We talk about portable friend lists, and we've seen some of that on Dopplr.
We talk about portable profile data and we see that on
GetSatisfaction.com and Lifestrea.ms.
We talk about a personal/portable social graph but we haven'
demonstrated what, in actuality, that looks like, writ large.
I think Dopplr and STFN are good test beds and they "get it", but I
think we're a ways from 1) providing an economic justification for
moving in this direction except for extremely early adopters and 2)
haven't provided a user experience that's salient, sensible or easier
than today's siloed approach.
If we start with solving real world problems first, the technology
will practically produce itself.
Chris
--
Chris Messina
Citizen-Participant &
Open Source Advocate-at-Large
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"but at the same time we have to have a discourse about how best to
make them secure, scalable, and smart."
I'd rather see this group focus on documenting existing pain points
and prescribing antidotes that could alleviate that pain for issues
found in the wild... And perhaps that's the route we're already on.
I suppose the simplest way to make some progress here is to have a
clear mission statement for dataportability.org. What we have there
now is a bit too grandiose and unfocused; I might suggest something
like:
"leveraging existing open and non-proprietary protocols, formats and
standards in support of ..."
Well, that's where things start to go fuzzy. I'd like to say "user
choice" or "better user experience" but again those things are far too
abstract. In support of "data portability" doesn't make much sense,
since it doesn't, by itself, lead to improving anything.
So, I think to put it to a point again, how does this "stack" make
things better again? Can we point to real world examples where having
"data portability" has lead to improved choice or customer experience?
Chris