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It's Time To Take Back Instant Messaging

Enigma5O writes "The TechZone says the world of instant messaging is a disjointed mess, and it's time for a citizen's revolt. From the article: "The obstacles in this case are three big companies: AOL, Yahoo! and Microsoft. Each wants to keep their networks closed, thereby forcing consumers to use their brand of software and effectively using their size to eliminate competition. Five years ago, Yahoo! and Microsoft were calling for then-leader AOL/ICQ to open their network to allow others to compete. They even successfully petitioned the FCC to restrict AOL's future developments before approving the AOL/Time Warner merger. When it was convenient for their business goals, Microsoft and Yahoo! waved the interoperability flag, but now that both companies have built substantial IM communities with their own closed networks, they have lost their passion for open networks.""

25 of 377 comments (clear)

  1. Take it back from what? by heinousjay · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How do you take back something you never owned in the first place?

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    1. Re:Take it back from what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Ask SCO

    2. Re:Take it back from what? by dasunt · · Score: 4, Informative
      There's Jabber servers aplenty, but lets see anyone join that disjointed mess into something cohesive. That's the real fragmentation.

      While there is slight differences in what each jabber server software supports, jabber servers do talk to each other quite nicely.

      It works like email. If I am romeo@montague.org, I can send a message to juliet@capulet.org. The message will go to montague.org, which will open a connection to capulet.org, and then capulet.org will send a message to juliet.

      Other than gmail, I can't think of a jabber implimentation that doesn't support S2S communication. After all, S2S communication is part of the jabber spec.

      You may call it fragmentation. Fine. I think its a sane system.

  2. Trillian by vivin · · Score: 4, Informative

    Which is why I like to use Trillian. It's pretty convenient, and you don't have to have 3 separate programs. It works well with AIM, MSN, Yahoo, and a host of other protocols/clients/whathaveyou.

    The free version is good, but if you're willing to fork up $25, then the Pro version is worth it as well.

    --
    Vivin Suresh Paliath
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    1. Re:Trillian by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Until MSN, AOL, and Yahoo! decide to close unofficial clients out, then it becomes a huge pain in the ass arms race.

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    2. Re:Trillian by vettemph · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yep, and the same thing happened with documents, hence OpenDocument format might save the day. Unfortunatly, Microsoft is doing the same shit with the WMV format. It is closed and encrypted and only works on proprietary systems. This was sole purpose for this was to swqeeze FOSS out. Folk are making home video with webcams and don't realise that they are making "closed" movies. It's very sad that the monopolistic behavior is not being stopped.

      --
      The government which is strong enough to protect you from everything is strong enough to take everything from you.
    3. Re:Trillian by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Except that it's Windows-only, and Jabber plugin is only available in the (non-free) Pro version.

    4. Re:Trillian by Baloo+Ursidae · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Which is why I like to use Trillian. It's pretty convenient, and you don't have to have 3 separate programs. It works well with AIM, MSN, Yahoo, and a host of other protocols/clients/whathaveyou.

      But you still have to have three seperate logins to get on all the networks and if you change computers and install it on a new system, you get to resort all your contacts again. You don't have these problems on Jabber, and it lets you talk to the Obsolete Three (AIM/ICQ/Microsoft-Yahoo Messenger) networks just fine. It's also not shareware, and any time proprietary software is not involved is a great thing.

      (Not to mention Trillian's got a user interface only a crackhead could love...)

      --
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  3. Add Skype by giorgiofr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Add Skype to the list, for there are many people who use it as an IM app. It would be great if we could unify the different protocols and have one big IM network. I, for one, hate to need different accounts here and there to be able to talk to my friends.

    --
    Global warming is a cube.
  4. Do away with the centralized server. by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The key is to do away with the centralized server, so no company or organization can control it.

    Go peer-to-peer, using each other's IP address.

    To discover someone's IP address, just e-mail your contacts a special message from which their IM will update it's table of address. Polling will check whether one is available or not.

