LiveJournal Buyout Confirmed 223
Kingfox writes "Brad Fitzpatrick, creator of LiveJournal, finally confirms the story that was posted to Slashdot yesterday. Six Apart has purchased Danga. This means that they're moving to San Francisco, LiveJournal users are finally getting the trackback feature, but the project will stay open source, and little else will change for the end user."
Changes (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Changes (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Changes (Score:5, Interesting)
Another thing that I hope they change, though it has no bearing on me since I don't blog there, is their theme system. It's pretty convoluted to learn. I don't know why they don't just let you use CSS. 90% of the custom themes I've seen could be done with the right HTML and some CSS. At least then after you spent hours working on your LJ page with CSS, you could use it in the "real world." After learning LJ formatting, all you can do is format LJ (AFAIK).
Re:Changes (Score:3, Insightful)
Agree here. If I had a nickel for everytime the server timed out on me or I ran into a "The document does not exist" error while surfing LJ, I'd probably have enough to keep a Paid LJ account for life. They need to get more bandwidth, faster server, or both.
Re:Changes (Score:3, Informative)
NOT TRUE (Score:2)
LJ added some pretty heavy duty hardware in the last year. I've been using them since Dec. 2000, and the service has never been better, even though I've been a paid user most of that time.
Re:NOT TRUE (Score:2)
See here [livejournal.com]
Re:Changes (Score:2)
As for the speed; paid users get ahead in the queue and the site is quite fast.
Little will change...? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Little will change...? (Score:2)
Re:Little will change...? (Score:2)
Ads already in place (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Ads already in place (Score:3, Informative)
It's quite clear (especially if you actually go look at the pages she cites) that she's been spywared.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Ads already in place (Score:1)
And if anyone is gonna see ads, it's me. I have WinXPPro & use MSIE 6 (patched and locked down, but still...)
Ran Ad-aware lately?
Re:Ads already in place (Score:3, Informative)
The people running LiveJournal seem to be quite aware of an average user's worries about the project; hell, Brad Fitzpatrick himself seems to be one of the crowd who has chosen specifically not to sell his soul to the devil. RTFA to hear what he's actually saying. As he says, "Really you shouldn't see any negative changes." The LiveJournal operators wou
Re:Ads already in place (Score:2)
Right, but what I'm concerned about is their Privacy Policy. Since legally (and yes, IANAL) wouldn't the old owners have absolutely no say whatsoever what happens to the users information? Whats to stop these people from deciding one year down the line "hey, revenue is down, we need more money, lets sell our user lists to advertisers"?
Re:Ads already in place (Score:2)
Re:Ads already in place (Score:2)
Re:Ads already in place (Score:2)
If you weren't aware, the original owners of LJ could do the same thing, and without notifying you?
Keep in mind, even when you set up your slashdot accounts: Don't expect a
Re:Ads already in place (Score:2)
Re:Ads already in place (Score:2)
Re:Ads already in place (Score:2)
Note that said LJ poster is also involved with the now-offline LJDrama.org and Encyclopedia Dramatica [encycloped...matica.com] (current front page NSFW). Take it all with a nice, big grain of salt.
Re:Ads already in place (Score:2)
Ahhhh! Please SPELL OUT the important acronyms. So other people won't have the panicked clicking-to-close-windows that I just had:
NSFW = Not Safe For work
Re:Hi, welcome to the Internets. (Score:2)
Thank goodness for TrackBack (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Thank goodness for TrackBack (Score:2)
Hmm. Somehow saying that doesn't make it any more true either. Endless "trackback" listings are still the annoying Type R stickers of the Internet.
Sick of trackback spam and pointlessness (Score:2)
Trackbacks suck. Believe me, it's not worth it. I've moved from LiveJournal to my own WordPress-based blog, and trackbacks is one of the last features I'm excited about. I got tired of all the trackback spam coming my way, and I disabled trackbacks for good.
Alternative: If you want to know who's linking to your blog -- whether or not they've trackbacked you -- you should look at Bloglines. Even if you don't use Bloglines, someone who reads your blog probably does, and Bloglines knows about which blogs are
Re:Thank goodness for TrackBack (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Thank goodness for TrackBack (Score:2)
So every time somebody makes a post in response to a post I've made, I have to assume that they're also going to take the time to comment in my blog about it?
or checking referrer logs.
I can do this on LiveJournal?
Re:Thank goodness for TrackBack (Score:2)
No. Something that is unintentional is never as "bad" as something that is intentional. If google can't handle the modern web, then a competitor should take its place. Expecting publishers to bow down to google's limitations is ridiculous.
Re:Thank goodness for TrackBack (Score:2)
Will this affect supervision/abuse? (Score:1, Interesting)
I wonder whether this will affect the webmaster/abuse contacts' attitudes.
