Jaiku Bought By Google, Some Fear Privacy Issues
Platonic writes "According to the New York Times, Google's recent purchase of Jaiku, a little-known micro-blog service (think Twitter) might raise privacy concerns due to the automated nature of the web site's services. From the article: "The deal, announced this month, has much of the tech-tracking blogosphere abuzz. Some claim it is the harbinger of a new, truly interconnected world, where a chunk of our existence will migrate online ... Chris Messina, an open-source entrepreneur and founder of the consulting firm Citizen Agency, takes it a step further. In a blog post after the Jaiku deal was announced, he said that he envisioned a world where all information had migrated online, where the address book "lives in Googleland,"'"
I can see the point of people concerned about privacy. However, I think the kind of service discussed in the article, a sort of address book 2.0, sounds pretty cool. Its something I would probably go for if I had a life. And as for the privacy deal, there's nothing forcing people to use this kind of service.
I can see it now... I need that address I saved to google to send that document to that important client but- uh-oh! 404! I love the internet! I'm so glad I migrated all of my personal information to Google!
http://twitter.com/OLDTELEGRAM
More space for me. On a more serious note, don't put things online if you don't want the world to know. Better yet, assume everything transfered via the internet is world readable (444)
"Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
Is there a way I can block all stories involving usage of the word blogosphere? I've accepted blog as the hip way to say webpage, but blogosphere takes it a step too far.
What's next, newspapers are papticles and the news industry becomes the infoknot.?
So this tool automatically gathers little scraps of information about a user and draws lines between what it thinks are logical connections (like any good tinfoil hat aficionado might do in a dank basement) into some sort of tag cloud for that user. Ostensibly the use is used by applications as a sort of "stuff about you" repository, so maybe in one application you set your default home address as something when you go to use an application that requires your home address it could dip into that repository and insert it for you.
The pro: It's like having an assistant
The con: It's like having an assistant who works for the FBI
crazy dynamite monkey
_________ (random company)bought by Google, ____________ (some random blogger) fears _______________ (some wild ass speculation).
"As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
I understand the danger of having a single company (Google in this case) having easy access to comprehensive data about your life (location, email records, search habits, etc.). And I firmly believe that people need to educate themselves about the dangers of releasing too much personal information. But I fail to see how this recent Google acquisition is cause for great concern. Mobile devices are increasingly useful. So are social networking tools. Merging the two is an obvious next step, and a step that Google is taking.
Deleted
Jaiku, blogger site Once alone, now of Google Privacy, evil
Ben Hocking
Need a professional organizer?
Here is Chris Messina's blog entry on his inclusion in the NY Times piece.
In a nutshell, he doesn't like the NY Times' headline.
The Busy Coder's Guide to Android Development
Are you saying you value privacy. What are YOU hiding?