Moore and More on Linking

Earl Moore has a list of reasons why some people don’t link.  I can add some additional reasons why I think a couple of bloggers I used to read don’t link:

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(a) I was picked on in high school and this is my revenge on the world;

(b) if I link to you, people will realize that you are right and I am wrong, and I like to feel right;

(c) for the first time in my life, I am at the top of the food chain in something and I like the feeling of ignoring people who wouldn’t give me the time of day in the real world; and

(d) I’m pretending that my new media blog is an old media newspaper, and old media newspapers don’t link to new media blogs.

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Morning Reading: 9/30/06

Claus is having his own set of problems with Firefox.  Fortunately, my crash problem seems to have magically fixed itself- perhaps via an extension update.

Did the latest Colorado gunman use MySpace to research his victims?  According to John Dvorak, a CNN story intially reported a rumor that he did.

TechRepublic has 10 ways to become a better blogger.

Here’s how to use your webcam as a motion detecting security device.

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Morning Reading: 9/29/06

Only a Fool Would Buy That: Everyone’s favorite billionare, Mark Cuban, on YouTube.

I Know You Are, But What Am I: HP’s Patricia Dunn at a congressional hearing.

Why don’t we all just agree that MySpace is worth more than everything else on earth combined, so we can stop writing about it?

Randy Morin is exactly right.  Those who, by intent or by laziness, don’t link are damaging the utility of the blogosphere- both as a conversational medium and as an information resource.

Rogers and Seth on Seth’s Wikipedia imprisonment.

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Morning Reading: 9/28/06

Henry Blodget says that MySpace could be worth $15 billion (yes, that’s a b) in a few years.  He bases his argument on the current value of Yahoo.  He also says it could be worth less than Newscorp paid for it ($600 million).  While I’m not sure Henry did much other than set out the vast range of possibilities, he ended with a sentence I very much agree with: “One big search deal–and an obsession with music-related content–will not a $15 billion company make.”

In related news, Forevergeek debunks the myth of 100 million users.

Zingu: fun with photos.

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Morning Reading: 9/27/06

I really, really enjoyed the Scoble Show segment with Thomas Hawk.  I could watch him shoot and talk about photography for hours.  I probably learned more about photography from that segment than most of the photography books I have read.

Tom Morris talks about the SXSW panel on tag skepticism.  No one, and I mean no one, in the real world cares about tags.

Firefox 2 Release Candidate 1 is out. Ars Technica takes a look.

Limewire gives the RIAA a taste of its own medicine.

Farmgate asks if America still needs its farmers.  The answer, happily, is yes.  Read this interesting post to understand why.

Bad Teddy: a Paddington Bear kills 2500 fish in a fight at a fish hatchery.

I watched The Matador this past weekend and thought it was great.  I was not a Pierce Brosnan fan before, but I am now.  A must see for fans of offbeat movies.

Every Simpsons episode.  Online.  South Park too.

Seth Finkelstein on the future of the internet.

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Someone Needlepoint this Quote

And hang it on the wall.

Kevin Briody on Facebook’s move to open its network to anyone:

This is a bad idea. A classic example of inappropriately twisting a business model to justify investor demands and market expectations.

Amen.

It’s another example of the completely out of whack scale (or lack thereof) in the Web 2.0 space.  Facebook gained a big advantage, a huge mindshare and an identity apart from the “me too” of social networking by doing one thing very, very well- connecting college students.

Facebook is now willing to toss away much of that advantage by opening its gates to everyone in a silly attempt to be MySpace.

One day someone is going to make descisions based on something other than trying to squeeze the last dollar from the mythical Web 2.0 buyer.

When that happens, it will be time to needlepoint again.

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Piczo – A Better Choice for Kids?

Piczo is a social networking site, geared toward young teenagers, that actually does something about online safety- unlike MySpace and others.

Piczo is a closed system- there’s no way to browse pages or to search. There are numerous ways for parents and others to report inappropriate behavior. And best of all- Piczo has full time staff reviewing all complaints and claims to take swift action to protect its members.

This sounds like the sort of site I was describing last night when I was calling MySpace out for yet another round of smoke and mirrors in the name of user safety.

I haven’t tried Piczo, and much of what I report here comes from the C|Net story, the TechCrunch story, the Piczo safety page and the Piczo parents’ page.

I really wish Piczo would require parental approval before allowing kids to register, but other than that one material omission, it seems to have a good approach to online safety.

