Archive for May, 2007

Wakoopa – Software Gone Social

I first heard about Wakoopa this morning while listening to Buzz Out Loud and it was described as “Last.fm for software”. Very interesting, I thought.

I’ve been using xfire for a while, but not for the IM capabilities (who needs another one of those?). I use xfire because it keeps track of what games you are playing and how long you are playing them. It creates these nifty badges which you can put in forum signatures and such to share your gaming habits. The only problem I had was xfire doesn’t provide an RSS feed so I’m not able to add the information to my Jaiku presence stream.

Enter Wakoopa.

Wakoopa, using a small tracker application you installed on your Windows or Mac, will keep track of all software you run (including games), how long you run them, and some other information such as what version they are. The result is the perfect place to create a profile of “what you do”, share applications with others, find new applications, review applications, and even find out when new versions are available.

I found RSS feeds for my recently used software, my contact’s recently used software, reviews of software I use, and versions of software I use. It fed right into Jaiku and I’m a happy camper.

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This is insanse! Digg in full effect.

It seems that yesterday was a crazy day for Digg. If you’re not up on the controversy, here’s a good place to catch up. Go on, I’ll wait.

In my opinion, there is a reason we have a representative democracy. It’s not perfect, but it’s better than the alternative. Not only is it nearly impossible logistically to allow every citizen to vote individually on every issue, but the vast majority of the citizens have proven that they are not capable of comprehending the issues. Just look how close the last few elections for President have been.

No, I’m convinced that every Digg user who posted or dugg stories containing the hex code did so without thinking about the consequences . No, not for themselves. Not much could possibly happen to them individually. Their account gets banned? Their post/comment gets removed? Big deal. However, the bigger issue is not whether Digg has the right to remove their posts (which obviously violate the Terms of Service), but the fact that Digg is susceptible to a revolt by the very users it gives the democratic power to.

I’m not even concerned with the issue about the hex code itself and what it’s for. Post it wherever you want: blog posts, t-shirts, coffee mugs, whatever. This worked for the DeCSS and proved their point quite well. The bigger story here is that when Digg received requests to take down the offending content, they had to comply. It’s the law. There is a process to follow which allows the website owner to say, “No this doesn’t violate copyright, put it back up” and the next step is to go to court. Digg community never gave this process a chance to work.

So, this morning I saw that Kevin has given up and will stop deleting posts and comments containing the code. Sure, it’s a great idea to stop the revolt, but it must have taken a lot to admit defeat. The site is his baby and he strongly believes in democratic news and it turned on him, after all. I hope he quietly starts deleting the posts after the heat about incident dies down. Show ‘em who’s boss!

Digg is a great concept and for most things, it’s fine to let the community to pick the important topics (though my opinion of the digg community is the subject of a whole other post), but this faceless mob clearly decided their interests were greater than that of Digg’s. They won, I hope their happy. Now Kevin needs to build in safeguards against this kind of revolt for the next time. There will be a next time, I guarantee it. The mob will be embolden by their success.

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