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Wir widmen uns diesmal fast ausschließlich der f8 Ankündigungen. Ist Facebook jetzt offener? Ist die API simpler? Kommt man an mehr Infos? Wie sieht es mit offenen Standards aus? usw…
Viel Spaß beim Hören:
Länge: 1h2m29s (54.7 MB), Download MP3
http://blog.facebook.com/blog.php?post=383404517130
Vor allem Instant Personalization und “Referrer” bei Like-Button. Was genau speichert Facebook.
GigaOM on Instant Personalization http://gigaom.com/2010/04/22/facebooks-instant-personalization-is-the-real-privacy-hairball/ Christoph Kappes auf CARTA über Zentralisierung http://carta.info/26360/facebook-ein-sonderfall-im-oekosystem-des-internets/ Chris Messina: http://factoryjoe.com/blog/2010/04/22/understanding-the-open-graph-protocol/
But, here’s the rub: rather than using data that’s already on the web, everyone that wants to play Facebook’s game needs to go and retrofit their pages to include these new metadata types. While they’re busy with that (it should take a few minutes at most, really), is it at all likely that they _won’t_also implement support for Facebook’s Like button? Isn’t that the motivation for supporting the Open Graph Protocol in the first place?
Here’s the rub though: those Like buttons only work against Facebook. I can’t just be signed in to any social web provider… it’s got to be Facebook. And on top of that, whenever I “like” something, I’m sending a signal back to Facebook that gets recorded on both my profile, and in my activity stream.
(OpenLike: http://openlike.org/)
http://librarianbyday.net/2010/04/protect-your-privacy-opt-out-of-facebooks-new-instant-personalization-yes-you-have-to-opt-out/
Wir widmen uns diesmal fast ausschließlich der f8 Ankündigungen. Ist Facebook jetzt offener? Ist die API simpler? Kommt man an mehr Infos? Wie sieht es mit offenen Standards aus? usw…
Viel Spaß beim Hören:
Länge: 1h2m29s (54.7 MB), Download MP3
http://blog.facebook.com/blog.php?post=383404517130
Vor allem Instant Personalization und “Referrer” bei Like-Button. Was genau speichert Facebook.
GigaOM on Instant Personalization http://gigaom.com/2010/04/22/facebooks-instant-personalization-is-the-real-privacy-hairball/ Christoph Kappes auf CARTA über Zentralisierung http://carta.info/26360/facebook-ein-sonderfall-im-oekosystem-des-internets/ Chris Messina: http://factoryjoe.com/blog/2010/04/22/understanding-the-open-graph-protocol/
But, here’s the rub: rather than using data that’s already on the web, everyone that wants to play Facebook’s game needs to go and retrofit their pages to include these new metadata types. While they’re busy with that (it should take a few minutes at most, really), is it at all likely that they _won’t_also implement support for Facebook’s Like button? Isn’t that the motivation for supporting the Open Graph Protocol in the first place?
Here’s the rub though: those Like buttons only work against Facebook. I can’t just be signed in to any social web provider… it’s got to be Facebook. And on top of that, whenever I “like” something, I’m sending a signal back to Facebook that gets recorded on both my profile, and in my activity stream.
(OpenLike: http://openlike.org/)
http://librarianbyday.net/2010/04/protect-your-privacy-opt-out-of-facebooks-new-instant-personalization-yes-you-have-to-opt-out/