AOL Adopting Jabber (XMPP)
sander writes to tell us that AOL seems to have decided to make their AIM and ICQ services compatible with XMPP. A test server is up at xmpp.oscar.aol.com, and while it's still buggy most major Jabber clients seem to work.
Does anyone know what address you would use to chat to a friend who has an ICQ or AIM account? 798221@icq.com and bob@aol.com sound reasonable, but anything a bit more concrete would be good.
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
This seems like a reasonable move. It's not like sticking with their old protocol got them anything. They get more kudos and better interoperability with other networks by switching to a open protocol.
Curiosity was framed, Ignorance killed the cat.
Now can I have my 6 digit UIN back, after you lost my damn account?
The price is always right if someone else is paying.
Well at least for those of us who've been around long enough to remember how badly AOL fought against opening up their services. The cat and mouse games of the early 2000s with a workaround being discovered and AOL closing it are long gone at this point. It is also interesting because the internet is now starting to move into an open direction. I can remember when AOL users and AIM users could not see each other. This was done to entice people to pay for AOL service. Slowly this eroded, and AIM was able to access AOL screennames. AOL always saw its chat base as it's main way to rake people into its service. With the actual AOL business model of old all but effectively dead (I say that, but I know there are millions who still cough up for a service that is free) they had no incentive to keep things closed.
I was trying to get this to work with Pidgin and my AIM account earlier today but never managed to. Has anyone made it work, or would you list the settings for it?
Thanks
"If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
This is big and is part of a trend. Open standards are replacing proprietary protocols. Companies are starting to see the advantage of being open and not closed. I am happy to see this.
AIM support in GMail Chat (not the GTalk client) still uses the standard AIM protocol, not XMPP. In order to use it, you must have an AIM account. If AOL eventually fully support XMPP what that will mean is that you can use your XMPP account to chat with AIM users directly without having an AIM account yourself.
No, this is different, since before you could only go through google and it was limited to google. For example, any @jabber.org account should be able to talk to an aim or icq @aol.com account now.
I'm not sure how far the compatibility extends however, since my aim account connected traditionally can't seem to talk to my normal non-aim xmpp account.
I was introduced to IM through ICQ back before AIM existed. I remember Aim being ok, but ICQ was much better...well naturally AOL bought mirabilis for 300M-odd dollars way back when and then did the "standard operating procedure" (see the story of Netscape, Nullsoft, et al) of just letting it fester without updates while they pushed their product.
AIM was pretty much the only game in town after that for me...I had my people on AIM, and didn't see any reason to move to yahoo, let alone Msn.
Then everything seemed to stay the same for liek 5 years. The only thing AOL really seemed to be working on was adding loud video ads and fighting against the people who tried to make their crap usable -- like deadaim and it's ilk, gaim, etc.
Over the past seemingly decade, there was talk of cross-network integration...a la msn meets aim, etc. As far as I got was logging into multiple networks in gaim--which is NOT what I was hoping for.
Then google finally put out google talk, a great implementation. Easy enough for my parents to use, no ads....less spyware concern because google doesn't have an evil time warner overlord. And there's a web version of gtalk which beats the PANTs off of the aol crapfest they've called aim express. That's good for those who run different OSes or who don't want to be committed to installing software locally. To their credit aol did put out some token linux release, which i appreciated.
Call me old school but I like the TSR windows client. I don't want my IMs getting lost in browser tabs...I wish they'd port it to linux.
Anyway I read todays news as AOL is losing customers, so they're finally getting their protocol straight and using a standard.
Anyway, Google. PLEASE, please please grab AOl off of time warner...they've been dying to get rid of it, although they're too proud to admit it. Take their user base and merge it with yours. Get rid of their crap....get the media company bias out of their products...I'll take google's signature embedded ads over just about anything that's ever come out of AOL
While you're at it, take nullsoft too...and release all the source code....it might be best to release the code from before the AOL merger, btw.
But just imagine how much better tuned, and how much more quickly interface bugs could be fixed if the pidgin guys could focus on just one protocol vs. a dozen. That's a good thing, IMO, even though I use pidgin for AIM as well.
Then again, everyone could have just stuck with IRC. Oh well.
Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power. -- Mussolini
And as such, this is a clear admission that Google Talk was putting a serious dent in their business. They had no interest in standards until they had competition, but now that they do, they'll certainly want to make sure that their competition isn't the only one that can claim universal access (which is exactly what Google can claim now for their Web-based client).