Speaking as someone who's had inappropriate personal information and untrue claims splattered all over the board by a malicious ex, who knew many mutual friends would see it, I was less than impressed by the LiveJournal team's response when I pointed out that defamatory/illegal content was being posted. The ex in question made that post private when I sent her a rather pointed message about it, and the LiveJournal admins then claime
Re:Will this affect supervision/abuse? (Score:2, Insightful)
Story from previous day (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Story from previous day (Score:2)
Nice quote (Score:4, Interesting)
I believe that LiveJournal has, unfortunately, received a bum rap because many have considered the postings on LiveJournal to be trivial. It's sort of like a vicious circle: Journalists make fun of webloggers saying that they only post about their cats, webloggers make fun of LiveJournalers saying that they only post about high school angst and LiveJournalers make fun of webloggers saying that they are SUV-driving yuppies who think they have something important to say (and I'm generalizing). The fact is, webloggers and LiveJournalers are in essence doing the same thing: they are posting their thoughts to people who are important to them. For some webloggers, it's 100,000 people, for others it is 10. For LiveJournalers, it may be 30 people, it may be 3 (or a combination of some number).
Hey, amateur porn is where it's at... (Score:5, Informative)
--grendel drago
Page Ads? (Score:2)
Re:Page Ads? (Score:2)
Ack... (Score:1)
*sighs*
Re:Ack... (Score:2)
Truly these are the end times.
Re:Ack... (Score:2)
You mean, support will increase to infinity and prices will drop to zero? :) That actually would be nice.
Yay! (Score:2)
We atleast bother backing up our rumours with evidence (sometimes!).
Take that, Jenny. Ahaan!
Correction (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Correction (Score:3, Informative)
I believe your post is technically correct but it's also misleading. Six Apart may not be buying Danga but the Danga employees will be moving to San Francisco, at least according to the news post:
Re:Correction (Score:2)
I've got a more thorough write-up on my blog:
dmehus.blogspot.com [blogspot.com]
I use Blogger because of its permalink and post editing abilities, but I am considering either a switch to MSN Spaces or (possibly, and I stress this word heavily) back to Li
Re:Correction (Score:3, Informative)
Someone asked Brad directly if it was Danga or just LJ that was being sold and he stated it was all of it [livejournal.com].
Stephen
What's the business model? (Score:2)
It
Re:What's the business model? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What's the business model? (Score:2)
Look at the stats on how many paid accounts they have, and the price per month for such an account.
It works out over $150,000 per month income i believe
Re:What's the business model? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What's the business model? (Score:3, Interesting)
I think Six A
Six Apart v Google (Score:4, Funny)
Lots of reasons:
Together we form super robot that's stronger than the sum of its parts.
Super robots can fight super companies."
Blogger.com bought up by Google...
To think that millions of £££ venture capital will be spent over which system publishes what 14 year old Lisa's dog ate last night.
Re:Six Apart v Google (Score:2)
To think that maybe venture capitalists have a better understanding of the potential of these self-publishing tools than people like us do.
Hey, it could happen. First time for everything, even VCs having a clue.
Though everyone complains about LJ... (Score:5, Insightful)
One, I keep a tightly-knit friends-list, and sadly enough, those people would not read my journal regularly if it were not on Livejournal. On LJ, it's just a matter of opening up the "friends page" and seeing all of your friends' entries at once. Handy and keeps you and your buddies close, even if you rarely have the chance to really chat or talk.
Two, I adore the communities. When I need information on some subject, there's always a community. Not only that, but it's usually active. I prefer having a human helping hand rather than that of a search engine; both at once are even better (ha.) For example, I trust the ladies at the VaginaPagina community [livejournal.com] to relate experiences and help--especially since everyone is there to do just that.
I used to scoff at LJ, but now that I'm there, I just can't leave.
Re:Though everyone complains about LJ... (Score:2)
Well, you could set up a WordPress blog and use LivePress [goldsmith.us] to copy the entries to your LJ.
Also, you could try Bloglines [bloglines.com], an online RSS aggregator which is like a much improved friends page.
Re:Though everyone complains about LJ... (Score:2)
Re:Though everyone complains about LJ... (Score:2)
Re:Though everyone complains about LJ... (Score:2)
Re:Though everyone complains about LJ... (Score:2, Insightful)
Also RSS readers alone don't solve the problem of private "friends only" posting (afaik) - someone would still need an LJ account to be able to read my non-public entries, so once they've done that, it's usually easier to just use the Friends page system. If I was hosting
LJ Backup/Export to XML (Score:4, Informative)
LJExport v0.1 [homeip.net]
Any comments are welcome.. released under the BSD license.
