This just in from the chombster:
Hey Milk, Mike, Beev, whoever,
don't have my bb password with me right now. I noticed the cool new
links on theforest.org.uk to google, twitter, etc. and I saw that there
seems to be a domino effect as forest fringe and total kunst now have
twitter accounts as well. I wanted to ask again, would you consider
deleting the twitter account and opening an identica one instead?
I really think that microblogging may become a more and more important
form of communication, along with email, IM etc., and that closed
networks like twitter are bad for the internet, and conversely that what
identica are doing is absolutely the future. It all needs to be seen in
the wider context of the struggle for free software, open networks and
end-user autonomy.
I was listening to this podcast recently that had an interview with the
founder of identica. It was really cool. He talked about laconica (the
free software that runs identi.ca) as an open network microblogging
platform, built to be federated, distributed, decentralised, not tied to
a single monopoly provider. Identi.ca is different from twitter in two
ways. The software that runs it is free software so you can host it on
your own computer or use it to setup a rival service, and it supports
the OpenMicroblogging standards so that it can interact with _other_
microblogging software. Twitter is closed in both senses. This
difference is even bigger than it first seems when you realise that it's
a difference of network topology, witness the recent successful DDOS
attacks against twitter. You couldn't do that to an Internet full of
federated laconica services like identi.ca.
http://thecommandline.net/2008/10/01/evan_prodromou/He made an interesting analogy with email. In the early 90s email was
like twitter or facebook today, AOL users could only send email to other
AOL users and not to CompuServe users. It seems absurd today that we
would have a proprietary email system, but it _could_ have turned out
that way. What happened was that all of the smaller email providers
started to cooperate and together they outweighed the giants, and we
ended up with open protocols for email that the giants were forced to
sign up to.
A counter-example is social networking. Several major closed social
networking services like Facebook etc. have gotten very big with no open
alternative. OpenSocial exists but came too late, and it's now an uphill
battle to popularise it. I've missed out on much of the forest
community's web output ever since everyone started using facebook,
because I won't use it. It is really a very bad thing for the Internet.
The Internet should be open. I've no doubt that the likes of Twitter,
Myspace, Facebook and Flickr want it to remain closed.
Another example of a federated service like laconica is Wordpress. You
can sign up to a hosted blog at wordpress.com, but you can also download
the software and host it yourself or setup your own rival hosting
service, or you can use some other blogging software because blogging
has a whole host of open protocols associated with it (RSS, metaweblog,
pingback, etc etc etc). Wordpress is now the no.1 blogging software and
service in the world.
One more example: because people can contribute to laconica's open
source code dozens of people have translated it into their own
languages. Twitter supports English and Japanese.
I think this matters. Which side do we, as users, want to be on? Do we
want an open network or a bunch of closed networks? With microblogging I
reckon right now it could go one way or the other, and it's really a
shame to see the forest throwing its weight in with the 800-pound
gorilla in the room when it would be so easy to side with the Rebel
Alliance on this one.
I guess it goes without saying that I'm not happy either with us
prominently linking to both Facebook _and_ MySpace. Personally I'm in
favour of simply removing these links. People who are already on
facebook or myspace will find the forest on facebook or myspace, one of
their 'friends' will have it written on his face or something. There's
no reason for us, the forest, to be pushing people towards these
corporate monopolies.
The links to Flickr and Google are different because they're useful to
anybody, you can click on them and view the forest-related content
without having to buy into a closed network. Flickr is a bit of a shame
because there is 23hq, we have a forest group at
http://www.23hq.com/photogroup/forest/ that anyone with a free 23hq
account can submit photos to, it could have worked. Maybe it could still
work.
Anyway, twitter = corporate whores, identi.ca = forest.