| John Mierau ( @ 2008-05-27 14:23:00 |
zittrain on proprietary goodies/threats to innovation
I'm listening to cbc radio's spark podcast interview with Jonathan Zittrain, author of 'The Future of the Internet - and How to Stop It!'
This is a great discussion of 'tethered' appliances - endpoint appliances like iphone, apps like facebook and other access routes to the internet and our data that lock us in and kill innovation.
I have brisk discussions on the greatness of the iphone and how it's in Jobs' best interest to provide innovative software, but Zittrain verbalizes my concerns clearly: in any 'walled garden' the proprietor or the regulator can drop the hammer on our expectations.
To me, his strongest argument is a call for data portability, the same way years of lawsuits have led to privacy agreements and licensing agreements... and a more aware user who fights for those rights, the same way consumer advocacy groups fought for real-world regulation of products.
Zittrain's book is free online in PDF form here
I'm listening to cbc radio's spark podcast interview with Jonathan Zittrain, author of 'The Future of the Internet - and How to Stop It!'
This is a great discussion of 'tethered' appliances - endpoint appliances like iphone, apps like facebook and other access routes to the internet and our data that lock us in and kill innovation.
I have brisk discussions on the greatness of the iphone and how it's in Jobs' best interest to provide innovative software, but Zittrain verbalizes my concerns clearly: in any 'walled garden' the proprietor or the regulator can drop the hammer on our expectations.
To me, his strongest argument is a call for data portability, the same way years of lawsuits have led to privacy agreements and licensing agreements... and a more aware user who fights for those rights, the same way consumer advocacy groups fought for real-world regulation of products.
Zittrain's book is free online in PDF form here