“It’s a very dangerous network because it’s all centralized,” he said, “not only on a technological level, where it goes through one set
of servers — but it also goes through one set of business interests
that’s anything but transparent.”
Danger may sound a bit overzealous for a Web service that barely
existed two years ago, but for a media landscape in the middle of a
profound shift, two years can be the span between eras.
Twitter is becoming a major source for news, commerce and free
expression and, as with a free press itself, defenders don’t want a few
profit-motivated individuals making all the decisions about how it
should evolve.
Like Facebook and YouTube before it, Twitter is now transitioning from
a freely available, much-loved Web service to a well-funded business
venture looking to cash in on the audience and cachet it built in its
freewheeling early days.
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Both critics have installed their own smaller, open-source micro-messaging systems outside of Twitter’s domain. Laporte calls his the Twit Army. The software they’re using was developed by Evan Prodromou, a developer in Montreal. Prodromou is the force behind Laconica — an open-source, Twitter-like system that anyone can install; hundreds of administrators already have, creating a dispersed, decentralized network of Twitter clones that can all talk to one another. Prodromou compares the state of micro-messaging to the early days of consumer e-mail. In the early 1990s, the e-mail world was dominated by proprietary dial-up entities like CompuServe, MCI and Prodigy. But because those systems were competitive, they didn’t connect to one another, and you could send messages only to people inside your own service. “I couldn’t send you e-mail and you couldn’t send me e-mail,” Prodromou explained. “We were on these separate islands. Making the change to an open standard for Internet e-mail has meant e-mail has become ubiquitous. I think that’s where we’re at now with microblogging.”
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