citizen-everything – by Dave Winer

Dave’s post today about his sale of weblogs.com, which has been pretty well recieved (except for some folks pointing out some institutional stupidity at Verisign).

I think news, good or bad, is always received this way: “What if it were me?” And this idea fits well into people’s minds that way. It actually could be me, they think, and I think that’s great. We need more people starting projects for the community, that build the community, and then have the perseverence to stick with it, in the hope that there will be a payday someday.
-Dave Winer

Dave is saying something important. Right now, whether you call it Web2.0 (with all the acquisition and investment news in the last 2 weeks it feels a little like 1998 again) is that people are creating, making, shaping with technology for themselves and sharing it with others. The tools are becoming commodities. Its what we do with them that makes it interesting. Dave, with a small bit of technology (small in complexity – I know I couldnt build a ping server), is able to facilitate a lot of other people/businesses/investments. He should get paid for it – to go and create something else.

Rinse and Repeat. Rinse and Repeat.

The innovation isnt coming from Oracle or AOL or MS. The smarts are with the audience, and not the guys and gals on the stage. The point of this ramblign mishmash of regurgitated stuff Ace and I have been talking about for years is that its not the technology, its what you DO with it and how you SHARE it.

Citizen Media
Citizen Journalism
Citizen Developers
Citizen Makers

Cool – Google Reader

I have been a big fan of Google since, well, since Google came out. I never believed the “Do No Evil” schmack – because I am a jaded advertising guy.

Check this out:
http://www.google.com/reader/things/intro

This is Google’s new RSS Feed reader… testing it out now.

This kinda solves the RSS anywhere problem i have been having (multiple readers on multiple machines and keeping them all synched) and is another sticky element in the googlesphere.

Thanks to Ace at East India Branding Corp for the catch.

“This (is) not the son of Passport”

Excellent post on Kim Cameron’s Identity Weblog, which reprints an article from InfoWorld with quotes from a conference where Kim discussed/presented on software whose “behavior reflects identity”.

I have been walking the edges of this topic for a while, not really getting in there and taking a closer look thanks to clients and deadlines and the usual lifestuff. I started looking closer thanks to Doc Searls excellent posts on the subject at his blog and his IT Garage. I decided to do a deeper dig after reading his recent SuitWatch column in Linux Journal. It fits incredibly well with the idea of Attention as defined by Steve Gillmore and the Attention Trust.

Doc on identity:

The real problem is the absense of something we’ve needed all along: Independent Identity, owned by the individual, rather than granted by outside commercial and governmental bodies. With Independent Identity, sovereign individuals could selectively present credentials and do business, anywhere on the Net (or in the physical world, for that matter), without being forced to obtain “membership” or whatever. Their private information (memberships, preferences, transaction histories, attention data) would reside with the equivalent of a bank or a broker, and would be represented to others in a way that revealed only what the transaction, conversation or relationship required.

As defined by the trust, Attention is:

… the substance of focus. It registers your interests by indicating choice for certain things and choice against other things. Any time you pay attention to something (and any time you ignore something), data is created. That data has value, but only if it’s gathered, measured, and analyzed.

Attention is about my time AND focus, what and how I spend my attention on depends not on some programming wonk at a major network, but depends on my likes and dislikes. Identity is about my self, how I identify myself to the world, how I exchange my identity for access or content, or commerce and what information I allow marketers to take away and use. The only way I can exchange or monetize my attention is through some process that interacts with my identity. But my identity is not required for others to monetize my time (think CPM).

It all comes down to control. The Ad Guy in me is scared to death of that. Direct Advertising (Below the line) is based on getting the right message to the right person at the right time in the right medium. Lack of control, the user determining what information a marketer can see/kee/share with partners. scares the shit out of the ad industry the same way timeshifting (what do you mean you allow them to skip my commercials) or napster (what do you mean they can share my music) scared the big media companies.

If they control their own eyeballs, how do we make any money off of them?

Marketers and their agencies would rather not engage in the discussion at all. Trust us, they say. Give us you information and we will customize/personalize our content to what you want. Exchange your identity with our network and we will give you all kinds of stuff – as long as you dont ever leave (it is our competitve advantage after all). If you lock yourself in to our proprietary platform/software/distribution mechanisms, we will give you almost everything you think you want – except choice – choice in what we spend our attention on and the choice of what parts of our identity to share.

Kim’s post can be found here.

Find the entire article here:
http://www.infoworld.com/article/05/09/21/HNinfocard_1.html

Bit Torrent raises $8.75 Million

Thanks to Om Malik for this great story:http://gigaom.com/2005/09/23/bit-torrent-raises-875-million/

At Gnomdex this year a great deal of the conversation was about BitTorrent, and how the best way to legitimize it is to use it legitimately – use it for podcasts, video blog casts, spreading your own content, open source software, sharing legal and Creative Commons work – change the conversation from what it could do (piracy) to what it does do (sharing, transmitting, communicating – you know, like the internet).

Om Malik is reporting that the BitTorrent guys have just lined up financing of $8.75 million dollars. Now while that isnt dotcom money (aaaarrrggghhh!!!) it is still a nice chunka change for developing and rolling out bittorrent to the world. And while the big studios and record companies wouldn’t use the technology, with the right safeguards (like software keys, etc.) media companies could change how they distribute and share content with their users.