No, this actually _is_ Jabber, while Googles AIM access isnt. Google just provides a client you can use to access AIM, but using AOL's oscar protocol. You cant use Google's AIM access with a client you choose, but here you can. The difference is that with google's approach of jsut implementing the (now old) oscar protocol, you will always have to have an actual AIM account to communicate with other AIM users. With AOL now using jabber, there is hope that they will open their servers for server2server communication, like google has done with their GTalk, so you will be able to contact aim/icq users without having an aim/icq account yourself. Like, you know, you can send email to aol users without having an aol email account yourself. Oh the beauty of open standards. I actually look forward to MSN (and/or yahoo) remaining the only ones in future _not_ using jabber as their backend, sitting in their little proprietary world and being step by step excluded from worldwide IM communication.
A multiprotocol client will always be a kludge, some are slightly more elegant than others, but a kludge none the less.
That said, changing protocols on their end doesn't really buy anything for anyone, unless they also support jabbers network interoperability. I.E. an aim user should be able to message directly to a google chat user without both users requiring an account on the others' service.
-*The above statement is printed entirely on recycled electrons*-
No, maintaining their proprietary protocol is a completely unneeded IT expense. Now they have the power of the XMPP community behind them.
There is a lot with AIM. File transfers don't work reliably behind firewalls. There's no voice and video support. Its client is archaic. In short, their legacy of being a dial-up information provider instead of an Internet Service Provider was weighing them down.
me@me.com that is. That's my generic email. On systems that'll take it, though, I try to use me@example.com since that's reserved.
Well, GTalk or Gmail extension what have you, use the OpenAim standard of course not the original AIM protocol. So my point really is that AOL's progression in this realm at least has been going in this direction. This blog seems to argue against the positive nature of AIM moving to Gmail, but I think the comments point out that long-term it should be positive, especially since one of the suggestions of the article are now implemented! I think bottom line is AOL knew that OSCAR was dead and rather develop from the ground up, they open it up and let the world do it. Another win for OSS!
...and it should be known by now
maybe they don't want to maintain the old protocol forever?
XMPP has well maintained, free, server software, and has the added benefit of things like jingle (voice), and a rather large user base (GTalk & Jabber). Considering all they want is for users to use their services, this should simultaneously lower their overhead and increase the value of their services.
This is yet another positive sign that arbitrary incompatibility is giving way to the (old) concept of open standards for communication on the internet.
"Knowledge is the only instrument of production that is not subject to diminishing returns" -Journal of Political Econom
AOL *users* have been jabbering for years now.
This is great news. Hopefully it will shame the others to switch to XMPP. Yes, I mean you MSN.
the real question is -- are they going to support XMPP S2S (server to server federation)? Currently it looks like port xmpp.oscar.aol.com:5269 is NOT accepting connections (that's the XMPP S2S port).
Without S2S, this announcement is pretty much useless -- I mean, sure I can use my jabber client against AOL instead of the AOL-branded one, but I pretty much can do that already via the reverse-engineered joscar libraries (e.g. libgaim)
It appears that they haven't implemented server-to-server connections yet so that's not the case now. However all they have to do is throw the switch so to speak. It would be a wonderful thing if AIM migrated fully to xmpp.
-- Ecks
Finally I will only need to be connected to one IM network. _My own_. Up to now you had to pretty much put up with either MSN logging your conversations or AOL logging them.
One of the great things about Google turning on server 2 server for GTalk is that it is now possible to run your own IM server (as you might run your own mail server) and network interconnection just works. If AOL go the same way a critical mass might build up enough that central control of IM becomes almost impossible - as all the geeks can set up their own independent servers that serve to keep them in touch with the masses as well as (securely) in touch with each other.
Beep beep.
XMPP would allow you to have a jabber account on your corporate network, and talk to somebody on AIM, ICQ, or another company's japper network, without having to have accounts on those servers. Think of it like email, you have yourname@yourisp.com, and I have myname@myisp.com, but you can send me an email without signing up with myisp.com. Well now we get the same flexibility with IM. The only thing I see missing is an MX-like DNS record for IM servers.
http://www.mhall119.com
Maintaining the old protocol costs them users. I want to be on the chat server/protocol with all my friends. If AOL is the biggest then that's where I want to be. I imagine that Google talk/xmpp is growing faster than AOL now so it's a logical move.
