I haven’t forgotten that I still owe you the last installment on the D2L competencies series, but that’s going to take more mental bandwidth than I have at the moment. My goal is to get to it this weekend.
In the meantime, I note this article on GigaOm about the DiSo Project, which aims to turn WordPress blogs into social network nodes using technologies such as OpenID and microformats. While I don’t think this is necessarily the Nirvana of social networking (if there even is such a thing), I would personally welcome it as a step in the right direction. First, it’s focusing on using open standards and a platform that isn’t owned by one giant vendor. Those are good things. Second, as a blogger, I would prefer to own my primary identity node rather than going out and copying personal information into 50 different social networking sites, none of which I feel any special affinity for. As one blogger quoted in the article puts it,
For me, there’s really no appeal in spending a lot of time creating ‘user-generated’ content via a social networking application. That’s like remodeling the kitchen in a house you rent.
The article does go on to talk about how some people will prefer “ephemeral” identities that they can use for specific purposes and throw them away, rather than the strong anchor that a blog-based node would provide. For me, it’s not an either/or thing. Both would be useful.
Stephen Downes says
Yes, this is exactly the sort of thing I am envisioning. What I picture as being the core idea of the PLE, and similar technologues. User-owned identities.
Lorraine Stewart Moran says
Hey Michael,
It is Lorraine and George. We heard of a Michael Feldstein performing on Laurie Berkner’s CD (Kids music) and we were looking for you and here you are! Looking at your accomplishments is amazing! You seem to be really making your mark on this world. Good for you! Contact us sometime!
Jim says
Hi Michael,
While the idea is appealing, along with the benefits comes some problems such as spam blogs. Imagine software that generates thousands of blogs to siphon off the traffic and divert it to sales pages.
with a distributed network of blogs defining and enforcing policy will be difficult.
In any event it will be interesting to see what develops.