    Yes, it's time to take back our IM!!!

    1. Re:Do away with the centralized server. by heelios · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's a pretty good idea, but what about people with dynamic IP addresses?

  5. "Its time to support my job security" by dada21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Its a big business conspiracy to become an uncompetitive monopoly. Just like GM, Ford and Dodge have a monopoly on U.S. Produced cars, Yahoo, MSN, and AOL have a complete monopoly on IM services. Just look at how much they charge for their monopoly service!

    This guy is totally right. Instead of these 3 expensive monopoly services, we should instead switch to one single service that we know is far more competitive than three monopolies. It is wonderful that he's so unselfish, I'm sure the time he spends working on his company's (check the link on that tirade) software is donated.

    While we're breaking down the IM monopoly, we should also tear drop the fruit monopoly that all those grocery stores have, and just grow and share fruit amongst each other in a free and open way. Come by the farm I work for, get a free orange while you peruse our other items for sale. Screw big bad grocery stores! My company gives away oranges!

    There's no problem here. This guy is posing his rant in order to generate interest in his company to better secure his job. We should make every car part interoperable between manufacturers, and make every TV the same size so that everyone sees the same picture. I'm sure it won't stifle development.

    1. Re:"Its time to support my job security" by Tinidril · · Score: 4, Interesting

      So why do you think Microsoft and AOL provide this free (beer) service? As an act of charity? And why do you think that they have had such strong resistance to inter-operation? Bad hair day?

      Both companies believe that they can use IM as a platform to make money, or as a platform to lock people into other services that cost money. Otherwise they wouldn't be providing the service and resisting inter-operation. Both companies sell enterprise servers that can be used within corporate environments to provide features unavailable with the free client. You can bet that any "innovations" will appear in that environment and not in the free version.

      For instance, there is a limited number of contacts that you can use in MSN, but that limit is removed with the enterprise server. For many people thats not an issue, but I know of a lot of helpdesk and GNOC people who need more than an average number of contacts, and they run into the limit all the time. If I try to create a new inovative service that runs on top of IM networks, I will need to pay a tithe to Microsoft to use more than the limited number of contacts they allow. If Microsoft didn't like my new service they could block it at the server and I would be powerless to stop them, and even today my choice of alternate providers would be quite limited.

      Microsoft has already started to talk about integrating MSIM into exchange and outlook. Just one more example of how Microsoft can extend one monopoly into another, and how they plan to tie IM inovations to overpriced software.

      Your grocery store is about as lame an analogy as I have ever seen, but I will attempt to use it to show where you are confused. I can go to any grocery store I like and buy a bag of apples, bring them home, and bake a pie with ingredients purchased at any other store I like, and the grocery store has no way to stop me. There is no such promise with MSIM or AIM.

      Yes there is _some_ choice of clients at present, but that is only by fiat of Microsoft and AOL. They can use encryption and soon trusted computing to lock out competing clients, or to charge competing vendors licensing if they want to inter-operate. This is not a question of "if", but "when". At some point they _will_ see an opportunity and they _will_ take it.

      I don't want to have to rely on Microsoft and AOL to give me permission to use IM or whatever new innovations are be created to use an IM network. Not when it is possible to have an open network to provide the same thing. This is not a case of trading multiple providers for one. It is trading three providers for as many others that want to enter the market. Yes, the core protocols will be the same. But that stops nobody from extending them or adding additional features to clients. Open standards provide a common platform from which anyone can inovate, while closed standards limit inovation to the corporations in power.

      The Jabber network really is the answer here, and with Google's new involvement, and commitment to support S2S federation we might stand a chance to make this part of the Internet as free (as in speech) as HTTP and SMTP are today. In fact, this may be our only chance.

      Try to look past the next year when thinking about what direction we want our network to go. Less corporate control will always be preferable in the log term, even if it is not in the short term.