Hail to AOL for this move. Hopefully I can turn off my xmpp aol transport in a year or so.
-- Ecks
No, maintaining their proprietary protocol is a completely unneeded IT expense. Now they have the power of the XMPP community behind them.
You're assuming that the XMPP community's desires correspond with AOL's desires. That's a pretty big assumption. Even if they do correspond, AOL is still going to have deadlines on when they need things implemented, which the community isn't going to care about.
And don't forget, AIM is a mature product. It's not like they need to do massive development on it.
There is a lot with AIM. File transfers don't work reliably behind firewalls. There's no voice and video support. Its client is archaic.
I think you're basing your opinion of AIM off the 3rd party clients. It's been years since I used the official client, but, back then if a file transfer failed, it asked if I wanted to do the transfer through their server instead of direct. It even gave a simple, clear explanation of the pros and cons of doing that.
Voice chat has been in there for almost a decade - I remember people in my dorm using it in '99. I vaguely remember GAIM Release Notes talking about not implementing video support, which I took to mean AIM had video support, but it's not something I've ever cared about so I don't know for sure.
In short, their legacy of being a dial-up information provider instead of an Internet Service Provider was weighing them down.
No idea where that is coming from.
Another question is will file transfers finally work? What about direct connection (for pictures, etc)? It's been on-again-off-again for years...even with the real aol client. don't get me started on how spotty/non-existent this functionality has been on gaim, etc.
The only thing I see missing is an MX-like DNS record for IM servers. The answer is: SRV record
It's great that AOL is finally going to speak the industry-standard XMPP. Now instant messaging will be as universal as email is today. And you know what that means...
... all day, every day, but now it pops up right into the middle of your screen. Happy Happy!!
If you have a Jabber account anywhere, be prepared to start receiving lots of spim all day, every day. And don't simply think that you'll get away with not allowing buddies on your list without accepting an invitation. Spimmers don't do business that way. They simply put their advertisement in the invitation so you've already read it by the time you decline the invite.
Viagra ads, mortgage scams, pump and dump stocks
Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
This is most likely the result of the AOL XMPP Gateway project posted in 2006 at TopCoder: http://www.topcoder.com/tc?module=Static&d1=dev&d2=assembly&d3=det_aolXmppGateway
Have you driven a fnord... lately?
You must wait a little bit before using this resource; please try again later.
http://www.mhall119.com
There is such a record in the case of Jabber; it uses the SRV record type. For instance:
$ host -t SRV _xmpp-server._tcp.gmail.com
_xmpp-server._tcp.gmail.com SRV 20 0 5269 xmpp-server1.l.google.com
_xmpp-server._tcp.gmail.com SRV 20 0 5269 xmpp-server2.l.google.com
_xmpp-server._tcp.gmail.com SRV 20 0 5269 xmpp-server3.l.google.com
_xmpp-server._tcp.gmail.com SRV 20 0 5269 xmpp-server4.l.google.com
_xmpp-server._tcp.gmail.com SRV 5 0 5269 xmpp-server.l.google.com
$ host -t SRV _xmpp-client._tcp.gmail.com
_xmpp-client._tcp.gmail.com SRV 20 0 5222 talk2.l.google.com
_xmpp-client._tcp.gmail.com SRV 20 0 5222 talk3.l.google.com
_xmpp-client._tcp.gmail.com SRV 20 0 5222 talk4.l.google.com
_xmpp-client._tcp.gmail.com SRV 5 0 5222 talk.l.google.com
_xmpp-client._tcp.gmail.com SRV 20 0 5222 talk1.l.google.com
I guess one could say that is what the XMPP SRV records are for.
I'd be pretty surprised if Google Talk was putting a dent in their business. It's probably one of the other big-three--Yahoo! Instant Messanger, and MSN Messenger. By moving to XMPP, AOL can effectively increase their userbase to include anyone also using XMPP (since they can now communicate with AOL's subscribers.) It's Yet Another Reason to use AOL instead of Y!IM or MSN.
I believe AIM is still the most popular in the US, in the UK it was never really that popular compared to ICQ at the beginning and then very quickly MSN took over the top slot. Unless AIM had some advantage over MSN then I'm sure they're slowly losing ground in the US too. So what better way to remain relevant than to switch to an open protocol. It suddenly makes AIM accessible to a larger number of users without the need to register a separate account.
