OpenID again

I’ve men­tioned OpenID here and here before (the first only in pass­ing), in the con­text of frag­ment­ing social net­works and Live­Jour­nal. By the way, check out the sec­ond of those posts… for meta-writing/meta-blogging, it’s (IMO) sur­pris­ingly good! I was pleased.

Any­way — OpenID is still around 10 months later (though the spec was last updated around the time I last wrote on the mat­ter), WordPress.com have announced they are now an IdP for it, and it seems every­one wants to be a provider, not a con­sumer (in OID spec par­lance, con­sumer means the web­site request­ing ver­i­fi­ca­tion of an Iden­tity — “end user” is the term given to an actual human user).

In fact, Ma.gnolia.com is the only OpenID con­sum­ing site of con­se­quence that I’ve encoun­tered thus far in my trav­els. Which is, to say the least, slightly perplexing.

I’m aware the whole point of OpenID is that it’s a vastly decen­tralised spec that enables myr­iad providers to exist, but it seems some­what redun­dant (in the sense in which that means “point­less, with­out pur­pose”, not failover-type redun­dancy) if there does not exist a sin­gle con­sumer of consequence!

And, let’s face it, why should being a con­sumer be attrac­tive? You know less about your cus­tomers, they can bail on you more quickly, and… all of a sud­den, adver­tis­ing is the only way of mon­etis­ing a web­site. Jan­Rain oper­ate “MyOpenID: Your first (and last) iden­tity provider”, as well as a cou­ple of ser­vices that use OpenID, and have (to my eyes, at least) no con­ceiv­able way of gen­er­at­ing rev­enue at present.

Which is poten­tially fine, but com­pletely stu­pid if that’s hap­pen­ing on a wider scale. As a con­cept, OpenID has much to offer — I just wouldn’t use it in CYIADA. I might con­sider it for smaller projects (com­mer­cial clients), but, really, I think it’d have a bet­ter chance if Myspace were an OpenID provider. And we all know what they’re like when it comes to web stan­dards (and gen­eral usabil­ity issues)!

Plus, of course, there’s the issue of the pop­u­lar­ity of up-stream providers if you want to ver­ify against some­thing other than OpenID (like, for exam­ple, someone’s Google account — which you can do quite eas­ily using var­i­ous API tools they pro­vide). With any­thing youth tar­geted, there’s a spe­cial impe­tus that we don’t really see in other places. I read this absolutely hilar­i­ous com­ment on a great analy­sis of an arti­cle about Myspace:

It’s easy to imag­ine teenagers as a pack of wilde­beests on a grassy plain, sim­ply run­ning with wild abandon.

Why yes, yes it is. They’re not (arti­cle has more on this), but the bot­tom line is if you’re using exter­nal ver­i­fi­ca­tion ser­vices, you’re depen­dent on the exis­tence and longevity of these ser­vices for the exis­tence and longevity of your ser­vices, not the least in user pro­fil­ing and build­ing up mean­ing­ful mar­ket data so you can adjust your mix to a known audience.

OpenID feels like a won­der­ful tech­nol­ogy in a chicken-egg sit­u­a­tion. It’s still just too bloody geeky for your aver­age LJ user to get on board with. And they’ve got it easy. For any­one else, it’s com­pletely impossible.

Here in Syd­ney, we could prob­a­bly get away set­ting up ver­i­fi­ca­tion against Win­dows Live sim­ply because that’s what peo­ple use here, as I have noted before (about halfway down the post linked). But devel­op­ing dif­fer­ent autho­ri­sa­tion schemes as a mat­ter of local­i­sa­tion is most def­i­nitely not in my book of best prac­tices (if I were ever to write one :P) — so, instead, frag­mented Inter­net iden­ti­ties persist.

That bugs me.

If you have any answers or thoughts… let me know. Blog about it and send a pingback/trackback. That’s one of the few open stan­dards that’s worked well on the web, albeit with plenty of spam abuse, but there’s of course the prob­lem that not enough peo­ple are socially blog­ging aside from soft­ware devel­op­ers and design geeks and… what­ever cat­e­gory I fit into (“web strate­gist” is still what I’m call­ing myself… we’ll see how much longer that sticks) — so, of course, there’s no instinct to reply in this manner.

In the same way, devel­oper and busi­ness instinct is to build your own authen­ti­ca­tion and pro­fil­ing plat­form. Is it worth resisting?

Making web stuff again

Nextgen Learning: Coming Soon

It’s free­lance but still very excit­ing. The web­site itself isn’t tech­ni­cally exotic but is for a gen­er­ally excit­ing & unique busi­ness con­cept, so it’s quite good to be involved with. It’s also brush­ing up on much-needed web skills for the slowly (oh-so-slowly) approach­ing CYIADA build… very good to be back in the field again fac­ing chal­leng­ing prob­lems I’d nearly for­got­ten existed. I will be get­ting very lit­tle in the way of SEO prac­tice on this one, though, because “nextgen learn­ing” is a very low hang­ing fruit right at the minute. It’ll be taken by this site prob­a­bly as soon as I make this post! Search traf­fic isn’t going to be a key busi­ness dri­ver though, so it’s just impor­tant peo­ple can find the com­pany by its name at the minute. I’ll prob­a­bly do some opti­mi­sa­tion around other key­words at a later stage, but it is in many aspects an establishment-phase busi­ness at present, so we’ll wait til it’s alive & kick­ing before pur­su­ing any­thing further.

