
Battle Lines Being Drawn Over OpenSocial 63
SkiifGeek writes "Microsoft employees have already openly criticized Google's OpenSocial initiative (recently discussed here), and now there's news that one of the first OpenSocial applications, emote by Plaxo, was hacked within 45 minutes of appearing on the Net (it was subsequently pulled while Plaxo looked into fixing the holes). Although coding errors can happen to anyone, leaving evidence of lax programming discipline when all it takes to view your code is 'View Source' is poor form. It seems that the battle lines have been drawn between Microsoft and Google through their social networking proxies, with Facebook getting ready to fire the next salvo in the social networking battle."
OpenSocial isn't going to save MySpace. (Score:4, Insightful)
The OpenSocial value proposition goes something like this: Adopt opensocial, push your data into more places, and everyone wins. Consumers get their information needs answered in more places, and companies get their footprint in more places. And more or less, I think more relevant social services in more places is a win, but not in the Facebook-killing way.
To put it bluntly, OpenSocial isn't an anything "killer." And OpenSocial isn't going to save Myspace.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
That's not the problem, IMO, that Google is trying to address with OpenSocial. It may be the problem that MySpace is trying to address with its participation in OpenSocial.
Re: (Score:1, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1, Funny)
Facebook for the win!!!!
Re:OpenSocial isn't going to save MySpace. (Score:5, Interesting)
All Facebook fanboys seem to forget that its only big in US, and there too not the biggest yet (may get there, but who's seen the future!). For people in India, where I'm from, Orkut is the default social network. Everybody's there. 10 year old kids, 60 year old grand dads, but not to forget, India's teeming youth. Almost everyone from my school, university, work etc. Everyone! OpenSocial wasn't built to save Myspace. It was built to serve as a common API to developers to develop apps for all social network.
Apps on Facebook are very cool, but with the barrage of apps which have come up, it has totally screwed up their UI. It takes a newcomer a little while to find his bearings there. And even for experienced users, the app spam is becoming too much. Then you have profiles where a user has added dozens of apps, making it pretty much like a highly jumbled up myspace page, though without the graphic stuff.
Facebook has been going great guns so far, but they now have a very credible opponent. And it shall make for very interesting following.
As a passing note, check out this community for opensocial developers/users.
http://www.opensocializr.com/ [opensocializr.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Facebook is also huge in the UK, especially in London. Everyone is on it here. The London network on Facebook is also the biggest one (according to Wikipedia) with 1,646,154 users, Toronto is second with 936,969.
facebook is also very popular in turkey right now. i'm married to a turk and all of her friends are one it and more join constantly. anything to get people away from myspace is a good thing. myspace is the highest concentration of awful design in the universe.
Re: (Score:1)
Then you have profiles where a user has added dozens of apps, making it pretty much like a highly jumbled up myspace page
So much so that I've got into the habit of clicking the top bar of pretty much every app to minimise them when I look at profiles, so that I only have to see the stuff I want not the crappy meme-style stuff.
Wasn't aware Orkut was that big in India, I know a few people on Fb from there but my main SN remains LJ, which is mostly the preserve of the goth and the geek in the UK. I agree though, OpenSocial is a step forward in many ways, and we'll just have to see how things pan out.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Uh nothing can save Myspace. They wrote a piece of shit software that wasn't remade the second they got famous and then got stuck with just tacking on more code and making it an even worse POS. The cool thing about facebook besides being developed better (IMO up until they added those dumb useless apps that do nothing but annoy me) it was closed to college students. People that go to college have someth
OpenSocial is fixing a solved problem! (Score:5, Funny)
Chromatic points out that the whole problem addressed by Ope\ nSocial's API has already been solved [oreillynet.com]:
Honestly, I can't understand why Google et al. would ignore this work. If only there were some way of contacting them...
Re: (Score:2)
Of course, with things like PGP, e-mail can be extended to be a far better messaging system than social networking sites, and you get privacy, too. If only it were "cool" to
Re: (Score:1)
Did I really misspell Jon Postel's name? Ugh.
I hope this isn't taken seriously... (Score:5, Insightful)
This kind of bickering will hopefully turn some people against social networks and get some kids back to doing their own pages again instead of using lame ass templates.
I beg to differ. (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:I hope this isn't taken seriously... (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless you're a kick-ass programmer _and_ kick-ass designer, the probability that you can produce anything that looks better than Facebook's "lame ass templates" is 1/aleph one.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
If people start using an API to target ads or spy on them or maniplate friend counts, the cuteness is gone and these normal non-geeky people will get bored/annoyed and move on to the next social fad.
Like the old skool days (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Scoff if you will but I think in future years we're going to see more and more developers and such who get interview on Slashdot or elsewhere that their first dabbling in (*cough*) "code" (*cough*) was GeoCities and the like.
As much as some of us laughed about it back than (myself included) it's a damn sight more interesting and educational in comparison to MySpace.
Re: (Score:1)
I loath MySpace with a passion. But in order to personalise it you have to embed code. Sure, a lot of people are going and grabbing templates, but some of them will tweak and play, and others will go look for something better--I've seen some really nice MS profiles around. OK, the ugly ones outnumber them 100:1, but still, they're there.
The real regret is that the winning SN currently does appear to be Fb, which means people aren't learning any code. I learnt HTML on Geocities, and CSS on B
GeoCities, Angelfire != Facebook, MySpace (Score:3, Insightful)
For those who merely want to be able to have a public diary or a forum where they can communicate with their fr
Re: (Score:2)
For those who merely want to be able to have a public diary or a forum where they can communicate with their friends, I think it's a good thing that we have sites like Facebook which provide all of the basic tools. It's certainly much more usable to my friends who I still want to keep in touch with, but aren't computer savvy at all.