I know at the moment the AIM jabber server does not support server to server federation, but neither did google until they'd gone through initial testing, hopefully AIM will see sense and turn this on, even if they don't it makes it easier for the developers of Pidgin, Trillian, etc.
What business? I don't even see how they make a dime from this service. I've used AIM for years without paying AOL or seeing a single advertisement. I've also never used their client either as many clients are compatible with AIM.
I like XMPP and like the fact that I have my own server so I don't have to be too concerned about privacy issues. According to AOL's TOS, they own all of your IMs and wouldn't be surprised if Google had something similar.
I'd like something that was point to point without a server in the middle. The messages are encrypted so ISPs can't peak in and all logging is left up to the parties involved in the conversation.
I can't verify this, but from comment 28 on the blog:
IdahoPotato Said,
Before you declare Mission Accomplished! - there seems to be a sip.oscar.aol.com, and my SIP client can connect there as well.
I'm not really into IM, but I imagine he's looking for the ability to have one address that anyone can IM him at, instead of needing an AIM address, an MSN address, a GTalk address, an ICQ address, and so on. That way anyone, on any IM network, can reach any other person. By using one protocol, XMPP in this case, all of the networks can be merged into one.
If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
Meebo and other clone jabber websites do it for them now.
Google Talk putting a dent in AIM? Uhh... maybe... but aren't you forgetting about YIM and MSNM? They have been making noise about interoperability for months now and seem to have a much larger user base than Google Talk. This looks more like a "the enemy of my enemy" situation.
For S2S to work, they would have to add a SRV record to aol.com so other servers can find the XMPP server responsible for @aol.com addresses (this works just like MX for e-mail, but more general). I doubt they will do that until their server is a little more mature.
Try it:
$ dig SRV _xmpp-server._tcp.aol.com
It's possible to pull people into a chatroom. On MSN, this is spontaneous and invite-only. On Yahoo, for awhile, there were IRC-like rooms -- they probably still exist, but Yahoo doesn't talk about them anymore. I'm fairly sure Jabber supports this functionality, too.
The trouble is, you can't have anything like a "room" which includes people from different networks. I believe this means that GTalk people will be able to join AOL chatrooms and vice versa.
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
They exist.
"Joy is contagious," he said, peering into the microscope.
It means that theverylastaoluser@aol.com (seriously, who uses it anymore?) can now IM to smartpeople@gmail.com, and vice versa.
A longer explanation: IM has, historically, been a walled garden. That is, if you have MSN Messenger (or "Windows Messenger"), I need to have MSN Messenger in order to IM you. If I have Yahoo Messenger, we can't communicate.
There are ways around this, none of them very good. You could just install Yahoo Messenger also, and AIM, and that will cover almost everyone. (Almost -- there's still Gadu-Gadu, WinPopup, Groupwise, ICQ, IRC...)
IRC is a bit better, actually, because at least there's a standard protocol. Anyone can setup an IRC server, or write their own IRC client. If you're on Windows, you can just download mIRC and connect to anyone. (I like irssi on Linux and MacIRSSI on OS X.) But it's still a walled garden, in that you can't connect to EFnet and talk to people -- in rooms or in private messages -- who are on DALnet. (Or Freenode, or...)
But not everything is a walled garden. Email, for instance -- anyone can register a domain, setup a mailserver, and provide email for themselves, for friends, or for money. If you're a poor sap who has an @aol.com email address, I don't have to do anything special to be able to send mail to you from my @gmail.com address, or from my own domain.
All it takes for email to work is a domain name and a mailserver. And a mailserver can be any computer that's online all the time. Not that I recommend doing it yourself, just saying that email is wholly and completely democratized.
Well, that's what Jabber/XMPP is all about. Not only is the chat/IM protocol open, but Jabber servers can be configured to talk to other Jabber servers -- to arbitrarily connect to each other. So you can be on AOL Instant Messenger, and I can be on Google Talk, but we can add each other to our buddy lists and communicate. Not because there's any kind of big deal with AOL and Google, but because they both speak Jabber. And like email, I can setup my own Jabber server.
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
I thought Jabber traversed NAT...
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
You might think their world is "little", but in my country (Greece) and I'm sure in most of Europe, everyone uses MSN almost exclusively. Noone has ever heard of AIM/Y, and only old timers remember ICQ. If you want to get a taste of what this news is like for me (apart from the obvious theoretical benefit of using an open protocol), replace the word AOL/AIM with the word MSN, to you it'd be non-news.