I picked up host­ing from Seg­Pubstreet.id.au. I know. I legally own it and it sounds like it’s got com­mer­cial poten­tial — Sup dawgs, get yo street ID-izzle here! — and I think that’s even within the realm of allowed pos­si­ble appli­ca­tions of the domain. But I’m not really that inter­ested :P It was pretty cheap for Aussie name­space, too.

Any­way, that’s got the Seg­Pub holder up at present and I might change it at some point in the future. It’s quite a cute lit­tle holder graphic they’ve got going there, actu­ally… I’m a fan.

I’m con­tem­plat­ing replac­ing it with some­thing more inter­est­ing but prob­a­bly won’t in the forsee­able future. There’s the pos­si­bil­ity of giv­ing var­i­ous fam­ily mem­bers email addresses/websites there but that has poten­tial to turn into a hor­ri­ble respon­si­bil­ity: Seg­Pub aren’t astound­ingly cheap, and I’ve only heard they’re reli­able… at the minute it’s just a sand­box project & one client in there, which makes it easy to bail if I need to. I’m vaguely hop­ing to pick up a stack of poten­tial free­lance work in a week or two when I present at a con­fer­ence, so I’ve got between now and then to find a suit­able host for a decent num­ber of new clients… at the minute I’m not exactly mak­ing money on host­ing, but given the tar­get audi­ence (boards co-ordinating state school scrip­ture & fund­ing) it’s prob­a­bly not going to be the tough­est bunch to sup­port. No-one’s going to be want­ing RoR apps, for exam­ple (though Seg­Pub do sup­port that :P)

Hav­ing said that, I’ve got to fig­ure out how best to show how to setup a web­site and sign up with Pay­Pal to start accept­ing online pay­ments in about half an hour. Actu­ally, less than that.

I’m think­ing I’ll focus on the Pay­Pal side of things in terms of live demo and save Web Pub­lish­ing 101 for a hand­out, because it’s impor­tant to com­mu­ni­cate that e-commerce on the web doesn’t need to be scary & out of reach — though I often think it is. Part of that is a burn­ing desire to do things well in terms of user expe­ri­ence, because that’s been drilled into me (from my own read­ing, research, and prac­tice) over the last three years, but also because of a gen­eral dis­trust of 3rd party providers. Which is stu­pid, really, because a face­less API for a pay­ment gate­way is exactly the same thing, only with­out the UI-lameness factor.

I think the biggest chal­lenge for this pre­sen­ta­tion in par­tic­u­lar will be to stop think­ing like there’s an audi­ence who will be sold to by the aes­thetic com­ple­ment to func­tion­al­ity that we (rightly) place such value upon in other spheres. FEVA have been say­ing we should care about design for years (I’ve read/heard Mal­colm Williams give the same spiel in about 3 dif­fer­ent con­texts, but it’s a good spiel so that’s okay!), but, here in par­tic­u­lar, it’s worth try­ing to think the other way. Of course if they have resources that would be ben­e­fi­cial to con­sider — but, as I under­stand it, the peo­ple using these web­sites will be there for a pur­pose. Good design can help that, but for things like mak­ing a one-off dona­tion or set­ting up planned giv­ing (and, for the record, I have no idea how to do that with Pay­Pal… I think that’ll have to be a version-2 advanced sem­i­nar!) and down­load­ing a PDF newslet­ter, it’s prob­a­bly not a really big deal.

In essence, it’s not try­ing to reach peo­ple who need to be con­vinced of the value of their project, or that they take it seriously/care. Seri­ously bad web­sites aren’t some­thing to aspire to, but if mediocre ones are eas­ier and achieve the goals they need to, then why not? Not the kind of clients I’d like to work for, but a lot of these peo­ple won’t have any money to spend on a web­site, any­way, so it’s hardly a big deal.

In sum­mary: I’m excited about mak­ing web things again, good first impres­sions of Seg­Pub as a host but we’ll see over the next two weeks, and I’m pre­sent­ing soon to a bunch of peo­ple who don’t care about the web (as an amor­phous we-are-the-web collective-entity being) but are enthused about the poten­tial ben­e­fits it can bring.

Local galleries fixed

As if this server wasn’t push­ing enough traf­fic per day already (this site is gen­er­ally 100MB/day of what you’ll see on that graph, plus spi­der traf­fic), I finally got around to sit­ting down and fix­ing the bro­ken stuff about the gallery here. Well, okay, Ben did most of the fix­ing. I changed some URI structures/added some rules so that old perma­links start work­ing again. Any­way, point is, all the old stuff is work­ing again now. Not that this prob­a­bly affects many/any of you who read blog stuff, unless you’re feel­ing nos­tal­gic. Shrug :)

I’m now of mixed mind as to where to upload more pho­tos. Flickr is fun + makes edit­ing meta­data eas­ily + I’ve paid for it for a year. But here is sta­ble + I have com­plete con­trol and… blah blah blah… it’s not owned by Yahoo! (yet ;-) err I mean… *cough*)

Ah well. Flickr API’s make it easy to pull data out quick + eas­ily. So con­ceiv­ably it’d be not too hard to write some­thing to “export” to cat-scan. Maybe by this time next year…

# by Josh on May 8th, 2006 Tags: , ,
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