Quick Social Media Portability Primer

A nice, brief description of four technologies people think will be key to long-term portability of data across social media.

March 11, 2008 · David Wiley

Becoming a Node on the Social WAN

Whether they realize it or not, when people talk about a “social network,” they’re talking about a social LAN. All the profiles in Facebook or MySpace or Orkut or wherever are on the same network - they’re Local. What we need to be thinking about and putting in place is a social WAN - a fully distributed system where everyone completely controls their own profile, friends, and other data, and these are pushed out to the edges of the networks. ...

March 10, 2008 · David Wiley

Upgrading Elsevier

If you believe, like many, that academic publishers like Elsevier are evil, you may want to upgrade your opinion of Elsevier itself to “small but definitely non-zero chance that this organization is not evil.” According to a joint release from MIT and Elsevier: In a move to encourage open education, MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) and Elsevier have agreed to make available figures and text selections from any of Elsevier’s more than 2,000 journal titles for use on OCW. As a result of this landmark agreement, select Elsevier content can now be included within the open access OCW course materials - to be freely downloaded, used and shared under a Creative Commons license. ...

March 10, 2008 · David Wiley

On fully distributing the social network

Justin and I have been talking a lot lately about what’s wrong with social networking. Much has been written about social network fatigue and about the lack of data portability provided by many of the major social networks. For a variety of reasons, the portability of my identity and the graph of who my friends are and my relationships to them - in other words, me and my social network - is an extremely interesting problem to me. (And as Eric says, every good piece of software starts with a developer scratching his own itch.) Perhaps I’m not so interested in data portability aspects of getting my photos out of Flickr or my bookmarks out of Delicious because it’s already so easy to do. Getting my information about myself and my social network out of Facebook isn’t easy to do… ...

March 6, 2008 · David Wiley

Lessig for Congress

Once every 5 or 10 years you hear an idea that’s so good that you understand immediately that you should support it in any way you can, even to the point of personal sacrifice of time, money, and effort. I read one of these ideas on Slashdot today: With the unfortunate passing of Congressman Tom Lantos, parts of Silicon Valley and San Francisco will be holding a special election in June to send a replacement to Congress. Given the area, it would be great to have someone who is both tech- and policy-aware fill the seat — and it looks like that just might happen. Lawrence Lessig has apparently bought ‘change-congress.com.’ A ‘Draft Lessig’ group is forming on Facebook, featuring some of Lessig’s old co-workers at Harvard and Jimmy Wales, among others. No word from Lessig himself yet, but he’s been increasingly vocal about politics of late. If it happens, it would be a huge step forward for the representation of technology in Washington." ...

February 15, 2008 · David Wiley

Republishing OCW

Thought you all might be interested in a little experiment I’m trying in republishing OCW materials in Wordpress - http://newmediaocw.wordpress.com/. There’s a ton we can do here with custom themes and plugins that would be really cool. Wouldn’t have the power of something like eduCommons, but would be much simpler to use, too. Let me know what you think!

February 14, 2008 · David Wiley

Desmond Tutu Signs Cape Town

The headline says it all. Desmond Tutu has signed the Cape Town Open Education Declaration. Over 1400 individuals and 100 organizations have signed to date. Have you?

February 8, 2008 · David Wiley

Cato vs Cicero

Martin has a great post up about the debate between Stephen and I over the Cape Town Declaration written in terms of a comparison between Cato and Cicero. I enjoyed it; I expect Stephen did as well.

February 5, 2008 · David Wiley

Better than Free

Seth Godin expands on Kevin Kelley’s Better than Free. Seth’s takeaway: “when there are infinite copies of something, charging for one is almost impossible.” Or in Kevin’s words, When copies are super abundant, they become worthless. When copies are super abundant, stuff which can’t be copied becomes scarce and valuable. When copies are free, you need to sell things which can not be copied. They both hit the nail right on the head. People trying to figure out how to make open education sustainable would do well to read these articles. If a day or two passes and someone hasn’t translated Kevin’s eight points into education speak I’ll go ahead and do it. But read these pieces NOW.

February 2, 2008 · David Wiley

Great Article on NIH Open Access Mandate

Gavin links to his great article on scienceprogress.org about how NIH’s New Open Access Policy Can Benefit Everyone. “The new policy is not only notable for its novelty and the whopping amount of research it will make available, but for its storied history.”

January 30, 2008 · David Wiley