I think this is a tired argument. what, these people don't have email or a phone? social networks are for attention whores and you know it. anything else is just an excuse.
Re: (Score:2)
I know you're just a troll, but I'll bite anyway.
Do you know the e-mail addresses or cell phone numbers of all your friends from high school, many of which you've lost touch with over the years? I doubt it. Much of that data would be normally impossible to find as well, especially if those friends aren't Net savvy (don't have their own we
Re: (Score:2)
I know you're just a troll, but I'll bite anyway.
I am not a troll. I am just expressing my opinion. that's what I think, and you are free to disagree.
Do you know the e-mail addresses or cell phone numbers of all your friends from high school, many of which you've lost touch with over the years?
friends? you bet. I have kept in touch with my friends from highschool. acquaintances? nope. if they'd be my friends I wouldn't have to track them down.
There are plenty of other benefits to social networks that go beyond e-mail and phone.
such as?
Frankly, I'm surprised that a lot of Slashdotters (like yourself) are so anti-social networks. Luddites I say!
slashdotters with low and lowish UIDs keep dissapointing me too. but what can you do, right?
Yes, there are benefits of social networks (Score:2)
For me and many others (and possibly you as well), there's certainly a number of friends that I have lost track of. Sure, maybe I would consider them more acquaintances than anything, but I still find it interesting to have a way to keep up with them or find them. There are plenty of "acquaitances" that have developed into more deeper friendships, that you m
Re: (Score:2)
Yet something like Facebook allows for lighter interaction (pokes/prods/nudges/writing on walls), as well as being able to lurk and view their visible profile/photos/etc.
oh, OK I get it. this is the "social" aspect. one bigass circle jerk for drama seeking attention whores.
Your attitude almost reminds me of folks who were nay sayers on cell phones, or heck, even e-mail: "What's wrong with just calling people? Who needs this newfangled e-mail thing?"
here's where youre wrong. cells and email have their actual use. social networks are just a fad. like HTML email: stupid. it surprises me to see this kind of shit praised here. news for nerds? stuff that matters for pimply 14 year olds.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
It seems to me that this is becoming a sort of cold war between Microsoft and Google. Google's main business and source of revenue is advertising, while Microsoft's is Windows and Office, and neither company has much if any presence in the other's main business. They've made it clear they don't care for ea
More choices = good (Score:2)
This kind of bickering will hopefully turn some people against social networks and get some kids back to doing their own pages again instead of using lame ass templates.
I thought the whole idea was to build APIs that would tie into social networks. This should allow people to build their own sites/blogs/whatever, using any combination of custom/template/third-party widgets. How is giving people more options a bad thing? It seems to me this will open up social networks, moving them away from the gated co
A pox on both their houses (Score:1)
They care, I don't.
I'm so glad (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, yeah, slashdot....
Re: (Score:2)
First OpenSocial App made by retard. So what? (Score:2, Insightful)
Ya'all know its a fad, right? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
Remember all the dumb shit you did when you were a teenager? Me neither.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
I'm sorry, but where did you get the idea that, say, Facebook, is being frequented by teens? Last I'd heard, it's primary demographic was 18-35 year old university grads, for the most part.
... trolling for teens.
Welcome to facebook... (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Also, who do you think the 15 million linkedin users are, teenagers?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Of course, depending on your age we may still qualify as youngsters to you
Re: (Score:1)
The generation of youngsters that is pushing these Social Networks into prominence have the attention span of a crack-addled butterfly. They will flit about and land on the next thing soon enough, and then, after they are done with it, the corporations will notice and will invest in it a couple of years after its lost its prominence. Ask a teen. Any teen.
Herewith the 1995 version, from my boss back then:
The generation of youngsters that is pushing this Internet thing into prominence have the attention s
Re: (Score:1)
It's just more lock in (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't understand why any tech-savvy early adopter would be dying to lock into a platform. The companies are just as hungry for users to use their platform. I'm guessing it's all to lock in ad-revenue or mind-share or some other sinister corporate plan. It's too bad that the Internet used to be about open-communication. RFC's people! RFC's!! (I'm a big fan of the mention another poster made to the "dusty old RFC" that already solved this problem back in the 80's).
Social networking is dangerous to personal security. It's more about who you know, and sometimes we get involved with scrupulous parties that are not in-favor with the current dominant social circles. How long until creditors, government agencies, and employers exploit social networks online?
If one wishes to maintain a public network and a private one, that's there prerogative and is certainly maintainable. However, imagine a hypothetical situation where someone in that network gets flagged as a bad-apple by some institution. Would it be possible that policies at said institution may flag you as a bad-apple by association?
Funniest Comment of the Year (Score:3, Funny)
I nominate thoat for funniest comment by a "programmer" of the year.
New John Woo Movie with (Score:2)
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/11/02/ok-heres-at-least-part-of-what-facebook-is-announcing-on-tuesday/ [techcrunch.com]
Looks like there's gonna be a Face-On/Face-Off...
Everything That Rises Must Converge* (Score:2)
Oh, and they're easy to hack.
Of who am I reminded?
(*Apologies to Flannery O'Connor.)
Hmmm, uhhh.... (Score:1)
This is ridiculous (Score:2)
Google is ab
'Social' meant meeting people in person... (Score:2)
It's a change with fundamental consequences for society...
Oh, the irony! The irony! (Score:2)
The X-Files writers could NEVER have dreamed that one up!
-jn-