Re:LJ Backup/Export to XML (Score:4, Informative)
Re:LJ Backup/Export to XML (Score:2)
http://ryzh.kiev.ua/ljsm/index_en.html
worked quite nicely for me last night.. makes a bunch of html files, each one having a journal entry/comments.. and there's a utility to combine it all into one
Re:LJ Backup/Export to XML (Score:2)
Re:LJ Backup/Export to XML (Score:2)
Kinda makes sense (Score:2)
Nervous (Score:3, Interesting)
There are literally hundreds of thousands of people who have put time and effort into their own little portion of the Internet, and I'm afraid that with one motion Brad's damaged their stock. The thing is - this is something Brad's been putting his life into for around six years now. If anything he's got the most to lose. (Ignoring the nice chunck of change he jsut pocketed.) Hopefully he walked into this with due diligence and maintains some official control over where LJ will head.
I suppose that's the one question I haven't seen answered - from what Brad said, it seems like he's now just an employee. Any official power he now has is ceremonial. So I hope he made the right choice.
Re:Nervous (Score:2)
Ever since LiveJournal got big and popular, a number of companies have been offering to buy LiveJournal. I suppose it was inevitable, but the more I talked to everybody, the less interested I became in selling. With a few exceptions, nobody seemed to "get it", and people's ideas for LiveJournal's future were generally lame. I started to realize that selling LiveJournal would mean killing LiveJournal, so I didn't. Then one day Six Apart contacts us, we start talking, and here we are. I kno
Re:Nervous (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't trust SixApart as far as I can throw them. That Brad does is all well and good, but I don't. Not after what they did with the MT license. I help maintain a community machine [757.org] shared among about 70 people. We had quite a few users who were using MT to host blogs. Mind you, this is a community machine, composed of donated hardware, run with donated power and bandwidth. SixApart refused to give us a free license for the new version.
Why upgrade? (Score:2)
Why didn't you just stick with MT 2.6? That's what I've done on our colo. I'm tempted by WordPress, but so far I haven't found any major reason to switch.
I understand your concerns with the big MT licensing debacle, but then SA admits it was a debacle, and they substantially changed the pricing structure as a result. Now they've seen how hard the community can bite, I'd be surprised if they'll easily tread on 6.5 million users.
Re:Why upgrade? (Score:2)
And the pricing structure is too little too late. It's still damn expensive, and when I asked about special licensing, they wouldn't even entertain it at the time.
So, goodbye MT, goodbye SixApart.
Re:Nervous (Score:2)
It was a stupid change, almost on the level of the XFree86 license change.
Pony up 500 bucks or install 70 instances of MT for your users yourself if your users are not techincal enough.
No need, and why would we? Since we had to do all that work (because of them), it was better to move people to WordPress, which is free software. Why would we continue to support them by using their software? So they can start charging the individual users next? It's not like we're rich -- the har
Re:Nervous (Score:2)
Re:Nervous (Score:2)
I was one of the first 100 people to get the perm accounts when they were offered oh-so-long ago.
Re:Nervous (Score:2)
Re:Nervous (Score:2)
Re:Nervous (Score:2)
Re:Nervous (Score:2)
Re:Nervous (Score:2)
As a livejournal user... (Score:3, Funny)
Beaverton staff getting canned? (Score:2)
Good for SA (Score:2)
I just hope technology migrates from LJ to SA's products, rather than the other way round.. no TypeKey or comment spam on LJ please!
Mood: (Score:2, Funny)
hah, 'still open source' .. not for long (Score:3, Informative)
Details of the change are here [livejournal.com].
Story on Toronto Star business section front page (Score:2)
Raising Questions (Score:2)
Strategy?! My Questions ... (Score:2)
They also said LJ will stay opensource and there will be no crossover effect between services like TypePad and LJ in terms of functions and communities.
Questions? Sure!
1. Why buy a huge community that hardly makes any money? LJ is mostly for free and hardly makes big cash. Why buy the user base if you could build the technology yourself and try to get more paying customers. The o
Long Term Agenda (Score:2)
A) Keep Live Journal at its existing level of performance, providing
Dear Six Apart... (Score:2)
That way, we can have some actual features.
Signed,
The Slashdot Journal Community [slashdot.org]
Re:WTF? (Score:1)
Re:WTF? (Score:2)
why would you quit, the same people are running it, and there are no plans to change anything that wouldn't have likely changed before.
Re:Nooo... please. No more MT or LJ blogs. (Score:2)
Not so easy to ignore sometimes.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not so easy to ignore sometimes.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, that's it *exactly* (Score:2, Funny)
Just today I was posting an article discussing Renaissance architecture and what came out was a shoegazer post about cat shit.
I think it must have something to do with the version of PERL I'm using.
Re:Well (Score:5, Insightful)
I call hypocrite...
--Anubis
Re:Well (Score:2)
Someone mod this up (Score:2)
Re:LJ trackbacks will make Google go wonky... (Score:3, Informative)
As if the first page in the pile has a low rank, it gives off an even smaller part of this to the next page. Now, if a BIG blog which was very popular joined this, it would effect maybe 1 or 2 tiers down but after this yet again its gone.
This means only the BIG blogs can stay at the top, and anyway when googling, how many blogs do you click?
I know i never click any, not by habit but because there is none there. I guess this is due to the almost randomness of the infomation