Pitt talk was fun

The talk I gave this week on SiloSync at Pitt was a fun venue. Their Lunch-and-Learn series is a really cool idea and sounds like it’s getting even more interesting. Next month’s talk is going to be done by a VP from Sun Microsystems. Prior to presenting, approved I jumped back into the SiloSync code and wrote the beginnings of the importer for Facebook.

As a side-note: one of the things that’s fascinating about this project is that I get to see all of the half-implemented security that different sites use. LiveJournal had a secure way of sending passwords, but shockingly stores passwords as plain-text (a big security faux-pas). Similarly, I saw some left-over fields in Facebook’s login form, but it appears that they just punted and used https (a secure web connection using SSL encryption) to just encrypt the whole login.

Back to the crux of this post: I’ve been rather tempted lately to actually finish SiloSync – which I had previously shelved in hopes that Open Social and other big-name initiatives would fix the problem (they didn’t). Google, Facebook, and MySpace have all announced fake data portability initiatives in the last week or so, which shows that if we want our data to be free, we’re going to have to take it (see my previous post on freeing the social graph for why this is important).

I decided it would be best to make a habit of posting my slide-decks when I present (I appreciate it when other people do that), here are the PowerPoint and Open Document (Open Office) versions. In the process of making the presentation, I ended up creating a visual representation of SiloSync which I think does a great job of summing up the whole idea for someone who hasn’t been exposed to it yet. That’s the picture above and to the right… click it to see the full-size version.

Interestingly, with these effectively useless announcements from the major Social Networks, a lot of non-technical press has been declaring that data is now free. Okay, cool, let’s all go home.

Fortunately, most of the technical press is calling them on it. Everyone from TechCrunch to David Recordon (of OpenId fame) is telling it like it is.

If you are interested in seeing SiloSync pushed to fruition (more than you’re interested in seeing Motive Suggest or doItLater v2.0), let me know so that I can weigh off the interest between the several projects competing for my time. Also, feel free to leave comments about your thoughts on the various “fake” data portability. This seems to be the topic which always gets the most vocal response on my blog.

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