December 14th, 2007

It's nice when I can recycle concepts from many years ago for new releases of technology. Take, for instance, my concept of iron clouds and the release of Google's Knols.

An iron cloud is a cloud–a resource accessible by anyone, anywhere–that is seemingly open and accessible but has, as its core, a heart of iron: it's owned by a single entity. It is centralized by a single entity, regardless of its physical distribution. To me, there can be no true cloud when there's ownership.

Udi Manber introduces Knols with the following:

The web contains an enormous amount of information, and Google has helped to make that information more easily accessible by providing pretty good search facilities. But not everything is written nor is everything well organized to make it easily discoverable. There are millions of people who possess useful knowledge that they would love to share, and there are billions of people who can benefit from it. We believe that many do not share that knowledge today simply because it is not easy enough to do that. The challenge posed to us by Larry, Sergey and Eric was to find a way to help people share their knowledge. This is our main goal

We believe that many do not share that knowledge today simply because it is not easy enough to do that. This just isn't true, and a rather backhanded insult to another Google property, Blogger. If a person is comfortable enough with the Net, they have all they need to be able to start contributing to the Net, through Blogger, Typepad, Wordpress.com, and so on. There may be experts who refuse to put their material online until they're paid for it, but then again, we have sites like Huffington Post, which provides both payment and place in which the experts may dabble their little toes.

If this is a snide aside to Wikipedia's reliance on Wiki technology, I don't think any of us has seen that Wikipedia suffers heavily from too many people constrained from contributing. The problems at Wikipedia are based on organization and clannishness, not technology.

In fact, nothing about what Google is saying about Google Knols makes sense, and therefore one has to treat this new 'gift' with suspicion, and indeed, some alarm.

People have been saying that Knols are a way for Google to get back at Wikipedia, but in actuality, they're a way to get back at us. We have dirtied the pristine, perfect field of search, where only the cream floats to the top. We don't use NOFOLLOW on our links, and link indiscriminately, without a care or thought to how the search engine may suffer under our abuse. We toss our own half baked opinions out into the void and are linked, in turn, to further sully search results. Frankly, we're messy, and muck up the algorithms.

The whole point of RDF/OWL, first, and microformats and even HTML5, was so that we all could eventually annotate our material more properly, helping to make a better, more searchable knowledgebase that expands ever outward over time. We are the cloud. However, rather than trust us to form this knowledgebase on our own, Google has now taken matters into its own hands.

I feel like the time when I was a child, and sought to help my grandmother clean up after a holiday meal. I grabbed a dish towel and was reaching for one of the fine china plates, when my grandmother, reacting in horror, snatched it out of my grasp and told me to go play with the other children; before you break something going unspoken, but understood.

Danny Sullivan commenting on Knols, writes the following:

Why do Knol? Google vice president of engineering, Udi Manber, who heads the project, told me that is designed to help people put knowledge on the web that doesn't currently exist, which in turn should make search better, since there will be better information out there.

Of course, Google already offers other content creation tools, such as Blogger and Google Page Creator. In addition, there are non-Google tools people already use to publish content, not to mention collaborative tools such as those I named at the opening of this article. Why yet another tool?

Manber said that Knol has a special focus on authors and a collection of tools that Google thinks is unique, and which in turn should encourage both content creation and readership.

"Knol is all about the authors," he said. "We believe that knowing who wrote a knol will significantly help users make better use of web content."

I can feel the plate being snatched as I read these words.

Leaving aside the worrisome effect of 'knowledge' being centered in and controlled by Google, via its search engine and now Knols, Google is making the same calculated mistake with Knols, as Microsoft does with IE: rather than work with the community, using community tools and specifications, it goes its own proprietary path–using its considerable market presence to ensure it becomes a force regardless of the soundness, or rightness, of its approach.

Google also undercuts the more or less altruistic nature of the knowledge web in the past, with promises of remuneration for those who choose to contribute Knols (and not so coincidentally, profiting Google at the same time). It reminds me of what someone told me a year or so ago: that not having ads in my sidebar makes my site look amateurish. I guess the days when people shared knowledge just to share are over.

update

Best title: Google Runs Out of Content to Monetize; Wants You to Build More.

December 4th, 2007

Tiny bubbles (tiny bubbles)
In the wine (in the wine)
Make me happy (make me happy)
Make me feel fine (make me feel fine) 

Via Groundhog's Day and Infothought, Wikipedia has a secret mailing list:

The irony, Tobias points out, is that in using this mailing list, the Wikipedia inner circle is guilty of the same behavior they're trying to fight. "They're villainizing the so-called attack sites because these sites are promoting pernicious ideas about Wikipedia," he says. "The argument is that when a bunch of like-minded people get together, they're sounding boards for one another, and they end up getting way off base because there's not an opposing viewpoint around.

"But you could say the exact same thing about this secret email list: a bunch of like-minded people are encouraging each other's possibly wacked-out views and, in the end, making trouble on Wikipedia."

Tiny bubbles (tiny bubbles)
In the wine (in the wine)

Kara Swisher links to a video, We Didn't Start this Bubble, which is both very funny and scarily prophetic.

Make me happy (make me happy)
Make me feel fine (make me feel fine) 

In the meantime, I received a copy of Nick Carr's The Big Switch with the old tag line, Our New Digital Destiny. I love free books, and since Nick is a good writer, I'm looking forward to reading the book and then writing a review.

Note to all: if you want to give me free stuff, I'll write about it.

When I'm not channeling Don Ho, that is...

Tiny bubbles (tiny bubbles)
In the wine (in the wine)
Make me happy (make me happy)
Make me feel fine (make me feel fine)