User:Tonisant/Why Open Systems Matter
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One of the things that I try to point out when asked why we shouldn't just use Facebook or YouTube instead of the M3P open system for storing text, images, audio, video etc. is that those closed systems are run by commercial entities (a)with different goals than ours, and (b) who will close down one day sooner or later and potentially leave all our content without a home.
Check out the following for some factual basis to this arguments:
- RIP Google Video: Download Your Videos by May 13 or They’re Gone Forever - Mashable, 16 April 2011
- Friendster to Erase Early Posts and Old Photos - Jenna Wortham, New York Times, 26 April 2011
- Google Puts the Hammer Down on Three More Services - Gizmodo, 20 January 2012
And sometimes you can see it coming ahead of time too:
- YouTube Founders Buy Delicious - The Guardian, 27 April 2011
- Facebook's share of UK social networking declines - The Telegraph, 11 January 2012
- Facebook Will Disappear in 5 to 8 Years - Cadie Thompson, CNBC.com, 4 June 2012
See also
- Open access policy adopted - Princeton University
- What Happens When Data Disappears? - The Dilemma of Being a Cyborg by Carina Chocano, New York Times, 27 January 2012
- Five Ways The Open Web Can Transform Higher Education by Cathy N. Davidson, 4 December 2011
- An Open Letter to Academic Publishers About Open Access by Jennifer Howard, The Chronicle of Higher Education, 1 April 2012
- How Yahoo Killed Flickr and Lost the Internet - Gizmondo, 15 May 2012