The Burgeoning Openly Owned Web

It’s your data after all!

The Open Web Manifesto

So here’s an idea that Dave and I have formed over a late night of brain-storming - it’s a work in progress and items still to be fleshed out - read and tell us what u think! :)

The Open Web Manifesto (Draft)

  • We believe that we should be able to CRUD our own data on our own terms
  • We believe that our data should be owned and accessed directly through open standards
  • Proprietary web services take our rights to our own data away
  • Portability is our right


The disintermediation of personal data
Our personal data is increasingly entrusted to third parties, for instance:

  • Your Photos reside in a proprietary File system (Flickr, Picasa etc.)
  • Your Email resides in a proprietary File system (Gmail, Yahoo etc.)


This is a bad idea, because you have no control over your own data. Your data is stored in proprietary storage, and is hidden be hind proprietary web applications. Some of your data is accessible over the published API’s, but you have only limited functionality, and you do not have any guarantees over the long term life of your data.

Taking Back Control
We think that people are going to start wanting more and more control over their data. Services like Amazon S3 and Dreamhost provide inexpensive, enterprise class data storage. If we can access many (or one!) data stores in a useful way, there is no reason why we should use other proprietary web ‘land grabbers’. You can easily move all your data to a secure, agnostic online drive with multiple backups over multiple vendors if you so desire. Or, you could keep a backup of your online data at home on a USB drive. It’s YOUR choice.

Costs

  • The bad news is that you’re going to have to pay to host your data. But from there, it’s all free (if you want it to be).
  • The good news is that utility storage services (e.g. S3) charges a lot less for data storage than Flickr! And by choosing your storage provider you can store files up to what ever size you want!


Accessing your data

  • We think that you should decide how your data is accessed, and who gets to access it.
  • We want to develop open source services and tools to assist you in accessing your data. Web services are analogous to software, in that they should be free and open source. Although there is a cost associated with, say, indexing and then making your data available on a web service, we believe that these costs are very small and can be absorbed through donations etc.
  • Creating an open market with low barriers to entry for, say, photo sharing apps (running on our aforementioned free web service) will drive down costs and promote better products.


Service need to be built

  • A service which indexes you public and private data, and provides a ‘private search engine’
  • A service which can display media (photos, video, music, documents) in a cool way
  • A service that will sync your media to other services (flickrsync, picasasync)
  • A service that provides a single interface for multiple front and back ends
  • A service that manages your metadata (tags, EXIF etc)


What already exists
Tools to upload and download to utility storage services (e.g. S3)

Use Cases

  • Dave lost all his old emails when he moved from hotmail to Gmail. If he had used S3 for his email storage, he could have backed them up, or just switched frint-ends.
  • Andy uses flickr to store his photos. Most of his friends use Picasa. Andy can’t participate in their ’social web’. Andy should have used S3 to store his data, so he could then sync it using 3rd party tools with any online photo provider.

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