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Lazy Blogger Blog Post: Sunday Edition

March 23rd, 2008 · No Comments · Information Markets, Lazy Blogger Blog Post

From The Economist, a lovely story about the value of social networking.

First, some choice quotes.

Both deals [Microsoft buying Hotmail and AOL buying Bebo], in their respective decades, illustrate a great paradox of the internet in that the premise underlying them is precisely half right and half wrong. The correct half is that a next big thing—web-mail then, social networking now—can indeed quickly become something that consumers expect from their favourite web portal. The non sequitur is to assume that the new service will be a revenue-generating business in its own right.

And this:

The problem with today’s social networks is that they are often closed to the outside web. The big networks have decided to be “open” toward independent programmers, to encourage them to write fun new software for them. But they are reluctant to become equally open towards their users, because the networks’ lofty valuations depend on maximising their page views—so they maintain a tight grip on their users’ information, to ensure that they keep coming back. As a result, avid internet users often maintain separate accounts on several social networks, instant-messaging services, photo-sharing and blogging sites, and usually cannot even send simple messages from one to the other. They must invite the same friends to each service separately. It is a drag.

This observation, and the natural inclination of social networking sites to try and overcome this (via allowing you to import your social networks from other social networking sites), has lead me to coin the term: network effect-scalation.

~alex

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