URL Shorteners Get Some Backup
URL shorteners are problematical, as everybody knows, but with the rise of Twitter and its ilk they seem to be a necessary part of the landscape. Some of the biggest questions around services such as bit.ly, TinyURL, and is.gd is what happens when they go out of business (as tr.im did last August). Now a group of such companies, organized under the auspices of the Internet Archive, has formed a non-profit entity to hold URL-shortening databases in escrow, with the intent of continuing to resolve a member company's links should it get out of the business. At announcement, the 301Works organization has 21 URL-shortener members, including the largest, bit.ly. Many others are not (yet) on board. The members have agreed to cede control of their domain names to 301Works.org should they exit the field, and to back up their URL mappings regularly to the organization.
URL shorteners are problematical, as everybody knows, but with the rise of Twitter and its ilk they seem to be a necessary part of the landscape.
Seriously?? I know editors frequently get grief for this sort of thing, but come on... the word is problematicalic, for crying out loud. ;)
I have a great proof why this won't work, but it's too long to fit in into a URL :(
Sorry, I mean srs bsns.
qkd2f
My first program:
Hell Segmentation fault
If your own URL shortener becomes popular (it won't), it will have to serve at least a million clicks per day. bit.ly is currently at around 4-5 per day, I think.
I don't know why bit.ly is even up for discussion though. A site that only gets 4 hits per day is obscure by any standard.
GAAH! MY PRINTER IS ON FIRE!!! PUT IT OUT! PUT IT OUT!
And, according to TFS, it is the biggest of them. :)
-- SouNerd.com
(Note: Remove the last z if you want to see naked women.)
This is why I love slashdot. And why I kind of want to start messing with link-finding regexes to leave the last character out of the href.
How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?