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-This morning's article on Facebook versus an open network has generated a fair bit of [discussion][3] [around the web][4] with some [good ideas][5] and [suggestions][6]. To follow up I thought I'd pull in a few comments and point out a couple misconceptions.
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-First off, in suggesting that Facebook ought to open up its data to the world I did not mean to imply an either/or distinction. A number of commenters on Wired, [Slashdot][2] and elsewhere seem to think that we're arguing that all your data should be public.
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-That's not the case.
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-Rather, we think there needs to be an open way of managing friends on the web at large so that you can replicate the privacy controls of Facebook, on any public page.
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-Given that Facebook only has three privacy settings, that doesn't seem like it would be hard to accomplish. The best ideas I've seen would involve some combination of OpenID, FOAF and perhaps microformats.
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-One of the more thoughtful responses I've seen comes from Dare Obasanjo, a Program Manager at Microsoft, who [points out that "open" means different things to different people][1]. He then lists four things that those of us looking for an open social network typically complain about:
-
-
->* Content Hosted on the Site Not Viewable By the General Public and not Indexed by Search Engines:
-* Inability to Export My Content from the Social Network:
-* Full APIs for Extracting and Creating Content on the Social Network
-* Being able to Interact with People from Different Social Networks from Your Preferred Social Network
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-Building on Dare's ideas, here is what, to my thinking, ought to be goals of a true open social network protocol:
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->* Content access controls. The ability to make some content visible to everyone and at the same time reserve other parts of content only for those visitors I've designated as "friends." To some degree you could do this with OpenID, but OpenID still hasn't reached critical mass.
-* Cross interaction for existing Social Networks. Got friends defined on MySpace, Facebook, Flickr and a ton of other sites? Any good solution to this problem will not require you to redefine your relationship, it will incorporate you existing data while providing a way to define new friends without resort to a social network.
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-
-The ability to export data or use an API are moot points because there would be no centralized site from which you need to grab your data.
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-Also, there were a couple of things deemed too nerdy for the general Wired audience which I think might interest Compiler readers. First off, the how-to part glosses over the logistics of attempting to build a Facebook-like page on your own.
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-Frameworks like Django and Ruby on Rails are both quite good for this sort of thing. I'll readily admit my ignorance to specifics of Rails, but I know a number of people are starting the release Django apps that are geared toward aggregating data from various social sites.
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-One standout example of this is Jeff Croft's site, particularly his ["lifestream"][7] section (the name may be a little cheesy, but the functionality of it is impressive). Jeff pulls in data from Flickr, Ma.gnolia, Upcoming and some other services and integrates them into his site -- and if you read some of his blog entries you'll learn that he's got all the data in his own database.
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-The missing link is of course a way for the site to recognize "friends" and show specific content to specific people.
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-Perhaps some folks more familiar with Rails could chime in the comments with some suggestions for the DIYers.
-
-[1]: http://www.25hoursaday.com/weblog/2007/08/06/SomeThoughtsOnOpenSocialNetworks.aspx
-[2]: http://slashdot.org/articles/07/08/06/1427214.shtml
-[3]: http://www.allfacebook.com/2007/08/give-it-time-facebook-will-open/
-[4]: http://www.allpeers.com/blog/2007/08/06/not-so-opened-social-networks/
-[5]: http://mashable.com/2007/08/06/mashable-supports-the-open-friends-format-off/
-[6]: http://www.centernetworks.com/open-your-social-network-or-face-wireds-wrath
-[7]: http://www2.jeffcroft.com/stream/ \ No newline at end of file