OPW — June 26 — There's a new social network on the launch runway, worthy of a mention. Marc Canter is a visionary and a troublemaker and he's making his social networking move. Not sure why it took this long, but he's taken his sweet time to build something worthwhile. fyi, Marc was the founder of Macromedia. I remember him most as the loud guy giving Jonathan Abrams (Friendster founder) and the rest of a social networking panel a hard time in 2003 at a Stanford Vlab panel presentation. He called for open standards, more user empowerment. Marc built PA on his own dime to allow people to connect their networks and identities in one place. An advanced social network for an older group. Tags, photos, video, groups, networks, blogs…usable, clean, customizable…nice. More fun than Linkedin (like there's any fun there), more serious than Myspace. I think I might have found a new home. – Mark Brooks
Month: June 2006
Genealogy Subscription Service
DAILY HERALD — June 25 — Ancestry.com, a subscription service of MyFamily.com Inc. completed a six-year effort to index more than 540 million names in U.S. Census records from 1790 through 1930, boosting its online archive to more than 5 billion searchable names. "We've brought family research into the 21st century," said company CEO Tim Sullivan (former Match.com CEO). Ancestry.com has 725,000 subscribers and receives 300 million page views and attracts 7 million unique site visitors each month by offering free trials and making effective use of banner advertising. MyFamily.com, Ancestry.co.uk, Rootsweb.com and Genealogy.com, receive 13 million uniques monthly and generates $140 million revenue.
The full article was originally published at Daily Herald, but is no longer available.
Mark Brooks: Jim Safka took over Match.com's stewardship.
Free Sites vs American Singles, Social Networks
OPW — June 26 — Here's a little graph of Plentyoffish vs OKCupid vs Matchdoctor vs American Singles fyi. Plentyoffish is powering away. Here's Myspace vs Friendster vs Hi5 vs Facebook.
Mark Brooks: Crazy outta control! Myspace is taking over the internet.
ISP Blocks Myspace and Personals Sites
OPW — June 26 — A Best Western in Utah was reported as using a wireless ISP that blocks Myspace. InfoWest explains on their blog and site that they are blocking Myspace because it is a context for dating and personal ads.
Mark Brooks – I hope this trend stops here. Your comments please.
OPW Interview – Wikipedia founder, Jimmy Wales
OPW INTERVIEW — June 25, 2006 — Strange things happen when you empower people. Myspace allowed users to create freeform profiles…85 million users later, Fox has their arms wrapped around them. Linux asked for a little help with a new OS. Jimmy Wales pondered on the wealth of the worlds encyclopedias, and set the framework for a new, open encyclopedia. Here's the story of Wikipedia. It shouldn't have happened, but it did. How can you empower YOUR online personals site users more? Have faith, step back, you might be surprised what happens. – Mark Brooks
What's your personal story?
One of the interesting things, I guess, is when I was growing up, I had a fairly unusual education. My mother and grandmother had a small private school and there were four kids in my grade, 1st through 8th grade. In fact, what they did was they grouped us into two groups, so 1st through 4th grade, and 5th through 8th grade. There were about 16 kids in the classroom but at different levels. So that enabled us to work at whatever different levels we were interested in. We had a very open-ended time schedule and we were able to just study and learn whatever we wanted. I spent a lot of time pawing over the encyclopedia. Self-directed learning has always been a part of my upbringing.
I was in grad school studying financial economics and did PHD coursework, but I never did finish the PHD. I got an interesting job in Chicago as a trader. When I was in grad school I started looking at the Internet and looking at free licensing software. I was watching the growth of the free software movement. At first I was skeptical but then we saw that very high quality software was being created. All the software that really runs the Internet is Apache, Linux, PHP, it's all free licensed software that's written primarily by volunteers, programmers just working together collaboratively. So that was really the genesis of the idea for a free encyclopedia, to get a bunch of people together to collaborate on something useful. We've seen them do it in the software world and it works so, let's do the same thing with encyclopedias.
Was there one particular turning point for you? When was Wikipedia started?
Wikipedia was started in January 2001. Before this, for two years, I had the previous project Newpedia. Newpedia was a completely different social model. It was very top down, very structured, very hierarchical – seven stage review process for articles, academic committees and so forth. And it was also a failure. It was a failure because it wasn't very fun for the volunteers. It was way too heavy in terms of controls and mechanisms and that's actually one of the things, as you said, Wikipedia was intuitive but it was born out of really a reaction against that.
In the Newpedia days we engaged in a lot of thinking about how to control things, how to make sure nothing bad got in. Wikipedia goes in totally the opposite way. So I said, "Let's just be as open as possible. Let's rely on accountability rather then gate keeping." By that I mean, every edit is visible, every edit is trackable to your account, people can see what you're doing, so there's that public oversight of the work that the community does. Wikipedia is really a reaction against the gatekeeper approach, which was to say, "we'll just make sure that only good people are involved and that people know what they're talking about before they get started." That was the gatekeeper model, which didn't work.
Did the information drastically improve on Wikipedia at a certain point, once you had a critical mass of contributors?
It's not about the number of people, it's about the quality of the individuals who are working on Wikipedia. We had more work done in two weeks on Wikipedia than we had done in two years on Newpedia. Even in the very early days, there was some pretty good articles, within a couple of weeks, where people got excited and edited together and kept adding information and rewriting and smoothing out, and then it just kept growing from there. I can't really point to any particular point and say, "Once we had this, then we were that." It grows and improves over time.
Is what you've created at Wikipedia magic, or is it reproducible?
I think the core principles are reproducible. You've got to think really hard about being in a social environment that's friendly and polite and helpful. Of course, with humans it's never perfect,there's always some fighting and things going on. There's always some sort of drama going on in the community.