The question then becomes a choice between a “safer” network and no network at all. I suspect that when my kids get to the networking age, I will first try to write a secure site for them and their friends to use to connect online. If that’s too nerdy or Daddy-infested for my kids, we’ll have to talk about it. I’m not naive enough to think I can keep my kids from the internet, but I’m certain I can and will exert influence over where they go and what they do there.

My buddy Tom Morris pokes some logical holes in my dark alley theory and compares MySpace to a large city, like New York, Boston or London. He says that problems like the ones at MySpace and elsewhere can’t be solved by technological means. And he says that, since MySpace has more rules than the web at large, it’s at least incrementally safer than the world wild web.

Most of what he says makes sense. I guess the difference that I keep clinging to is that my kids can’t go to New York, Boston or London without me, but they are permitted to (and will almost certainly demand to) go to MySpace, etc. all by themselves.

Sure, I can forbid them from doing it at my house, but what about at a friend’s house? I have to be watchful and involved, but I want sites like MySpace to make it easier for me to control where my kids go and what they do online- not harder.

Piczo seems to be to be a step in that direction.

Update (12/27/12):

piczo

Morning Reading: 9/25/06

The Pew Future of the Internet II report tells us that by 2020, we’ll be living Bladerunner-style:

Tech “refuseniks” will emerge as a cultural group characterized by their choice to live off the network. Some will do this as a benign way to limit information overload, while others will commit acts of violence and terror against technology-inspired change.

Wisdump has its Top 10 Web 2.0 losers.

Techmeme has enacted sponsored posts- an interesting advertising angle.  Here’s Gabe’s announcement and here are the pricing plans.    Here are notes on the first three sponsors.  And here is Dwight Silverman’s take.  My initial thoughts are that this is a clever alternative to traditional advertising, and as long as Gabe picks the right sort of sponsors, it ought to work well.

George Ou on proof that Antivirus software slows your computer to a crawl.

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Dark Alleys, Dollars and Did She Really Say That?

darkalleyMySpace wants us to stand up and take notice of its new safety initiative.  Is this something meaningful or just more lip service?  Let’s take a look.

The big plan, it seems, is to publish a guide on safety tips, get Seventeen magazine and the National School Board Association to tag along, and put a link to these safety tips at the bottom of every MySpace page.  Oh, and they plan to distribute copies of the guide to schools all over the United States.

Yep, a guide with some safety tips will stop those murderers and pedophiles dead in their tracks.

For one thing, don’t most schools ban MySpace under the so-called MySpace law?  If so, are teachers going to spend time going over how to do safely what students are not permitted to do at all?

This is just more lip service, with some conscripted allies along to muddy the water a little.  I’d love to know the basis on which Seventeen magazine and, particularly, the National School Board Association lent their names to this effort.

In the flurry of lip service one very funny thing happened.  Seventeen magazine’s editor-in-chief opened her mouth and out came these words: “My mom was the person who told me not to walk down the dark alley by myself, not the person who created the dark alley.”

Well, aside from the fact that she just compared MySpace to a dark alley, here are a couple of differences between that dark alley and MySpace that come to mind:

(1) that dark alley doesn’t make millions or billions of dollars by enticing kids to walk down it;

(2) that dark alley isn’t owned and operated by a major media company;

(3) that dark alley is located in some outside place, likely far from home, as opposed to inside every computer in the world.

There are lots more differences, but you get my drift.

I’m all about educating kids.  And I’m all about monitoring what your kids do online.

You can’t expect MySpace, even if it is making millions and billions of dollars, to guarantee a safe environment.  Parents have to monitor and stay actively involved in their kids’ online activities.

But for some company that makes millions or billions of dollars by providing the so-called dark alley to take the position that it’s up to mom to protect the kids from said dark alley…well, that’s just about the most absurd thing I have ever heard.

MySpace should take a few of those millions or billions of dollars and hire hordes of people whose job consists of nothing other than surfing around MySpace all day and night, looking for both potential troublemakers as well as inappropriate content and personal information.

Or maybe require parental approval for people under 18 to sign up.

The dirty little secret, of course, is that if MySpace did all of that, its coveted user base, many of whom think they want a place away from mom and dad where the rules are looser, would cry foul and, perhaps, spend less time clicking those lucrative ads.

The fact remains, however, that parents expect MySpace to do a lot more than it seems willing to do in this regard.  Eventually, the smoke and mirrors will fail and congress and/or lawyers will press the issue.

In sum, you can do a lot more than MySpace seems to be willing to do and still rely on parents to be vigilant. So far, unfortunately, MySpace seems to want to do as little as possible while giving lip service to the problem.

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