Twitter and the Rise of Data Platforms 33
snydeq writes "Fatal Exception's Neil McAllister sees Twitter's latest move — to develop 'analytical products' based on Twitter data and to encourage third-party developers to do the same — as part of a growing trend toward a new kind of software platform. 'In the past, tool vendors have offered developers languages and code libraries that gave them access to computing functions in simple, standardized ways. In this new paradigm, however, a platform consists of more than just frameworks and APIs. It also comes prepackaged with a complete, rich data set, and often that data is the platform's most valuable aspect. These new "data platforms" are creating exciting new opportunities for developers, though they are not without their challenges.' Chief among these issues are privacy and security, as evidenced by a recent letter to Google from government regulators and activist tools such as PleaseRobMe. But for developers, the challenges also include livelihood. 'Even more than mobile platforms such as Apple's iPhone, a data platform like Twitter's is a walled garden. If Twitter cuts off a developer's access to its data sources for any reason, that developer's business is sunk.' Even those who develop 'cloud middleware' around such data platforms stand to gain little from their efforts, as doing so pits them in competition with their data platform vendors, which are in a far better position to reach potential customers."
Parent is +1 insightful. (Score:2)
Sounds reasonable to me. The Red State Strike Farce must be paying one of their cosplay visits here today, because I can't see how your comment was in any way flamebait.
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I didn't know Karl Marx was into the dot-com boom and IPO's, but if you say so...
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I didn't know Karl Marx was into the dot-com boom and IPO's, but if you say so...
What, you never read Marx's book, Dot.Kapital?
Mod parent up (Score:1, Funny)
Comrades! Only by abandoning freedom can we become truly free! Also, capitalists smell of poo.
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Says Red lazer... He's a KGB agent! Get him!
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So you're thinking it's either socialism, nuclear war, or sharks with friggin lasers on their heads?
Re:It's a bubble (Score:5, Funny)
All extremists should be shot, LOL.
Seriously, Communism was just a reaction to the first great wave of technology known as "the industrial revolution".
We need original thought, not re-hashed 20th century failed solutions that arose out of 19th century excess.
As an American I hate to say it, but it seems like the French have the right idea. Instead of using the excess productivity gained by technology to drive useless things like war and Facebook, we should just take more vacations.
That's not to say the French have it perfect--I wager their beurocracy consumes a lot of time. How about just shorter work weeks instead? One of the great ironies in this is that Utah, a state not considered "progressive" instituted shorter work weeks for state employees.
In other words, technology really did reduce the need for labor. We just need to find a constructive outlet for the excess labor. Neither violent revolution, nor wage slavery in a neoindustrial cubefarm/factory is a constructive outlet.
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The need for labour is only fully met when mathematics is complete, scientific discovery is complete and complete technological development has been attained. Good(?) news: none of those will ever happen.
Technology has certainly allowed us to meet the necessities for life---and indeed a much higher standard of living than in the past--with many fewer people farming, running shops, making trinkets, etc., but that doesn't mean we should spend mo
Less-skilled labor (Score:2)
The need for labour is only fully met when mathematics is complete, scientific discovery is complete and complete technological development has been attained. Good(?) news: none of those will ever happen.
The vast majority of mathematical and hard-science is done by doctors of philosophy. Not everybody is cut out to Pile it Higher and Deeper. For example, what will kids do to pay their way through college once a vending machine can handle a customer's request for groceries or a chicken sandwich and fries?
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The tendency of the rate of profit to fall means that big capital refuses to invest in any productive industry.
"Big capital" refusing to invest means that "small capital" can make a bigger margin. And then, once the 'productive' industry increases, "big capital" will invest more, margins will shrink, and "small capital" will go look for something else.
Capitalism is ruthlessly adapatable. You will starve to death, but capitalism will continue. Captialism won the cold war -- and capitalism is winning the drug war. If you feel that starving to death is a bad thing, then you're in favor of a change... but capitalism
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I had to look it up, but "agonal" is actually a word. I thought he meant [wikipedia.org]"agonadal" [audioenglish.net], which is also a word, and perhaps more appropriate in the context.
Of course, the two are not mutually exclusive, particularly in the case where someone has recently and suddenly become agonadal.
Value and Profit (Score:2)
"People turn Value into Profit. News at 11."
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There is nothing "exciting" or "new" about advertising. It's just a mechanism for siphoning wealth from the middle and working classes and giving it to the top 1%.
The speed with which people welcome the tools of their own demise is stunning.
Re:Value and Profit (Score:5, Insightful)
If I don't buy anything they advertise -- in fact, I block the advertisements themselves -- exactly how is it hurting me to use services supported by advertising?
I see nothing wrong with parting a fool from their money. If people as a whole aren't smart enough to move past the mental abilities of a ferret (ooh, shiney, must have it), well, then they're bringing it on themselves, and I don't feel sorry for them at all.
Go ahead, call me cold hearted, but I learned from my mistakes. It took me the better part of 10 years to learn and recover from those mistakes, but I did it without going begging for help. People need to suck it up, reduce their expenses to the bare essentials, work multiple menial jobs if that's what it takes, sell possessions if they have to. It takes work, and a willingness to do without, but it can be done without needing handouts.
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Advertising is stronger than you are. You may believe that you have superpowers that make you impervious to marketing, but some very thorough research done since the 1920's has shown that sooner or later, advertising sinks in. Maybe you can block an ad in a website, but the whole idea of ubiquitous messaging is that if the right don't get ya, the
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All of which is predicated on the theory that I buy excess stuff. I pretty much buy necessities only, and if I'm buying a name brand of any of them it's because a)it was cheaper / unit when I was at the store, or b) past personal experience with it has proven it to be of sufficient quality that it is worth seeking out again. Hell, half the time I'm in the store, I don't know if something is a "name brand" or if it's the "store brand". Mostly because I avoid advertising, and partly because I simply don't
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If you live in Europe or the US, you buy excess stuff. That's a statistical certainty.
The gray and black markets (Score:2)
Worthless, sensationalist tripe (Score:1)
Worthless, sensationalist tripe - posted by snydeq. I take it theodp is on holiday?
Foolish (Score:1)
We put too much value on this data (Score:3, Interesting)
It's more like DRM. (Score:3, Interesting)
What we're seeing with these "data platforms" is that you can do some restricted things with the data, but you can't just get the data and work on it yourself. Compare, say, Securities and Exchange Commission filings. The entire data set is downloadable for free. (I have an application downloading the updates every night. [downside.com]. So do many Wall Street services.) Don't expect that kind of access from Twitter.
Companies hate to make that data freely available. Even most WHOIS access is throttled, and that's supposed to be public data. It's not about data volume any more, now that terabyte drives are in the bargain bin at the computer store. It's about control.
"Data platforms" with such restrictive access are really just another form of "digital rights management".
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