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Thursday, March 29, 2007
Friends in wide places
| | And never mind that Iraq the Model isn't merely an "opinion" blog reacting to news, as the snobs at the AP would have you believe. They are reporting news from the ground--which is a serious threat to MSM outlets like the AP that continue to rely on anonymous stringers relying on anonymous sources feeding them unverified statements. |
| | Meanwhile, Riverbend hasn't blogged a word in more than a month. She tends to go long between posts, but I'm still concerned. |
Am immodest proposal
| | In Linux Journal, A Public Market for Public Music. Let's create a new and truly open market for music that's led by listeners rather than followed by them. Let's solve common problems in ways that work for everybody because they're conceived as common opportunities. |
Making meaningful all the world's information
| | When information has meaning it can become knowledge, and that is perhaps the most important process humankind has ever practiced, to learn. |
| | Why is it then that our current most modern Meaning Economy is a text box dictatorship? Why in such an advanced civilization have we become Knowledge Peasants whom are so easily placated by the black magic of our Goovernor? Am I the only one wondering why these commercial boxes own such an important social function: what everything means? |
| | We're safe because it's a free world marketplace on the Net, and anyone can compete if something goes wrong, right? Not quite, 'compete' itself tells you why, the competition will just be another commercial box, how else do you pay for all those servers and bandwidth it takes? I'm glad you asked! |
| | Open open open! Open source, open distributed grids, open algorithms, open rankings, open networks of people cooperating to provide resources. The future of search is in open cooperation (and competition) based on a Meaning Economy, create meaning, exchange meaning, serve meaning. |
| | My vision begins with an open protocol, allowing independent networks of search functions (crawling, indexing, ranking, serving, etc) to peer and interop. All relationships between these networks are always fully transparent and openly published. Networks exchange knowledge between them, each adding new meaning to the information, each of them responsible for the reputations of their participants and peers. This is the very foundation of a Meaning Economy. |
| | Jeremie is going deep and wide here. He's done it before. Can't wait to see more of what he means. |
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