There is a new program out called Waste (300k) that was released open-source for only a few HOURS by its developer before his corporate honchos (he worked for a subsidiary of AOL) made him yank it from all their sites. (Didn't matter - this baby spread like WILDFIRE once it hit the net. It's still all over the place aside from AOL.)
It's got peer-to-peer chat, & file transfer with all the right features:
- private and encrypted, where existing users decide whether and how far to let in new users based on different levels of trust
- peer-to-peer, so, like the internet itself, it still runs if any particular nodes go down, and it doesn't depend on any one ISP.
It might be just a question of tweaking / building on top of this open-source program.
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This idea - releasing a new web app (other than just a browser) in order to create a different communications "topology" - is very BIG. Lots of revolutions just happen because the technology allows it.
The GOP revolution of the past 30 years is arguably just a confluence of different ways of "gaming" the system - Texas gerrymandering, Choicepoint, push polling, the Mighty Wurlitzer, CIA plants at WaPo and NYT - and many times the best way around a technological obstacle is simply A BETTER TECHNOLOGY.
If the voice of the people is not being heard because Judith Miller at the Times (or WHOEVER) is a mouthpiece of the Administration - then MAKE THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE HEARD.
I think a private encrypted chat/filetransfer technology - something that would never crash and which ASHCROFT could never break - would be great.
I'd also like to see some way of indexing and aggregating the things discussed - just a way of holding on to content that people want to keep, and a way of making it findable later, and maybe collaboratively deciding on some of the "best" content.
It would be great to have lots of people typing in, talking in, reading out loud, drawing, ranting on the keyyboard or on-air - and a whole 'nuther army rating the rants and keeping us posted on the Best of the Best - so the rest of us could have cool stuff to read and listen to without having to beg Clear Channel to keep Howard in our "market" - we'd automatically have a thousand Howards to choose from.
I'm talking two-way writing/reading talking/listening on private encrypted indexed/summarized/rated networks - talking to each other maybe, exporting their top 10 hits (their top-10 lists of conservative idiots, their top essays, their top posts, their top recitations, their top videos) to each other maybe - until a whole bunch of streams of grassroots-generated text audio and video are available all day long wo we can GIVE THE BOOT TO THE MEDIA WHORES ONCE AND FOR ALL.
http://www.instantmessagingplanet.com/enterprise/article.php/3300391Much of what has been written about WASTE, the controversial peer-to-peer (P2P) application released without permission by an America Online programmer, has centered around its notorious origins. But largely overshadowed by the brouhaha is a significant work of collaborative technology that enables secure, basic communication -- and from which makers of more corporate-ready applications might learn.
The WASTE flap began in May, when programmer Justin Frankel published a working version of the application, and the software's source code, and attempted to release both under the GNU General Public License, in an effort to hand WASTE and its code to the open-source community.
But Frankel happens to be the head of Nullsoft, a subsidiary of Time Warner's America Online unit, and shortly after WASTE's posting to Nullsoft's Web site, the software was removed. (Whether the software today is legally in the public domain remains in doubt; the download page was replaced with a stern notice warning from Nullsoft that "Any license that you may believe you acquired with the Software is void, revoked and terminated.")
That wasn't the end of WASTE, however. Despite being available online only for a few hours, the application and its code had already made its way into the wild; in September, an updated version of the program appeared on open-source application repository SourceForge.net.
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