welcome to my blargh

now with 88.333% more desu. repeating of course.

Alas, LiveJournal

(originally published here: http://jwwest.wordpress.com/2009/08/17/alas-livejournal/)

Nearly 1o years ago, I opened a LiveJournal account. At the time, it was just starting to blossom into a hot, cutting edge web property. Brad Fitz was still squarely in charge, and I think they had just bought their second database server. My user id is 1581, most users today have user ids of six digits or above. Hell, at the time you couldn't have a username over nine characters and I ended up dropping the 'y' from my normal handle creating 'zerozephr'.

Needless to say, my account is still open and I loved LJ for numerous years. I would try blogging with another service or even tried my own software but inevitably I would end up integrating with LJ to cross-post, getting frustrated and eventually going back. The reason why is that they were the first to truly introduce the concept of a social network to blogging and web sharing. Many have done it better, but LJ was the first. Everyone I communicated with online used the service, so it was necessary for me to keep my account and update there for all my "friends" to see it.

I haven't really used LJ to blog since 2005, but I continue to keep my account open. I've often wondered in the past why the site still remains popular with certain groups of people, most notably slash fiction writers and furries. (I also hear that it's the most popular blogging platform in Russia.) But what really perplexes me are the holdouts that still use it in defiance of everything that's truly wrong with it: it hasn't changed in ten years.

If you have a winning product, it's not always necessary to change. However, LJ is so very outdated that the change required to stay current is enormous. At the time of its inception, there was no one doing the things it did with web sharing. Now there's almost too many choices, and many make it much easier than LJ does and in more interesting ways.

LiveJournal has not even really valued its members and supports. I can't even count the amount of drama raised over the years by the changing policies and heavy handed attempts at control by the numerous owners. But it was still simple and we continued to support it because of our friends list and communities. However even that's coming to an end.

The service is irrelevant now days: everyone does it better somewhere else. Even the design of most LJ sites are horrible; things of MySpace esque nightmare. The cool emotion and music tags which were so cool in 1999 look horribly dated and childish now. And the user icons! So cliche and overused that LJ can actually sell extra space for them for a premium rate, regardless that sites such as Facebook allow an unlimited number of possible user icons.

I'm not even broaching the subject of integration. LiveJournal is so steadfast in their refusal to innovate or change that no one supports them anymore. So it's even quickly becoming a thing of the past for me to use it as a secondary distribution for my writing. (Somehow, inexplicably, Posterous supports cross posting to LiveJournal so it may seem kind of ironic considering that this will end up there as well)

A friend of mine brought up an interesting observation the other day about his friends list. He noticed that his friends list had not updated in some time, and when it did it was aggregations from other sites. I've noticed this myself and while it makes me sad that eventually (soon) we'll see the death of the service from attrition, I can't help but feel a sense of relief. Sure, I have documented nearly 8 years of my life on LiveJournal including most of my turbulent early twenties, but as I've grown up I feel that either LJ needs to as well, or be lost forever as our generation logs off.

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Filed under  //   internet  
Posted August 17, 2009
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I need to stop reading articles on the internet

I need to stop getting myself worked up over these sorts of things, but I can't resist.

WoW Insider just ran an article about GLAAD trying to fight bigotry on the internet. Good luck with that guys.

http://www.wow.com/2009/07/21/glaad-fights-homophobia-in-online-communities-like-wow/

Here's my comment:

"I have no problem with what people do in their private lives. It's none of my business.

But I get offended when the thought police roll around to preempt any unpleasantness from happening. (Yes, I totally invoked the Orwell cliche here, but I think it fits)

Am I offended at some of the language and attitudes of the kids playing? Absolutely. I don't play Xbox Live because of the nasty voice chat. However, I don't think that in our society we need to be telling people what they can and cannot say.

This doesn't get them off the hook. The freedom of speech carries a debt of responsibility for that speech. You're free to run into a theater and scream "fire" but you should be prepared to deal with the consequences. These people need to understand that if they call someone names, they will be held accountable. Likewise, gay individuals need to understand that coming out and identifying themselves as gay in an anonymous online game will incite this type of sophomoric behavior. It's not fair, and it's not right, but it's reality. Any group of people with lifestyles or views that clash with the "mainstream" have faced this in the past.

Moreover, why should it matter? It's a virtual world, a make believe game. Leave that stuff in your real life and just enjoy playing. I've seen guild recruitment for furries and other such ridiculed groups pop up in trade from time to time and it amazes me that certain people are so desperate for validation that they stir this up when it doesn't need to be. I understand the need to have social groups to talk about certain things, and how they naturally extend into wow, but I'm even more surprised when people are shocked at how much wow reflects the real world of injustice and bigotry when you identify yourself openly as a member of one of these groups.

Hold these idiots responsible for their words, but don't make sweeping rules that effect everyone because that's a slippery slope to censorship."

The easiest solution for all of these problems is to just keep your mouth shut and mind your own damn business.

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Filed under  //   internet   politics  
Posted July 21, 2009
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