Sidebar Communication

Hollywood social networks are using IM Status (i.e. Busy, Away) as a communication channel (i.e. Status: Need Work). Excellent idea!

For Dave's Instant Outliner, this could be done very easily so one could see status of team members, friends, and family.

For blogrolls, a short status description element can be added to each feed. Blogroll has to be live though for this to work. How would it look? Where you see the orange XML pseudo-image on my blogroll to the right, you would see short messages from the bloggers like Need Work, Help Wanted, In Japan, Sick, or simply RIP for grave bloggers.

Note that the status could be little graphics like Sparkline or an image. Status of a dog, for example, will be a webcam snapshot.

Identity as a Verb

To me, identity is not something one has, like InfoCard or a key, but something one does, a verb if you will. Identity is like the equal sign of an equation. For identity to happen, you need both sides of the equation.

In the real world, identity happens when I see someone I met before. I compare the face in front of me with the face I remember and, voila, identity happens. Identity stops happening as soon as the person walks away or the person hits me hard enough to faint.

Likewise, online identity happens when a website and I agree on some piece of secret and then I later show it. Yup, the website would say, you showed us what we saw before. As soon as that is done, the website has to give me something else because identity is an event and the website will forget who I am otherwise. Usually, they give me a ticket which I have to show everytime I say something. When I am done with the website, the ticket is thrown away.

But does the website know who I am? Nope. If I tell them that I am the Don Ho who sang Tiny Bubbles, they'll accept that so, when online identity happens later, they'll be able to say Yup, you showed us what we saw before from a guy who claimed to be Don Ho.

At this point, I forgot what I was going to say. It's too bad that, like identity, enlightment is a verb.

Music in MMORPG

Star Wars MMORPG is having an interesting problem: how to let people play virtual instruments without violating copyrights? Adding a smart melody detector wouldn't work for technical reasons, probably not for another ten years so.

More practical solution would be to introduce a virtual gadget that lets people record music, more specifically record the notes generated from the music instrument a targeted player is using. Since the instruments are probably simply generating MIDI notes, storage won't be a problem. The recorder should be invisible though so it can be used without others noticing. For fairness, the recorder could easily take into account the number of players within listening distance and the nature of the space (private or public).

Yes, I am talking about using reward and penalty combined with evidence collecting device to solve the problem. So when a player playing a Madonna song gets reported, reporting player gets some online money anonymously (voiding the violation event pointed to by the evidence void). Copyright violating player can pay a fine ($1 on the next bill) or choose to buy a reasonably priced license to perform publically in the online world a month. If they don't pay up, their musician skill is suspended for escalating durations.

As to how the violation is determined, violating player is sent a notice of violation and, if they dispute, a reward-motivated player playing the mediator/judge decides whether the violation claim is bogus or not. If not, then it's kicked up to another level and so on. Ratings on each player prevents abuse of the system.

The solution outlined above will make both players as well as copyright holders happy without stressing resource. It will add a lot of emotion to the game as well. LOL.

As Usual

Not much happened this week except the usual. Execs mused. Marketers pumped. Engineers argued. Grunts humped. Busyness as usual. The only thing that keeps me from exploding out of this boring situation is that I am too busy to think. APWG meeting in San Jose came and went before I looked up long enough to remember that I was planning to attend. Sheesh.

Tags and Stickers

As I noted before in Tags and Divergence and attempted to address in Emulating Errors for Tag Convergence, tagging as practiced today could use more convergence features. While thinking about this and wiki-related problems, I came up with stickers.

I came up with the idea of stickers when I remembered the opening chapter of Snow Crash in which a girl tagged a bad driver's car with a sticker. Stickers on wiki entries? Stickers on Flickr pictures? Stickers on links?

Stickers are like graphical tags that users can attach to text or images. While textual stickers can be applied likes tags are, similar to the way adjectives work, I think graphical stickers offer better user experiences. An open system can allow users to create custom stickers and variations of stickers (like icons with modifier pieces) to help users create a graphical language. Time and effort needed to create new graphical stickers is not a liability but a convergence feature.

I think the best way to use stickers is to combine it with limits in availability and time. So a user gets N number of stickers of various types to start with and will get M more per week or month and each sticker type has specific time limits (meaning they come off after a while).

I am still not done thinking about stickers but I thought it was interesting enough as is.

Bank of America announces SiteKey

Bank of America just announced the SiteKey service, a very effective protection against phishing and pharming. The service will launch in Tennessee next month and roll out across the country by the end of 2005.

SiteKey service is based on the patented 2-way 2-factor authentication solution from PassMark Systems. For the most part of last year, I've been helping them build their core authentication technology. This year, my focus at PassMark has been the forensic technology.

Oh yeah. Hurrah!

Update:

News.com has a screenshot of a SiteKey screen for those more visually minded. That was actually a screenshot of this page at BoA.

Kicking off the camping season

This weekend is the start of our camping season this year. This year, the first camping trip will be at the Pfiffer Big Sur State Park. We've been that five times or so but I have no problem with repeating a good thing. My wife, on the other hand, wants to try new camps. Sheesh.

My only worry is that my cigarette craving might get real bad during the trip. Last time I quit smoking for longer than a week, I stayed away for 6 months but I started smoking again while camping at Clear Lake. Oh boy, it was bad. I chewed through a full box of nicotine gum before throwing the towel in. I hope I fare better this time.

Brain Feed

At 43, I now have to work harder to concentrate. 11 steps to a better brain sounds good to me.

Modafinil can keep a person awake and alert for 90 hours straight, with none of the jitteriness and bad concentration that amphetamines or even coffee seem to produce.

90 hours?!? Longest I went without sleep was three days and, at the end of it, I threw up before plunging into ZZ land. Not sure if I actally fell asleep or simply fainted my way into it. I am happy to say I can't duplicate that feat now but wouldn't mind giving Modafinil a try. Mixing Modafinil with Levitra would be interesting too. LOL.