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Marshall Kirkpatrick


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SuperHelix (User)

"Particls has every chance of becoming [a] standard"
Michael Mahemoff
Software as She's Developed



Posts Tagged ‘portabale social networks’

Dissolution of Social Networks - AUDIO

My lovely wife (who is an Economics and Business teacher coincidentally) sent me a Podcast today which really blew me away. It’s an interview with Andreas Kluth (San Francisco correspondent for The Economist) talking about real and virtual campfires, and predicts the dissolution of standalone social networks as we know them.

Anyone interested in the next generation of internet technology really needs to listen to this podcast. Its clear, concise and really gets at the heart of many social graph issues and human behavior.

Dataportability Soon at a Cinema Near You - VIDEO


DataPortability - Connect, Control, Share, Remix from Smashcut Media on Vimeo.

This amazing video was lovingly hand-crafted by Michael Pick, from Smashcut Media, to outline and demonstrate what Data Portability is all about. If you’ve been under a rock and haven’t heard of the Data Portability Workgroup, this ought to catch you up real quick. ;)

It’s amazing work. Thank-you for your great work Michael.

Top 3 Privacy issues for DataPortability on Social Networks

I was asked some questions by Ouriel Ohayon to help with his upcoming presentation at Tel Aviv University. I thought I would share my answers here as well.

He asked me what I thought were the top 3 concerns for Privacy on Social Networks in a DataPortability enabled world

My answers…

  1. Perception: Privacy Concerns are somewhat over-exaggerated - just like with any new system/approach. If I email you, you get my email address. Why wouldn’t the same thing happen if I ‘friend’ you on a social network. The question is not if Robert Scoble had a right to get the data and the data of his friends - the question is why Facebook won’t let him.

    Update: I forgot to mention here that if email addresses and spam are the issue - then moving away from email addresses as a means for uniquely identifying users should help solve the issue. As Chris Messina says, we should be using OpenID instead of Email addresses for login and uniqueness checks.

  2. Control: “Privacy” is just a subset of a broader issue of “Control”. Facebook and others can give lots of Privacy but ultimately give very little Control. A whole set of other Control features are needed including DataPortability support. Facebook and others like to pretend they are protecting users - but actually they are just protecting their business model. Open will always win though.
  3. Language: Privacy is a very poor, out-dated word. In a social world privacy is less of a concern than complexity and information overload. We need to move onto more practical words such as permissions and trust. Words that let users act.

This is a blog about using Attention Data to help users filter the noise and experience a personally relevant Internet. It is written by the two founders of Faraday Media - the creators of Particls and co-authors of APML.


Ashley Angell: Co-Founder/CTO: Entrepreneur, Code Guru and TV Addict

Chris Saad: Co-Founder/CEO: Entrepreneur, Media Junkie and Attention Ninja

Paul Jones: Chief Architect: Problem Solver, Abstraction Genius and Code Monkey