Florian Cramer on Wed, 1 Oct 2014 17:45:21 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Frank Chimero: Refragmentation |
The argument that insufficient protocol semantics lead to "walled gardens"...: > The lack of an <include> tag led to Pinterest. No method to connect > people created Facebook. RSS's confusing interfaces contributed to > Twitter's success. Any guargantuan web company's core value is a > response to limitations of the protocol (connection), markup spec > (description), or browsers (interface). Without proper connective > tissue, consolidation becomes necessary to address these unmet needs. > That, of course, leads to too much power in too few places. The door > opens to potential exploitation, invasive surveillance, and a fragility > that undermines the entire ethos of the internet. ... has been for years by computer scientist and W3C member Steven Pemberton. However, it's not realistic to think that richer markups or protocols would solve these problems because they don't solve the "issue" of identification and trust between users. Facebook, Ebay, etc. do not only manifest third-layer protocol extensions (if one consider TCP/IP the first and http the second layer of the web), but they are also identity and trust brokers. At a conference in Amsterdam, Pemberton gave the example of semantic web tags that could obsolete Ebay, simply because they would give users sufficiently precise and searchable tags for marking up their own private sales offer on their personal homepage. But nothing would ensure that the tags wouldn't be used as spam, and that the seller identities weren't fraudulent. RSS is a case in point. The interface is neither confusing, nor really hard to use for people who just want to follow and read feeds. But the reason for Twitter's success is the social filtering which RSS doesn't offer. And the social filtering function, in turn, relies on Twitter's function as an identity broker. Conversely, the lack of an <include> tag did _not_ lead to Pinterest because Pinterest is being used by people who cannot, or do not want to, write HTML. It is the old problem in computer and information science that solutions are being thought up from their back-end, not their front-end, and often, usable front-ends cannot be developed because they weren't considered in the back-end's design. (Case in point: XML is, theoretically, the working and tested solution for any kind of document processing; but not so in practice because there is, 17 years after its invention, not a single user-friendly universal text program for editing XML.) -F # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org