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Maybe you're a little right about selective memory, in the sense that in addition to being targeted to new computer users, AOL were first to have some features that were popular (chat and games). So no disresepect intended to people that liked aol for a while.
But I think a lot of people would have predicted that there would not be a long term reason to stay with aol.
Whereas with Google, the only question is how much more they grow, before things flatten out and stay huge (not that decline is impossible - but I don't see anyone predicting it other than you).
Facebook is a different story. Social networking is young and new, and I wouldn't try to predict where it will go. I can't imagine college age kids worrying about documenting their social life 20 years from now the way they do now. How it will be is way beyond me.
AOL was on my first computer, I was not impressed, I thought THAT was the Internet. I dropped it after the first month.
I got a CD from Blockbuster they were hocking Sprint Net dial up ISP service. I thought that was refreshing all you do is click your dial up thing, then open your browser or email client, no bloatware to hold you hostage while it updated software then dismissed you, and discard your connection like a cheap date after a hummer..."GOOD BYE!"(DUNT!)
I hated AOL, but I loved my new found ISP, and I had a hell of time explaining to 90% of people how I connected to the internet with out AOL. I do remember that vividly.
Mainly because there's not any money to be made from decentralizing. When you control the information, you can charge people to use that information. Weather it's a subscription based service to access the information or charging advertisers access to audiences, it's all the same. With the decentralized business model, who do you deal with? Since you can't control a decentralized business model, you can't make money off of it.
I'm not starting to hate Facebook, I've been hating it for quite some time. Kind of like Bank of America.
Every so often, with trepidation and fear, I have to go into my long dormant Facebook account to see what kind of mischief they've been into and check to be sure that all of my privacy settings and everything else are are set on "only me", as Facebook likes to change the rules of the game frequently and without notice.
Funny, I was once blandly sitting around one day after reading another infuriating article about Facebook privacy changes and googled "hate Facebook" "Facebook sucks" and similar othersuch phrases.
Much to my surprise all of these keywords led me to.....Facebook! That evil munchkin Zuckerberg owns all of the internet addresses hating Facebook and has incorporated them into his spy empire! Crap, you can't even hate the guy without putting your feet up on his footstool.
I'm just so happy that when I signed up for Facebook years ago I did it with a bogus email name and address and I have maybe 5 posts and no photos on my account.
Facebook sucks. Google that.
Every time i ever thought about signing up for a FB account.
The evening News would run a Story featuring some poor sap that had his right to privacy violated and trampled on, by his place of employment using something written or a picture posted to fire that person. Or let's not forget the hundreds of politicians that have managed to end their career over a FB post.
Just because it's posted on Facebook doesn't give your company the right to impose into your private life. Besides, it's the Internet, your supposed to use monikers and pseudonym as many people do. Under such avatars it's OK to break out of character and create an online persona for your self. You're a bore in real life, let's face it, if you had real friends you would be out doing things with them in the real world, instead of online painting yourself into a social taboo corner.
My other biggest problem besides the right to freedom of speech and expression on line, is the lack of rights of others not even on Facebook. What gives people the right to post pictures of you on their Facebook? Especially when that picture could be taken out of context and used against you.
Which brings me to further proof Facebook is just the flavor of the month. Geocities was the shit at one time
Some people just have short memories...
Yes, by entering search terms or friends, I told them private details.
But in return I got some useful service.
My question is whether we can cooperate to get that same useful service without giving any one company that info?
Something like the Wikipedia model maybe?
Google is clearly useful in searching for stuff, though other search engines are almost as good.
Facebook got me the email addresses of some long-lost relatives.
Google is clearly useful in searching for stuff, though other search engines are almost as good.
Google has lost it as research tool of any use, beyond the usual suspect sites.
Wiki, YouTube, Movie database all other results beyond that are every online and brick and mortar with phish links to their sites. Even if you are searching for information on a 1972 Ford Pinto, the Google results assures me I can buy a brands spanking new one from Best Buy or Amazon. And any one of the myriad cloned affiliate sites.
Google has lost it as research tool of any use, beyond the usual suspect sites.
http://scholar.google.com/intl/en/scholar/about.html
If you haven't used it, you'll find it under the "more" dropdown menu
Marcus if you don't know what I mean, then just say so.
Perhaps you never really used Google, you just took the first link in the list for granted all of these years.
I partly understand what you mean. But regarding your statement about research, I was just pointing out that there is the "scholar option" for people doing serious research using google.
I think searching could possibly be more effective, but a lot has to do with the people who make webpages. Isn't it their responsibility to put the keyowrd tags on the page and to do whatever they can to optimize their search ranking. I guess getting it linked from other places helps, and that there are other things people do to optimize the search rank. MAybe it's the commercialization of that process that bothers you.
