Sara Winge
2008/04/19
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On a stormy weekend back in February, O'Reilly hosted Social Graph Foo Camp (David Recordon and Scott Kveton were the instigators; we were happy to say "Yes" when they asked to hold the party at our Sebastopol campus). Google announced their Social Graph API on Friday morning, adding fuel to the fire as the intense discussions got underway. We managed to drag some of the Campers away from the proceedings, sit them in front of a video camera and capture their thoughts about the state of the social graph. We also included a summary in the latest issue of Release 2.0 (free excerpt).
There's much more to be done if we're to create sane and useful approaches to the data portability, identity, and privacy issues created by the social networking juggernaut. The conversation continues today at the Data Sharing Workshop in San Franciso, and next week at Web 2.0 Expo, where a slew of SG Foo Campers will be speaking, including Joseph Smarr, Tom Coates, Niall Kennedy, John Musser, Gavin Bell, Artur Bergman, Ankur Shah, Kellan Elliott-McCrea, Marc Davis, Justin Hall, and Dave Morin. |
2月份一个下雨的周末O'Reilly承办了Social Graph Foo Camp(David Recordon和Scott Kveton是主要的推动者;他们问是否可以在O'Reilly 总部的园区搞这次活动我们欣然应允)。Google在那个周五早晨宣布了Social Graph API,这无疑又给那次热烈的讨论火上浇油。我们把一些参加活动的营员拉出来坐在摄像机前记录了他们关于Social graph状况的看法。在最近一期的Release 2.0中也有概述(免费片断)。 要想完美地完成社交网络热产生的数据移植、身份认证和隐私这些问题还有很多事情要做。这样的讨论在今天旧金山的Data Sharing Workshop还将继续,以及下周的Web 2.0 Expo上,很多旧金山Foo Camp的营员会发言,包括 Joseph Smarr、Tom Coates、Niall Kennedy、John Musser、Gavin Bell、Artur Bergman、Ankur Shah、Kellan Elliott-McCrea、Marc Davis、Justin Hall和Dave Morin。 |
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