Send email from the afterlife! Write your e-will at Dead Man's Switch.
I am not really here right now.
I've been using AIM since 1997 and GTalk on and off for a year, both with Pidgin 2.3.1 currently.
:confused:
As far as comparisons go, with AIM I can:
- See and show other's and my own idle time (critical to me)
- See other's and set my buddy profile (very useful for links and other interesting tidbits)
- See people's login time (important)
- See people's account creation time
- See the capabilities of someone's client
With XMPP I can:
- Do none of the above
- Have a slightly larger buddy icon
Am I missing something? Are these lackings limitations of Pidgin? Given XMPP's open nature, I would have imagined missing features would have been implemented long before reverse-engineering AIM's newest protocol features.
Interested in open source engine management for your Subaru?
That'd be SRV records, which as MX-like records for
Rediff has been experimenting with a gateway between XMPP and their Bol chat server (Bol means "Talk" in Hindi, so it's a Chat chat server, but then again I once lived in Villa Chateau Apartments). I have no idea if it's publicly available, though. If anybody cares, drop me an email.
Don't piss off The Angry Economist
I like chatting with AIM users via iChat using voice. If AIM were to go XMPP, I'd think they'd need to support voice to keep their users happy. Google talk's jingle evidently isn't the same as that published by XMPP - see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jingle_(protocol)
So, before I start cheering, I'd like to know if supporting voice for AIM/XMPP will follow the standard or follow Gtalk or what?
Notice how hard they've made it so far - or whatever the correct conclusion is... http://www.google.com/talk/otherclients.html
Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
Because now I can just talk to people on AIM or ICQ via my work jabber account, rather than having to sign up for a AIM account.
XMPP works much like email in that individual companies can all run their own servers and control access to them however they want, but still talk to the rest of the internet with a simple address. The better question is, why doesn't AIM/ICQ just die and everyone move to XMPP which does every single thing AIM/ICQ/MSN does, and more.
They can still make their ad loaded clients if they want.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
I'd like something that was point to point without a server in the middle. The messages are encrypted so ISPs can't peak in and all logging is left up to the parties involved in the conversation.
Unfortunately, secure key exchange between random parties is a very difficult problem to solve.
However, Jabber/XMPP streams can be encrypted with TLS/SSL, so all of your traffic between you and your server (and between servers) can be encrypted.
Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
You suppose that GoogleTalk had put a dent in AOL's business? I doubt that. I have many AIM contacts, and no Gtalk contacts. People are not about to switch protocols (and therefore interoperability with their contacts) so fast. In any case, Jabber already has AIM gateways so GTalk and AIM could communicate without AOL switching protocols.
Side note: I hope that this finally leads to video support in Jabbber.
It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
there isn't anything WRONG with AIM
.. this announcement is awesome for anyone who ever wrote an IM client.
Read the OSCAR (AIM/ICQ protocol) specs and think again
Google makes good money from selling statistics on the words used in e-mails and IM.
That's interesting. How do you know that?
However, Jabber/XMPP streams can be encrypted with TLS/SSL, so all of your traffic between you and your server (and between servers) can be encrypted.
That's not a lot of help if you don't trust all the servers involved. For example, I trust my server because I administer it, but if I'm chatting to a GoogleTalk user then I have to trust Google's server too... Why should I trust their server? For one thing I don't know how trustworthy Google are themselves, and for another I don't know how competent the server admins are - the server could be spyware infested for all I know.
I'd like to see end-to-end encryption over XMPP become a standard thing, but as you mentioned it is a difficult problem.
http://blog.nexusuk.org
However all they have to do is throw the switch so to speak.
If you are running a pure jabber server using a standard jabber server codebase it is that simple. OTOH if you are running what is probablly just a form of gateway server into your existing closed system then it is going to be much much harder.
note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
Well, the XMPP community is working on this: https://stpeter.im/?p=2136
It means that theverylastaoluser@aol.com (seriously, who uses it anymore?) can now IM to smartpeople@gmail.com, and vice versa.