MEanwhile, I know that google has their own algorithms for identifying articles and so on, given topics or search terms.
Here let's try, I'll do a google search on "housing, shadow inventory." A lot of articles came up. Not too bad.
I know that in the technical world newsgroups are going to be FAR better for discussing cutting edge technologies and so on, but those are user groups (discussion oriented). For what it's supposed to be, I am not that down on google .
What is your preferred method to find articles from periodicals on a given topic. Library search engines ?
What is your preferred method to find articles from periodicals on a given topic. Library search engines ?
I guess knowledge is power, and GOP doesn't want to share his methods, lest he lose his big edge.
Hi liv4ever
I am representing Gefuso here. Thank you to write one of our blog link!
In the beginning of this post, Patrick has mentioned the SOPA. So, I have another good link explaining what we think about it http://www.gefuso.com/annoucements/we-say-no-to-sopa/
We are fighting for the Internet Freedom and specially today our team is trying to write we can to bring more people into this fight! against SOPA.
Help the Internet and say no to SOPA!
Regards
Fabio de Brito
Shares of the search giant tanked 10% Thursday in after-hours trading, after Google reported quarterly profit and sales that rose from year-ago results but badly missed Wall Street's forecasts.
And...
THAT was THAT!
Perhaps they've hit their ceiling.
I get the feeling Facebook is getting there too.
What is your preferred method to find articles from periodicals on a given topic. Library search engines ?
I guess knowledge is power, and GOP doesn't want to share his methods, lest he lose his big edge.
Ah crap I'm sorry Marcus, I didn't see your reply.
I type shit in the text bar and hit enter.
I'm not looking for insight from academia in the searches I'm speaking of. But more from user groups, and vanity pages where someone posts a wealth of knowledge about a topic they are passionate about.
It could very well be, that with Social Networks being the flavor of the month. Those style of page I was speaking about, don't exist anymore. People are do busy hooking a piezo magnetic pick up to their sphincter to send out Tweets every time they fart. Perhaps the coolness of just being able to do that in first place, trumps any desire to actually write a blog on how they actually managed to create their homemade rig.
Then perhaps, 15 years later, those folks early on, that found the internet an invaluable place to forever archive their knowledge for prosperity, have died knowing they left their legacy. Then Irony kicked, and nobody was left to pay the hosting bill, and their directory was whipped clean, and Ratemypoo.com was placed their instead.
Perhaps we've finally figured out to use the internet.
Welcome to Network Television 2.0.
Facebook is not content to use the contact information you willingly put into your Facebook profile for advertising. It is also using contact information you handed over for security purposes and contact information you didn’t hand over at all, but that was collected from other people’s contact books, a hidden layer of details Facebook has about you that I’ve come to call “shadow contact information.” I managed to place an ad in front of Alan Mislove by targeting his shadow profile. This means that the junk email address that you hand over for discounts or for shady online shopping is likely associated with your account and being used to target you with ads.
A couple of weeks ago, I noticed something strange was happening to my Google Chrome web browser. Where Chrome had always allowed me to browse the internet as an anonymous user, suddenly my browser had signed itself into my Google account. A bit of investigation (and a visit to a nerd forum) pointed me to the cause: Chrome had logged itself in after I visited my Gmail account.
The change in Chrome’s behavior, it turns out, was not a bug. It’s part of a new technical “feature” in the browser called “identity consistency between browser and cookie jar.” Despite the gritty technical name of the feature, it represents a truly fundamental change in the way Chrome works. For the first 10 years of Chrome’s existence, Chrome was simply a typical web browser. You had the option to sign the browser into Google—and thus take advantage of Google’s many data-sharing and cloud-synchronization options—but you never had to. In the stroke of an update, the sign-in became mandatory: If you happened to visit a Google property, the browser would attach itself to your Google account.
America needs SKULLFUCKBOOK!, an app that works 24/7 to enroll synthetic personalities and pump them full of plausible, persona-specific transactions and searches at a rate of 100,000 new personalities per minute, until Facebook and Google ads are statistically worthless.
Pat, tell me now. Are you ready to face down Larry and Serge and Zuckfuck in your drive way with M134?
The first few suggestions when I registered for a new Twitter Account selecting only "Politics" coming in from a VPN in Miami.
The top three: Maddow, Nate Silver, Krugman. NO Conservatives, Not even Fox News or Limbaugh. Only Liberals. Even Obama but not the current POTUS.
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Both Facebook and Google have way too much power. They know who we know and can censor what we see.
Are there any viable decentralized ways to accomplish the same functionality as Facebook and Google?
Bittorrent is a good model, I think. Just keeps popping up and they can't squash it yet, though SOPA is definitely intended to.