Continue reading “The beast has awoken; or, The beginning of Web 2.0”
The Filter: a lesser SoundFlavor
Hot on the heals of SoundFlavor’s release is The Filter, again, oddly PC-only. It supposedly “creates perfect playlists” and fills your “USB device”. Unlike SoundFlavor, however, it relies on user behavior like Last.fm to generate recommendations. Via Wishingline.
Awesome changes coming to Backpack
Pretty basic, but pretty awesome too: check out the new reorder-anything demo for a preview of what’s to come for 37Signals’ Backpack app.
Cisco is creating the Matrix
In a vivid example of the kind of exploitative crowdsourcing I was talking about, Cisco is apparently building a network of humans that live to consume its products.
Ironically, using words like “empower” and “connect”, they cite Digg Labs as an example of their “network monitoring program” and use specimens’ camera phones to monitor the their behavior while mining a “billion people’s” web surfing habits to find out what is of interest to them (whoa, it’s like a total rip of Original Signal!).
This may just be the best example of a corporate “crowdsource” shop underway. What with government sanctioned torture on the books, it’s only a matter of time before, indeed, they start sticking those metal prod things into our heads.
Gems from Matt
- The WordPress of forums has gone gold. Download now.
- Boxely, Joe Hewitt’s souped up alternative to XUL, is live. PC-only. Lame.
- Keep Google off your back with WordPress Anonymous Blogging. Original credit.
- Well, it depends.
- From Weblog Tools: WP Simile Timeline Plugin. (Now only if they added support for hAtom, I could just feed my blog into it!)
Dodgeball goes Gauth, reveals GOOG’s masterplan to p0wn your ass
Don’t say I didn’t warn you, but now when you try to log into your favorite neighborhood spyware, you’ll be greeted by a prompt to login with either your old skool Dodgeball account credentials or your Gauth account (the one that you use for Docs, Gmail, Gcal, Orkut, or other Google Services like YouTube (whoops — did I just say YouTube?).
Should you choose to login with your Dodgeball account, you’ll then be asked what your Gauth account is… again… or to create a new one. I chose to eff it and just merge my accounts (hoping that there’s an export of my checkins to Google Earth). Now I can manage Dodgeball from Google (note the last service):

So here’s an interesting theory. Or maybe a foretelling of the inevitable. But clearly everything that Google buys, it will, somehow, someday, assimilate. Just like Teh Borg a generation before it.
I mean, from a business perspective, it does make sense. Yahoo! at least had the sense to make it utterly optional for Flickr and Upcoming users to use or create a Yahoo account for logging in (though they’ve recently backslid into pushing straight-up Y! Auth at Flickr).
So in light of the GooTube buy-out, what’s interesting about this Dodgeball stitchover is what happens if they do the same to YouTube (which, of course, they will, giving them a lump sum portion of the nearly 20M monthly uniques as new or merged accounts under their proprietary authentication system). …Which then, of course, can be used at other Google Authenticated sites. But hey, how useful are those accounts on sites that don’t use their system? Yeah, about as a good as a false username and an incorrect password: utterly useless.
Which leads me to pimping OpenID, the open grassroots alternative I’ve previously discussed. If Google opted to interop with (or help develop) this emerging standard, users would be centrally in control of their data — and able to rely on vendors that they choose to represent them — hell, even run their own identity server if that’s their wont — and take their data with them. And now is more critical than ever to raise these issues as the major players push CardSpace, BBAuth and GAuth while independent identity projects struggle to keep it together and muster their collective will in crafting a standard that keeps users’ rights and interests squarely at the fore.
Thus with Google standing guard squarely between me and more and more of the services that I use, I’m starting to bear witness to the rise of a very insidious environment — where, heck, the kids’ll just keep following the pied piper into unknown territory until Google single-handedly locks’em all up in its walled-garden-silo, never to escape with their data or their friends again (that’s not evil, is it?) — or at least that’s what it looks like from here, given their culture of secrecy and expediency in converting existing login systems to their own (Writely, Dodgeball, Blogger, Picasa, Google Earth, etc).