      --
      XML is the best data format; unless your data needs to be read or written by a human or a computer.
    2. Re:"Its time to support my job security" by rvandam · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Instead of these 3 expensive monopoly services, we should instead switch to one single service that we know is far more competitive than three monopolies.

      You're heading towards making a good point but it all falls apart when you start talking about cars and TVs.

      We should make every car part interoperable between manufacturers, and make every TV the same size so that everyone sees the same picture. I'm sure it won't stifle development.

      It doesn't matter if your car and my car are interoperable because our cars never have to communicate between each other (yet). Neither of us would benefit in anyway if it were possible for us to swap belts or hoses or mufflers or whatever.

      But it does not matter when it comes to a communication platform. What if you couldn't call someone because they used AT&T and you used Sprint? What if your Nextel cellphone could only connect to other Nextel cellphones? You would clearly think that it was ridiculous. An earlier reply to your comment was on the right track about ISPs and email. But what if you couldn't email him because you could only email within your own ISP? What if you could only visit websites hosted by your ISP? What would be the point? The internet wouldn't never have developed under these kind of preposterous circumstances. But those are a much better analogy for the IM world.

      Then you throw in GAIM, Trillian, and whoever else that tries to establish general connectivity and the "monopolies" fight to keep them out. Equivalent to a third party company setting up one set of phone lines to AT&T and one set to Sprint and then when you (on you're AT&T phone) want to call someone on a Sprint phone you call the third party first and they make the connection for you. Or even better, you personally get both kinds of phones and both kinds of phonelines and then have the third party come to your house and wire up a hacked connection between them. Then in the middle of the night, someone from Sprint sneaks up to your house and cuts the wires. Or else they modulate their phone signal with propietary garbage that only they know how to filter out so you still have the connection but it's useless.

      Would you still fight against a citizen's revolt in a circumstance like that?

      I will point out however, that what I first quoted from you above is still an important comment. Notice that in all my silly analogies I never said that Sprint and AT&T should merge (with all the other telcos) and become one gigantic conglomerate. Instead, they should still all exist (competition is good), they just all need to recognize that they would all benefit if they established general connectivity (well, all minus Trillian, etc unless you just prefer their interface).

      Right now, people primarily choose to use existing IM services solely because their friends do. If they all interoperated, then we would choose them based on their quality of service (just as we ideally do with cellphones, etc). And then hopefully that quality of service would finally start to improve.

      --
      My religion is better than yours is.
  6. one word: by xlyz · · Score: 4, Informative
    1. Re:one word: by afree87 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Before anyone says "Jabber has failed," you have to wait for the Google Talk developers to finish S2S support in their server. Then, some other big names might start signing on.

  7. IM Cliques by vivin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One major problem is that people tend to have their "IM Cliques". Meaning that some people (and their friends) usually have a preferred client. They usually don't want to switch over to anything else, because their friends are all on AOL/AIM/MSN/Yahoo!. One solution is like Trillian which consolidates everything into one interface. The other suggestions made by the article are good, but I still think it would be a little hard to migrate people from their "cliques" over to something new.

    --
    Vivin Suresh Paliath
    http://vivin.net

    I like
  8. Wow by Spad · · Score: 5, Informative

    Wow, this article is right on the money, what with Microsoft and Yahoo announcing that they're going to link their IM networks.

  9. I have an idea by kingsqueak · · Score: 5, Funny

    We can call it...

    Internet Relay Chat

    It will be HUGE

    1. Re:I have an idea by ilyaaohell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Woah, wait. You actually WONDER why IRC stagnated while IM took off? Could it possibly be because the concept of a chat client consisting of nothing but a thin Buddy List window requiring no knowledge of "networks" or "netsplits" or "channels" was a massive leap forward in online chat applications? Could it possibly be that, more often than not, people prefer to talk one on one and not in a public chat room with a dozen or more other people? Could it possibly be because IM was the "default" chat method for everyone who signed up to AOL, the most user-plentiful internet provider of all time?

