else likes them, and pad your deadlines so you can reach them on time.
Being reasonable about your business will only bury you deeper in the pack. If you want to get out in front, you have to break away from yesterday’s conventional thinking.
Paul Lemberg shows you how unreasonable strategies can bring you unprecedented success. Through real-life case studies of successful and unreasonable businesspeople, Lemberg shows you how to
BE Uncompromising by sticking to your goals no matter what.
BE Demanding by expecting more, not less, from everybody.
BE Critical by changing old systems that just don’ t work.
BE Outrageous by creating your own Business Brain Trust.
BE Prepared for real success on your terms.
Paul Lemberg, one of the world’s leading business growth consultants, teaches top level executives and entrepreneurs how to get more out of themselves, their companies, and their clients by using strategies that sidestep the prevailing business thinking.
Being unreasonable is about assessing the situation and leaping into the unknown-not foolishly, but courageously. Only by going against the norm, and perhaps ruffling feathers, can you be competitive, innovative, and successful.
— Amazon Book Description, Paul Lemberg, Be Unreasonable
Do you have a hobby you wish you could do all day? An obsession that keeps you up at night? Now is the perfect time to take those passions and make a living doing what you love. In CRUSH IT! Why NOW Is The Time To Cash In On Your Passion, Gary Vaynerchuk shows you how to use the power of the Internet to turn your real interests into real businesses. Gary spent years building his family business from a local wine shop into a national industry leader. Then one day he turned on a video camera, and by using the secrets revealed in this book, transformed his entire life and earning potential by building his personal brand. By the end of this book, any reader will have learned how to harness the power of the Internet to make their entrepreneurial dreams come true. Step by step, CRUSH IT! is the ultimate driver′s manual for modern business.
Gary Vaynerchuk has captured attention with his pioneering, multi-faceted approach to personal branding and business. After primarily utilizing traditional advertising techniques to build his family′s local retail wine business into a national industry leader, Gary rapidly leveraged social media tools such as Twitter and Facebook to promote Wine Library TV, http://tv.winelibrary.com, his video blog about wine. Gary has always had an early-to-market approach, launching Wine Library′s retail website in 1997 and Wine Library TV in February of 2006. His lessons on social media, passion, transparency, and reactionary business are not to be missed!
— Amazon Book Description, Crush It!, by Gary Vaynerchuk
To be successful in the market today, you must possess two strategic assets: a compelling product and a meaningful platform. In this step-by-step guide, Michael Hyatt, former CEO and current Chairman of Thomas Nelson Publishers, takes readers behind the scenes, into the new world of social media success. He shows you what best-selling authors, public speakers, entrepreneurs, musicians, and other creatives are doing differently to win customers in today’s crowded marketplace. Hyatt speaks from experience. He writes one of the top 800 blogs in the world and has more than 100,000 followers on Twitter. His large and growing platform serves as the foundation for his successful writing, speaking, and consulting practice.
..snip…
— Amazon Book Description, Mike Hyatt, Platform: Get Noticed in a Noisy World
Somehow, I think Kim Dotcom knows what he is doing.
He’s got:
- Platform!
- Is #crushing it Vaynerchuck-style.
- Is completely #unreasonable.
- And is a #linchpin.
Above all, he’s the abominable snowman because he’s scaring the begeezus out of a lot of folks. In Charlie Sheen-style, he may be #winning the platform wars!

The chatterbox tends to agree!

More on the Dotcom here:
- See Rick Veitch
Source: The New York Times
THE PASSWORD TIME-BOMB!

IT HAPPENED AGAIN.
We’re living in an age of digital paranoia. It’s becoming far too complex to manage online profiles, identities, and other personal information. This is why companies like Lastpass thrive in today’s world. Known as an encrypted digital locker which opens all your profiles with a single click, you can push that security further with Yubico’s USB thumbprint security key to prevent any UNauthorized attempts on the Lastpass Manager which resides on PC/Mac browsers like Firefox, Opera, Internet Explorer (Windows only), and Safari.
The number one thing that everyone should do is make their passwords longer with numbers, letters, and symbols. And please please please - don’t use the same one across services!
LinkedIn appeared to respond late to this breach but they also made it be known that “enhanced security” would be added. Really? Wasn’t enhanced security supposed to be the first thing they should have considered pre-and-post IPO. Not entirely impressive and articles calculating odds and percentages around your individual risk being one of the unlucky few to have your password floating around on Russian hacker forums is totally unprofessional.
I see lawsuits in the future. Sure, it’s just LinkedIn and someone could play ‘funny’ with your profile but as we get “layered on” with services online and through mobile smartphones, it’s going to become a “chore” to handle reactionary and protection-like measures as a result of lapses by third-party stakeholders.
Privacy is serious business. Security is serious business. Don’t make it a bottom-line cut-out in your product or business model because it could be the last thing your business ever does as a result.
Kindly,
Alexander S. Bosika
Source: techvibes.com