At the end of the day Social Networks just want to make interactions as natural as possible so they can continue to mine and monetize your relationship data as you get more comfortable sharing the 'real you.' Anyone who hasn't and has an interest in privacy, graph and content ownership on social networks should check out the Diaspora project. -Travis On Tue, Oct 4, 2011 at 1:35 PM, Christian de Larrinaga <cdel@firsthand.net>wrote:
You know I don't need Facebook to introduce (broker) me to anyone! I am more than happy managing my own relationships (gradations of trust included!) Oh and my friends are distributed in the real world as well!
This works pretty well even without a "social network" or a "system". When the Diginotar certification authority was badly compromised I got a bunch of information from many sources using those protocols which span the standards sphere of the Internet each bringing information that I value at varying levels of trust and applicability. Between and in combination of all this input I was able to take action and remove Diginotar from my keychain. I could have waited for Apple to stir its stumps but didn't need to.
All those independent distributed "trust brokers" did a fine job!
thanks folks!
Christian
On 4 Oct 2011, at 16:38, Jay Ashworth wrote:
As usual, the underlying issue is one of trust.
Alas, I see no theoretical way that distributed systems like Diaspora *can* provide some of the functions that are core to systems like Facebook, *exactly by virtue* (vice?) of the fact that they are distributed; there is no central Trust Broker.
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