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To (Web2.0) Developers: I Want Control of My Data, I Want to Write My Own Rules

I sure am with Doc Searls and Dave Winer on this one. I want control of my own data. And I want to write my own rules on how others may and may not use my data.

First because if you tell me I have no friends simply because my data is not on your platform, you're not getting it. I am the landscape, you are the map. And the map does not get to say what reality is, just what it thinks it looks like.
So I would like Facebook, Amazon, Flickr, Plaxo, LinkedIn, Google and all of you out there, to sign my Terms of Service at the same time I am signing yours. True communication is, per Habermas, based on symmetry, a situation where there are no power differences interfering during the exchange. We will have to mutually agree on how you may use my data, and how I may use your services that are based on that data. You have your rules for using your service, well I have mine when it comes to adding my data to your service.

Second because I want my tools to become smarter, a lot smarter. And it is only me that can provide the context and data that allows tools to be smarter. I need to be in control of my data for you to let your tools be smarter. I need to be the owner of e.g. my favourites/wishlists and preferences for you to really give me good recommendations. Because I am holding back right now, as I don't get to keep control over my data. I am willing to share a lot more data about myself and my actions, a whole lot more. If you think I am exposing a lot of myself already, think again. It ain't half of it. It ain't ten percent of it. And of that small percentage your service only has access to a small fragment. I am prepared to share a whole lot more, as indeed I already do in each and every conversation I have with other people. But only within trusted circles I define, context specific and situation aware. That is how my tools, i.e. your services, need to become smarter: granularity in trust, and context specific and situation aware permissions. So I can increase the richness of my conversations. Having control over my own data is the number one prerequisite for it, otherwise I won't play.

With Facebook applications and the OpenSocial initiative by Google et al openness 'is now the new black', and the new sine quae non of competition in this space. Let's take that one step further. You're opening up your system's structures, now do the logical next thing: let me control my own data, and let me set the rules of how you can use that data. I am not petitioning. I will work towards creating that control. With people who get it and want to play. I am merely inviting you to be part of it.

Rules, Relations, Code, a model to describe SoSo
If you provide the code, I provide the relationships, and we both write the rules, we might get something useful (photo from BlogTalk Reloaded fall 2006)

Tags: socialnetworking socialsoftware identity2.0 control data

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I really ike the map metaphore. It also says something about the economic use of web 2.0 "technology". Something I was looking for something like that: a mapping tool for lanscape of all sorts.
Nice!

Posted by: Ernst Phaff at November 29, 2007 9:30 PM

Great post Ton! I completely agree

Posted by: Piers at December 20, 2007 1:29 AM

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ton2small.jpg Weblog by Ton Zijlstra,
Enschede, Netherlands
I write about knowledge work and management, and the tools and strategies that help us navigate the networked world.
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