More and more we are seeing things like NerdTV, Systm, Rocketboom , Digg, and OurMedia– professional quality ‘programming’ (video or audio, sometimes user generated) distributed through the web. BitTorrent is a natural for this – taking advantage of bandwidth, the distributed aspects of the swarm, blah blah blah.

Can’t wait to see what comes next.

OUTFRICKENSTANDING – Netvibes

Marc Canter blogs about the new site Netvibes. It is an example of a Digital Lifestyle Aggregator (similar to what Marc is planning on doing with GoingOn).

Check it out here: http://www.netvibes.com/

This is easily the coolest thing I have seen in a while. Its built in Ajax (like Google’s personalized homepage and Microsoft’s Start.com). The difference is, these guys aren’t a multibillion dollar public company.

This service is free and gives the user the ability :

* to create a personalized page with the content they like.
* to put together data feeds and services from web 2.0 with a very simple interface
* to access your page anytime and from any computer .

Key features of Netvibes :

* Browse, modify, and import your RSS feeds with our integrated RSS/ATOM feedreader. You can easily import an OPML file as well.
* Import, download and listen to pod casts without any additional software
* Check your mail on one or many gmail accounts, stick web notes, weather and many more features to come !

You can add feeds, move the elements around on the page (thanks AJAX), bring in your gmail, get the weather, add notes to the page and even hit your page from other machines. The guys who built it, Florent Fremont and Tariq Krim are based in Paris and do Web2.0 apps.

Tres cool. Check it out.

Cringely on Ebay-Skype Merger

I could spend this space ridiculing eBay for overpaying for Skype, whose investors had put two years and $20 million into the company for a return of 12,899.88 percent. Nice work if you can get it. But let’s instead make the assumption that Meg Whitman and her business development people have NOT been smoking Arkansas polio weed and instead know something the rest of us don’t. What makes Skype worth that kind of money to eBay?

Great post can be found here:
http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20050915.html

I just wish Cringely would blog more. With NerdTv we now get him 2x a week and it is still not enough.

More reasons to love Iceland

Thanks to Brand Noise

So my buddy Ace (East India Branding Co.) is probably the world’s biggest evangelist for travelling to Iceland. Now this:

Icelandic fishermen pull tons of pristine cod from North Atlantic waters every year, selling it fresh or preserved with salt. Icelandic lamb has never eaten a mouthful of grain or seen a syringe of antibiotics. The country’s butter is deeply yellow with a high fat content, produced from cows with a pure lineage that can be traced back to Norwegian Viking herds.

The nation of Iceland is doing more to promote their natural, high quality products. It would be neat to see if someone took a stab at marketing some of these products the way Hugh @ GapingVoid has done with Stormhoek and English Cut.

Pretty Cool:
http://www.icelandnaturally.com/

Fun – iTunes and Ticketmaster

From PaidContent

Depeche Mode, Ticketmaster and iTunes are teaming up to offer a new music-ticket option. Starting today, iTunes pre-orders of the group’s new album “Playing the Angel” come with a password good for the chance to purchase up to four tickets for some of the band’s 2005 concerts. Those with passwords get a 10-day head start before the general public tickets go on sale Sept. 24.

Pretty neat – iTunes knows your buying history and music preferences. Ticketmaster can leverage that to target both the bands you listen to and music you might like. What would be more interesting is if they started sharing the data in the reverse – “we noticed you went to the Social Distortion concert the other night, would you like to buy their new single for a low low price of…”

Amazon and Coinstar – interesting combination

Wall Street Journal today has an article about how Amazon.com is joining forces with Coinstar:

The coin program may attract new users to Amazon and Coinstar. Some consumers have resisted Coinstar’s machines — familiar fixtures in many grocery stores — because Coinstar charges an 8.9% commission in the U.S. to convert coins into bills. And Amazon’s clientele has largely been limited to people with credit cards.

The Amazon program will give customers the full value of their change, as long as they spend it on Amazon. Coinstar Vice President Peter Rowan said the deal gives the company’s customers “a way of using cash online, which they couldn’t do until now. We hope it’ll drive new users.”
– MYLENE MANGALINDAN
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Now this isnt the coolest thing I have ever seen, but it is still pretty neat. It gives people who don’t have access to credit or debit cards (all 4 of them) access to Amazon, and will drive coinstar coin exchange traffic. I never knew Coinstar charged nearly 9% on the transaction. The really neat part of the story is the fact that the coinstar machines allowing you to add value to the cards – creating a platform for electronic currency specifically targeted to the young and the less wealthy.

Long Tail 101 – Brilliant

http://longtail.typepad.com/the_long_tail/2005/09/long_tail_101.html

Excellent distillation of the Long Tail and required reading.

The theory of the Long Tail is that our culture and economy is increasingly shifting away from a focus on a relatively small number of “hits” (mainstream products and markets) at the head of the demand curve and toward a huge number of niches in the tail. As the costs of production and distribution fall, especially online, there is now less need to lump products and consumers into one-size-fits-all containers. In an era without the constraints of physical shelf space and other bottlenecks of distribution, narrowly-target goods and services can be as economically attractive as mainstream fare.