Hmm, let's imagine that Twitter would be "private" by default, i.e. every twit would be private so only people that you explicitly specified would see the contents of the twit - do you think that would be help it to become something like it is now? Or if Facebook would be private by default... Wave is the collaboration platform where things are shared openly. Of course if someone wants to change the settings - it should be supported.
On Dec 2, 7:33 pm, Bertine van Hövell <[email protected]> wrote: > I prefer to keep private as the default. If you accidentally keep > confidential content private, the only loss is to you. If you > accidentally leave confidential content public, you'll have a much > larger problem at hand. > > To give an example. I use google docs often, but in my main list I > often see a few documents popping up of which I'm sure the person > didn't mean to share it with *everyone*, and that's even in a medium > when you have to choose to share. Imagine what would happen if gdocs > would be public by default. > > Seeing as Wave is a safe way to be able to share private information > (and in some cases is the reason why people continue to use it until > now), I prefer to keep 'private' as default. > > On Dec 2, 12:10 pm, Vega <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > > > > > The current default wave mode is "private", i.e. whenever a new wave > > is created, it can be accessed only by the owner and then by > > participants added by owner. > > I think that this concept is not something that is obvious. It seems > > to me that it evolved this way since originally, Wave was created as > > email replacement. However, as we see, Wave is a lot more. It is a > > platform for collaboration, and as such it should embrace its users to > > share the content, not to hide it. Off course, if someone wants to > > create private wave, or change the default settings - it should be > > supported. > > The official reason for Google Wave development discontinuation was > > "lack of traction". I think the main reason for this - there's was > > very little public content. Because in Google Wave everything is > > private/limited until stated otherwise. Why not change it? Why not > > make everything public until stated otherwise? > > It may be a small change that makes a lot of difference. > > For example, I guess everybody knows the Flckr service. The company > > allowed users to upload images to its servers and share it. It wasn't > > the only one at the time, however it was the first to make the images > > public by default and it resulted in huge success. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Wave Protocol" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/wave-protocol?hl=en.
