Hi Everyone,
The thought occurred to me that developing pod-centric features like group messaging might be used to promote a sense of community identity which, in turn, might help grow the overall user base of Diaspora as a platform.
The way I imagine this working is that online communities like OCTribe, NPTech, the HRC, etc… would spin up their own PODs focused around their various goals, missions, and identities and encourage their members to sign-up. Functionally, group "members" who sign up with these PODs might be automatically enrolled in shared aspects (groups), be given access to group messaging channels (e.g., beluga-esque messaging), and otherwise provided with community specific (read "POD limited") features.
The primary benefit for the Diaspora project would be a significant incentive for online communities to host their own PODs which would, in turn, encourage their membership to join the greater diaspora network and thereby help us in our virtuous effort to provide a viable alternative to centrally controlled corporate-owned social networks.
I know this might seem to fly in the face of Diaspora's federated design (and maybe principles) but I think these initially POD specific features could (and should) be evolved to support federation. For example, both the HRC (Human Rights Campaign) POD and, say, the San Francisco LGBT Center POD might participate in a fully federated shared "LGBT" aspect.
This would provide the advantage of (hopefully) significantly accelerating uptake of Diaspora in the social network space and be relatively easy to implement relative to fully federated shared aspects. Comments?
@briarrose