But hey, I still remain hopefully naive while decidedly skeptical; if it’s not Google that gets there first, maybe it’ll be Apple with their patent on transportable identities. And, if there’s something you want to do about it in the meantime, if you’re running WordPress, go ahead and grab the new WordPress OpenID plugin. Perhaps if we take the identity matter into our own hands and do something about it first, they’ll have no choice but to keep the gate to their walled gardens, at the very least, unlatched.
Digg’s got a new blog… and no comments
Digg has redesigned its blog and moved to WordPress but for some reason (popularity I presume) aren’t accepting comments. Another “heartbeat” blog — just active enough to let you know that they’re not dead. Via Digg.
Another interview with yours truly
If for some reason you’d like to put yourself through an actual podcast of me rambling on and on about crowdsourcing, BarCamp, Flock and other open source goodness, take a listen. I also touch on community marks and other philosophical matters.
The Worldbridges folks were really kind to me (coming from New Hampshire and PEI) and I’d recommend that you take a look at their entire podcast series.
I see London, I see France — Tailrank goes 2.0
Kevin Burton launched Tailrank 2.0 today, a welcome improvement over the previous iteration.
As has been reported, the improvements in the ranking algorithm put it closer to sharing TechMeme’s lunch, though I still find TechMeme slightly more readable. Still, Kevin’s done some great work and should be commended on his essentially solitary efforts banging out code at Coffee to the People.
Now, what hasn’t been reported on is something a bit more… shall we say… scandalous. It’s not really that bad, I guess, but does hover between genius and spyware.
What I’m talking about is the RSS autodiscovery technique that Kevin’s created for populating your personal feed list (my result from Safari — a browser I barely use — is above).
Here’s how it works (it’s actually pretty simple so get ready for some geeky stuff…!):
When you visit the import page and click the “Auto Configure”, Tailrank loads a page in an invisible iframe that contains some JavaScript, basic CSS and a long list of links (over 400K worth, actually).
The JavaScript does something really clever to determine if the links should be added to your subscription list: by setting the style of visited links to be relative (as opposed to having no style at all) and then testing to see which of the provided list of links have that style, Kevin’s able to effectively rummage through your browser history and collect a list of blogs that you’ve previously visited (at least since you last cleared your cache).
Want to try it? I set up a demo that should detect at least one site (if you’re not reading this in a feed reader — if you are, visit my blog and then try it).
Obviously this technique, coupled with an invisible AJAX script, could be a pretty potent tool for gathering information about what sites folks have visited (like banking sites, for example) if it automatically ran when the page first loaded (fortunately you have to click a button to start the script on Tailrank).
Personally I think this trick is pretty cool — and a very innovative way to gather information about someone’s reading habits based on their actual behavior (if they’re the only ones using the browser, of course). I don’t like, however, that Kevin hasn’t disclosed his methodology on the Import page considering that, as early as 2002, a similar technique was discussed as being a browser security hole and has since come up repeatedly.
In any case, this is probably the best use of this tactic I’ve seen and in less capable or more devious hands, could be a pretty dangerous trick.
Still, the rest of Kevin’s work is rather remarkable and worth a look — especially his tools page. As for the auto-importer, well, I’ll leave it up to you to decide whether to use it.
Luobotou RSS Robot — feeds for Skype
Check out RSS Robot, a pretty innovative use of Skype for being notified of new feed content.
Just add anothR.com (was Luobotou2.0) to your Skype account and use these directions to try it out:
- Subscribe an RSS feed: RSS + [feed url]
- Unsubscribe an RSS feed: RSS – [feed number]
- List all RSS subscription: RSS List
- Setting up the alert time,0 for instant,5 for five minutes: RSS Timer [minute]
- Your suggestion for RSS Robot: RSS Ideas [content]
For example, try pasting this RSS + https://factoryjoe.com/blog/feed into the chat window.
Should be a nice complement to Tailrank’s new IM functionality.