Craigslist is a fine example. It's a community of friendly, helpful people who help each other out. And then, of course, I now have my company Wikia and people are building communities there using the same software (hosted) that Wikipedia is built on, but it isn't encyclopedias. It can be anything, political, fan sites, whatever, and those communities are also seeming to be very successful. I think it is reproducible.
I think that what we're going through right now is a period of learning about how to design software that let's people interact in friendly ways online. A lot of behaviors online, bad behaviors, come from incentives that are implicitly in the software that people don't necessarily notice. So a lot of my thinking about these kinds of issues is how do we keep the software in a state that encourages good work and gives a means of deflecting negative energy.
How do you make money? Why did you go non-profit with Wikipedia?
So Wikipedia started sort of on the side as a hobby and it just became bigger and bigger and there was a real demand from the volunteers that it be a non-profit. The idea of a free, neutral, high quality encyclopedia as a reference standard, written by a community…it just seemed to make sense as a charitable project.
I now get a salary from my work at Wikia, so that's how I make money. And then the foundation gets money primarily from small donations. So the bulk of the money that we get is $50 to $100, or 50 to 100 Euro. It's basically thousands of small donations that pay the bills and keep us going.
You're building an incredible reference to a world of information. Are you friends with Google?
Yeah, I mean I talk to people at Google. Of course, there are tons of people at Google who are fans of Wikipedia. We don't have any kind of formal business relationship or anything like that with Google.
What does the future hold for Wikipedia? What partnerships are you looking for in 2006 through 2007?
We just announced that we hired an Executive Director for the foundation. We're trying to mature the organization. Our organization is very small and a little chaotic because we're swamped all the time with all the crazy stuff that's going on with Wikipedia growing so fast. The main kinds of partnerships we're pursuing are around helping people to reuse our content commercially or non-commercially, so that involves us taking a careful look at how it can be used that are consistent with our community values. You should take a look at http://personals.wikia.com. It's not very active but it's kind of interesting. There's a few people working on. It's very limited at the moment but they're basically thinking about how to do personals in a community way. An open ended system. It's a neat experiment.
Mark Brooks: Wikipedia is modeled on the ancient campfire; the wise sharing information with the community around them. Jimmy knows open learning. He grew up in an open learning environment. It took that immersion in freeform thinking to drive the creation of the radical, rather counterintuitive Wikipedia. Web 2.0 will model (and improve on) many of the social dynamics that we experience in the real world. At the core of some of the best rising star web sites are two common themes. Trust and empowerment. (Wikia, Jotspot and Wetpaint are the top hosted wiki services available to the public).
Private-Label Social Network Platform
RED ORBIT — June 22 — Now, businesses and organizations can create, customized, branded online social networks where members can link their personal spaces with friends and colleagues. Server hosted solution, starting at $195/month – Webcrossing Neigbors.
The full article was originally published at Red Orbit, but is no longer available.
New MySpace Rules
COURIER TIMES — June 22 — MySpace users age 18 or over can no longer request to be on a 14-or 15-year-old's list of friends unless they already know either the youth's e-mail address or full name. MySpace already bars children 13 and under from creating accounts and only displays partial profiles of users' 14- or 15 years old, but the Web site has no way of confirming a user's true age.
The full article was originally published at Philly Burbs, but is no longer available.
MySpace Halts Tracking Sites
PC WORLD — June 21 — SingleStat.us was active for only 10 days before a cease-and-desist letter from MySpace caused its creator to shut down the site. SingleStat charged a small fee to be notified by email when the status of a MySpace user changed, from "in a relationship" to "single." On Tuesday, DatingAnyone.com, a Web site with similar functions was also shuttered after a warning from MySpace. MySpace bared its teeth citing California laws against hacking and federal trademark laws. Stalkerati enables searches at Friendster, Facebook, Technorati. MySpace appears to have added a script to prevent searches.
Mark Brooks: Myspace needs to be seen to be very aggressively going after sites that may undermine their user privacy. (What user privacy).
Interview with Markus Frind – AdSense Millionaire
WORK HAPPY.NET — June 15 — Markus Frind runs a free online dating site called PlentyOfFish.com and he rocked the Internet world this week when he posted a photo of his latest Google AdSense check for $900k Canadian. It was a check for 2 months because the first check they sent was so big it was rejected by his bank.
You're a one-man show running a very successful dating site. Tell us how you got started.
Back in 2001 after my birthday someone in the office introduced me to online dating sites. I went back to my desk and checked out udate.com and kiss.com and lavalife/web personals. I was bored and I wanted to chat with people. I was really annoyed when I found out you had to pay for everything, I ended up telling the girl who introduced me to the sites that I could do better and make them for free.
Your site, if you'll forgive me, isn't terribly attractive. What's your secret and what are your thoughts about what it takes to be successful?
I created the first real free dating and the first one that actually worked. Just like Google created the first real search engine that worked. There is no such thing as a secret. When I came home from work I sat down and I forced myself to code for a hour or 2. There are only 1000 or so sites in the world with massive traffic, and of those mine is the only one that is run by a single person. For being successful in building sites you need to give something to the surfer faster or better or both. If you want to do pay per click, you just need to be good at picking words to bid on. For that business its just a matter of repetition and fighting boredom. At the end of the day you just need to sit down and DO it. Most people don't. FULL INTERVIEW @ WORK HAPPY.NET
Mark Brooks: I just started listing the Canadian internet dating rankings at http://www.onlinepersonalswatch.com courtesy of Comscore Mediametrix. Plentyoffish.com is #3, very close behind Mate1, and has 3.7 times the number of uniques that it had in May of 2005. I'll interview Markus for OPW again shortly. Let me know the questions you'd like me to ask him.