      I bet you that 90% of all AIM users (which is tens of millions of people) have never once used, much less heard of, IRC... and you're suggesting that they somehow "switched" to AIM to avoid some arcane technical issue or made a conscious choice to use it over IRC?

      Instant Messaging is superior to IRC in many, many ways. That, and the massive marketting of IM by a wealthy Internet conglomorate, ensured that it is now the de facto standard in online chat.

      --
      UNIX: A computer user is defined as a programmer. WINDOWS: A computer user is defined as a consumer.
  10. IRC by oGMo · · Score: 4, Informative

    Geez, all this whining about proprietary half-assed IM networks. Show people how to use irc! They can use it with GAIM or any other various GUI client. (Or text if they prefer.) It's been around for decades, anyone can run a server, there are a multitude of clients on every platform, and it's entirely open. You can transfer files, and even have stupid graphical smileys and sounds if you want (or filter them if you don't).

    Seriously, if people want an "open IM network", fire up an irc server, give everyone GAIM or Google Messanger, and be done with the AOL angst.

    --

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  11. Re:Genuine question by oberondarksoul · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, they most certainly do. E-mail is certainly a very useful means of getting a message from A to B, but it is nowhere near as convenient as an IM, especially to teenage users who value swift feedback. It's quicker and easier to send a message to someone over Yahoo, or MSN Messenger, than it is to e-mail them, plus you can hold a conversation in almost-real time. While obviously not perfect, IM is definitely useful to many.

    --
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  12. Jabber/XMPP On :) by A.K.A_Magnet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Jabber is the way to go. It's open, scalable, distributed and simple.

    The problem are social connections. People are on MSN because their friends are on MSN. Same for Yahoo!

    But who from your contact list/roster, in the first place, came on MSN or Yahoo!? Well, users who were advertised by their Yahoo! account or using the MSN client being shipped with Windows. Compare to "Who made you join ICQ, or IRC". No ads, only because it was the way to go, because some computer techies back then told you it was great (well, it WAS indeed).

    Slashdot crowd and others, being [...] computer and technologies aware, should be the first link in each of our own socials network to tell others to go Jabber. Non-techie people should trust us on the technical side: Jabber is way better designed than others major IMs services. The Jabber community, for now, is mainly composed of geeks and free software hobbyists. Let's tell our friends to make the switch. It's a little time consumming the first time, but it's free. Tell them to use GTalk (which should be openly federating soon, even with some restrictions to avoid 'spim'..) or any other Jabber server.

    There are tons of great clients for Jabber. Under GNU/Linux, you may try Gajim, Tkabber, Gaim or Psi. Under Mac OS X, Gush, Psi or of course iChat. And for those still under Windows, Miranda, Exodus, Gaim or Psi. Google for them.

    And they will soon ALL support the feature you want, just give it some time More info

  13. It's your own fault! by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's time to repeat my old IRC rant. IRC was there first, has long had the most features (now that voice and video is common on the alternatives, that's not really true anymore), uses a protocol that is not only open, but also an Internet RFC, and probably has more implementations than any other protocol; both clients and servers.

    So, if the world had just stuck to using IRC, instead of jumping on the (at the time) overhyped, closed, and advertisement-infected instant messaging, you wouldn't have gotten this mess. As it stands, IRC is still around, and you can even use IRC to access the other networks through services like Bitlbee.

    Popular software (among the intelligentsia of the net) like Gaim, Trillian, Opera and (I think) Mozilla (the suite) supports it, so you might already have a client installed.

    So, no more excuses, break the proprietary chains and maybe you will be the one to write the next big popular extension. Yes, that's right. IRC is fairly easy to extend, and there are innumerable bots that do just that. You're not a proper hacker until you've written your own.

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
  14. Re:Gaim by pyros · · Score: 4, Informative
    Gaim does invisible just fine. It's just a little cumbersome. Click Away: : Invisible (or Hidden in MSN's case).


    But you have to log in and then set invisible, you can't log in invisible.