My understanding is you can't do that yet. Implementing XMPP as a client protocol is pretty seperate from implementing XMPP "federation".
note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
The pressure on MSN will be harder. In that sense it is also news for you as an MSN user. For example, if AOL actually federates AIM and ICQ by becoming part of the XMPP server2server network, then these things might happen: * Gadu-Gadu and Tlen may also adopt XMPP. XMPP already has a considerable stake in Poland. Besides that, ICQ is popular in Poland's neighbour countries and in particular Russia and Germany. Hence, it would be very useful for the Polish business world to use XMPP. If Gadu-Gadu does not switch, these companies will deploy their own server or other services competing with Gadu-Gadu will appear. In the long term Gadu-Gadu and Tlen will be pushed out of the market if they neglect XMPP federation. * In the US, XMPP will become #1. Therefor, the deal between Yahoo and MSN may end; Yahoo may also want to join XMPP. * As the US is China's #1 "customer, QQ the Chinese IM service may also want to federate with XMPP. * When Jingle is more mature in the XMPP community, eBay will see an opportunity in federating Skype with XMPP/Jingle: 3 big countries (US, Germany and Russia) use XMPP. Neglecting this huge potential customers will result in less money for eBay. * Microsoft will probably speed up with SIP/SIMPLE soon. In the countries where they have a huge stake today they will defend their market share more fiercely. * More mobile phone operators will offer XMPP serices. * More ISPs will offer XMPP services.
Yes, those are different functions. The AOL xmpp server is still experimental, and there's no reason to think they won't federate eventually. If they didn't the whole exercise would be pretty pointless anyway.
Well, the XMPP community is working on this: https://stpeter.im/?p=2136 [stpeter.im]
Doesn't really help. All that does is guarantees that my server is really talking to google's server and not some third party. If I don't trust Google (i.e. maybe they are logging all the IMs I send through them) or their server has been cracked (it's still presenting me the valid certs, but some malware is grabbing the IMs and sending them to a third party site) then I'm just as screwed.
So if alice@example.com wants to IM bob@gmail.com, Alice might trust Bob but might not trust Eve, who is Gmail's administrator. Eve still gets to see all the data in the clear because she has root access to the server. What is needed is end to end encryption so that the stream is encrypted for the whole time it is in transit between Alice and Bob rather than getting decrypted at every server along the way.
http://blog.nexusuk.org
Adopting an open documented protocol is one thing but the next step is to make sure all four major IM networks, namely MSN, GoogleTalk, AOL but also Skype get interconnected.
This would mean that all users of those network could chat and exchange presence information seamlessy and regardless of the network they belong. Unfortunaltly this dream vision hurts the business model of those networks as they are largely based on audience and funding by ads. So the only sensible solution would be that this seamless service could be reserved for premium paying accounts.
I am not sure about user acceptance of the above provided that many people consider that IM service is free, regardless of the number of server and bandwidth used to provide the service.
OpenPGP and OTR encryption are offered in many clients, and only have to be supported on the client. Clients supporting OpenPGP can also used signed presence. http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0027.html, although historical, is used by a few of the more popular clients, although, certainly not universally. OTR also has a strong following - I'm not sure if it's as broad as OpenPGP support. Finally, S/MIME support over XMPP apparently exists in RFC form, but I'm not aware of any widespread implementation.
This is in addition to TLS/SSL being used whenever available between client-server and server-server (which, still lets the server inspect messages, but at least protects from casual eavesdropping on the wire).
The problem really remains getting people to use encryption properly on their clients, and as email has shown, despite OpenPGP and S/MIME being available for more than a decade, they aren't widely used outside certain communities, because the average end user values convenience above security.
I guess that SRV record would make the trick.
there's no reason to think they won't federate eventually.
Depends, companies whose main buisness model is dying tend to be a little unpredicatable, one step towards openness won't nessacerally be followed by others.
note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
OK, let me restate it: If AOL wants to serve their customers and remain relevant in the long term, they'll federate.
MSN is widely used by people who don't know that they're using it. I'm willing to bet that actual traffic volume is higher on Google. This looks more like a "the enemy of my enemy" situation. Possibly.
Has anyone got any decent how-tos on how to setup a Jabber server, preferably with a web-based front end? I'd like to put one on my home PC so I can bypass the people that have blocked IM here.
Thanks.
The only way that AOL makes money from AIM, is when people use the official client (which has ads). My guess is that more people are moving to Pidgin, Meebo, etc in order to chat with friends on other networks. If AOL can get interoperability in the official AIM client by supporting XMPP, they may be able to keep people clicking on ads.