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?

Perplexingly Pithy

I’ve never really got­ten away with one-liners on this blog. It’s weird. A large part of that is because I’m an old wind­bag that doesn’t know how to write a sen­tence with­out a ridicu­lous num­ber of clauses, but… the proof is in the pud­ding; they should all lead some­where and make more sense more clearly than shorter sen­tences would. It’s about me not trust­ing you, dear reader, to have half a brain for your­self and under­stand what I am say­ing. I imag­ine that, by speak­ing (that is what char­ac­terises this medium of blog­ging more than any­thing else — as with instant mes­sen­g­ing, it is more about an ongo­ing con­ver­sa­tion than a pro­tracted series of epis­tles) more, I leave less to chance, less chance of mis­un­der­stand­ing, misinterpretation.

And I find this to be true of most other blogs I have perused in the past, with the obvi­ous excep­tion of com­pletely sim­ple statements/one-line com­men­taries to be found on posts that con­sist solely of a link to another site, and a sum­mary comment/quip. Those aren’t blogs, though, they’re link-logs. Or what­ever you’re going to call them.

Finally, I’m engag­ing with LJ peo­ple and am increas­ing per­plexed as to how one is expected to inter­act in such an envi­ron­ment. All is nor­mal, mun­dane, draw­ing a-heck-of-a-lot-of-comments; then there is a peb­ble (it is only a peb­ble) dropped onto the placid sur­face of a tightly strung mem­brane, pulled taut by dozens of inter­ac­tors (com­menters) who play a role in the blog con­text. It bounces.

Crack.

I pic­ture it like ice, because that’s a dra­matic image that appeals to me… shards, stress-fractures, mov­ing across its sur­face at incred­i­ble speed. It’s not really like that, how­ever. The sur­face is sim­ply released from the edges. It’s like those para­chute games you’d play as a kid… imag­ine peo­ple let­ting go of the edges — the peb­ble, or author (actu­ally in my orig­i­nal metaphor it was the author’s pithy-one-liner post: either ana­log will suf­fice), is left in the mid­dle beneath sheets of canvas.

Per­haps I mis­con­strue the response. Even beneath that can­vas there is, per­haps (again), a sub­ter­ranean response that goes unseen — that is, email, phone calls, SMS, IM con­ver­sa­tions… I speak of an elec­tronic com­mun­ci­a­tions ecosys­tem only, for it per­plexes me to think that any­one could or would use a let­ter to deal with such things: this, how­ever, betrays my per­sonal con­text: I am male and no longer at an age where I encounter my clos­est friends at school everyday.

But, it appears, this peb­ble bounces and causes those who were active to fall silent. Respectful.

That’s how I feel about it. That’s how I excuse it in myself.

As an alien, it is not my duty to respond… it would be inap­pro­pri­ate, engag­ing too much, likely to attract dis­dain, scorn. So afraid we are of being seen to reach out.

And I can’t help but won­der what would hap­pen if I were to start post­ing the same kinds of one-liners I see all over those kinds of very-age-specific social net­works, here. Would some­thing explode, scar­ing all com­menters away? I like to think I mix it up enough here that I scare every­one away equally… or rather, there are occa­sion­ally things that will inter­est all, but I have some­how man­aged to free myself from the con­straints of writ­ing for an audi­ence. This is post 966, by the way. That’s devel­oped writ­ing… not good writ­ing, just devel­oped. Hope­fully as I do so more I’ll under­stand the medium bet­ter… for me, yeah, there is a medium. Blog­ging is not use­less (anymore).

Even Live­Jour­nal is use­ful in its own (dif­fer­ent to this) way… it’s chiefly social. That’s the thing about hosted ser­vices over DIY jobs. DIY jobs are the best. Yeah, Word­Press counts as DIY. The point is, there’s no social facil­i­ta­tor in place. This isn’t Face­book or MySpace or Live­Jour­nal. It doesn’t have any hooks into them (excep­tion: LJ’s awe­some OpenID is del­e­gated to from this page), there’s no way to build links. I’m still an out­sider tech­ni­cally, if not oth­er­wise… LJ blow-in that I am and have been. But they’re out­siders, too. They’re out­side every other social net­work on the planet. It’s that which I find most strik­ing about social net­works… they con­tinue to facil­i­tate frag­men­ta­tion! Each cries out, “join our clique!” … and they often do.

Some are using Blog­ger, or even (MSN) Spaces. There are no social net­work­ing hooks between ser­vices. None of that group of friends uses RSS: they’re still man­u­ally check­ing (if, indeed, they do) these blogs. No con­ve­nient index-login-screen to say friends have posted new things. No attention-drawn to pithy one-liners to be ignored (or responded to in some hid­den way?) The whole sit­u­a­tion is utterly per­plex­ing. And now I feel how I imag­ine a soci­ol­ogy stu­dent must.