Weblogs 2.0

http://infrablog.verisignlabs.com/2005/10/weblogs_20_1.html

Word is out, and it’s true: VeriSign has acquired the assets of Dave Winer’s
weblogs.com. I’m sure Dave will have plenty to say on the subject, but
weblogs.com this past year has reached a point where Dave needed to either
a) invest significant capital into the development of Weblogs 2.0 ­ a ping
server to handle the next several years of traffic growth, b) sell it to
someone else who would do the same, or c) watch as the current system slowly
(or maybe quickly) succumbed to the ever-growing stream of pings. Last
Thursday weblogs.com processed just under 2 million (1.96M) pings for the
day. When we started talking with Dave, a couple months back, the ping
totals were barely half of that, and the load even then on the servers made
pinging weblogs a chancy proposition during peak posting times (late morning
and mid-evening in the US).  For a long time, a ping servers could be stood
up as a single box running on a fast business DSL connection. Those days
have past, at least for the popular ping servers; pings are well on their
way to requiring serious infrastructure.

 
Why VeriSign?

That’s where VeriSign comes in. Not only are we running the DNS Registry and
the largest TLDs (.com/.net), we handle hundreds of millions of transactions
every month in the areas of mobile telephony, ecommerce payments, and
instant messaging among other things. As we look ahead a few years, we see a
future in which pings are generated not just by the millions per day, but by
the tens and hundreds of millions. The blogosphere will continue grow ­
rapidly ­ but we already note signs that RSS and the mechanics of feed-based
publishing will extend well beyond the blogging perimeter, and be adopted as
an enabling technology in areas like mainstream media publishing and
corporate data distribution. In short, we believe that it won’t be long
before terms like ping, feed, and trackback become part of the conventional
lexicon for Internet publishing as whole, not just the realm of blogs.

 

That’s an exciting view of the future, with a host of new opportunities for
delivering network services in a user-friendly (and often user-powered) way.
In order for that to happen though, there’s a lot of work to be done
underneath the application layer. The blogosphere has benefited from a burst
of innovations and advances in blogging tools, aggregation services, and
social networking applications. The plumbing underneath all this activity
hasn’t kept up, however. In the area of pings and ping servers, we have what
it takes to keep up with the vigorous growth “up the stack”.

 

Pings, as their number grows and grows, starts to look a lot like they other
kinds of messaging operations we run. It’s what we excel at.

 
Our Vision for Weblogs.com

First, we want to see weblogs.com remain what it is, and maintain how it
works for the long term. There’s enormous value for the ecosystem in
realizing Dave’s original vision for his ping server: a free,
standards-based service that was easy to use, and effective in signaling to
the world at large that you’ve submitted new content into the system. Here
are some attributes that we intend to preserve and extend for weblogs.com

 
1.      Free

Basic pings, the messages processed by weblogs.com, will remain free to
submit, and free to retrieve from the service. Over time, we plan to offer
value-added services and publishers and consumers that we can charge a fee
for, in much the same way companies like Yahoo! provide basic email services
for free, and offer premium “upgrades” for a fee (e.g. extra storage, domain
hosting, integrated website, etc.) But pings will remain free; our goal is
to make weblogs.com the best, most widely used ping server available.

 
2.      Open

We are strong believers in standards and open computing. We’ll keep the
XML-RPC format Dave Winer built weblogs.com around, and add to it, with
additional services that leverage and extend the usefulness of pings. In all
cases, we endorse open formats, freely available, freely implementable by
the rest of the community.  Competing services are a good thing ­ ultimately
they will provide a much stronger basis for innovation and growth in the
ecosystem. We want to excel in our execution and implementation of our
services, rather than building a walled garden around a proprietary
platform.

 
3.      Solid

We have the skills, resources and experience in highly-scaled,
high-performance infrastructure to deploy ping server services that will
serve the blogosphere (and beyond) for the next stages of growth. As latency
and accuracy become increasingly important issues for the blogosphere,
weblogs.com will provide a reliable “dial-tone” for sending and receiving
publishing signals on the Internet. Like other high quality infrastructure,
we expect that over time pings and related services from VeriSign will
become transparent ­ it just works, so often and so well that you won’t give
it much thought in the future.

 
4.      Informative

I know from talking to Dave Winer that this was part of his vision, if not
part of his current implementation, but we would like to make weblogs.com ­
the website ­ a useful destination for checking in on the infrastructure
side of the blogosphere. We anticipate it being a handy place to check in
for aggregated metrics: how many pings were processed today? How many feeds
are active in the last week? How many different languages are being used for
ping submission? There’s a great number of stats and measurements we can
deliver that we’d find useful as members of the blogosphere. We think you
will too.

 
What Happens Now?

Weblogs.com version 2.0 will be a significant improvement in performance and
features, but will remain fully backwards compatible. If your publishing
tools are configured to ping weblogs.com, you should not have to change
anything. Everything will just continue to work, only faster, and all of the
time. As we develop additional services, we’ll do our best to make sure they
are easy and reliable to use in the tools of your choice.

 

As for additional services, there’s a wide variety of services that we’re
looking at and working on right now, but will focus on one that we’re
committed to in the near term and believe is a compelling problem for the
blogosphere in general: blog spam. If you read back through my previous
posts a ways its not hard to deduce that we spend a lot of time thinking
about this problem.  I noted this morning searching for something on
Technorati that they are telling us that  we can search more than 18 million
blogs now. I believe that’s true, but only if we’re fairly charitable in
what we’d call a blog.

 

We’ve just begun doing some analysis on just how many blogs out there are
real­ ­ the work of real humans crafting posts ­ rather than simply splogs ­
web pages that are generated automatically by scripts and programs to look
just like (or much like) real blogs, but serve only as a place to park
keywords that will hopefully be found in a search, and advertisements that
hopefully will be clicked on by humans who happen to somehow land on that
page. In talking to Google, they can confirm what our initial scan tells us:
there are an enormous number of splogs out there, and the number is growing
faster than the number of real blogs. By a good margin.

 

This problem is fraught with many of the same problems that plague the email
world in its struggle against spam: Who is the source? What is the content
about? Is it a copy? What does its distribution look like? Is this purely a
solicitation? These are not easy questions, and a robust solution is not
readily available. However, at the infrastructure level, very little is
currently being done, and there are remedies that can be deployed that will
provide significant, if not thorough relief. As a first “killer app” to
deploy on top of weblogs.com ping services, we’d like to make progress in
improving the “signal-to-noise ratio” in the blogosphere.  Does that mean
censorship? No. As above, we’re committed to maintaining the integrity of
the free and open ping stream, in all its wild and chaotic glory. But we
believe that many will want to take advantage of filtering services ­ screen
out the splogs based on a threshold value in the analysis ­ in much the same
way that mail users see value in spam filters for their email inbox.

 

That’s a tough task, and one we won’t be able to make much progress on it
alone. We’re already working with a number of parties in the ecosystem on
this subject, and believe that as part of a community effort, VeriSign can
help lead the way to much better “signal” at the infrastructure layer of the
blogosphere. Which will improve the user experience for everyone. Which is
why we got involved in the first place.



You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to