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Web 2.0 Viewpoint: Backlash From User Generated Websites – Is This "Bubble 2.0"?
"Will the web continue to move towards this model of user generated content?"

All the buzz these days seems to be about websites that let users generate the content (while the site collects most or all of the revenue). From Wikis to MySpace, and Digg (and their millions of clones), all the cool kids are letting the users dictate most if not all of the content on the site.

Though lately these stars have been falling from grace. For example the recent Digg controversy has raised questions about if it’s possible to have a system where users can’t game the system.

So the questions I think of are: Will the web continue to move towards this model of user generated content? Or will we go back towards the web being a more read-only medium with occasional points of interaction (forums, article comments, blogs)? Can a business model be based on someone else providing all the content? Can investors trust a company whose actual content is created by its customers? (Try explaining that as a business model to someone 10-20 years ago.)

Of course this leads to the question: is this “Bubble 2.0″?

First of all, there is more to the “2.0″ movement than just user generated content. It’s about usability and flexibility more than who generates the content. For example the impact AJAX has had on making web applications like Gmail easier to use. And getting rid of the clutter on so many sites, to be replaced with easier to read text. Sure “Web 2.0″ is getting over hyped with silly names, frustrating reflective logos, and goofy highlighting all over the page, but there is an advantage to all this XHTML, and DOM scripting: more usable and flexible websites.

I personally don’t believe the MySpace or YouTube model will survive on their own, it’s just not practical. They depend 100% on users to generate the content that attracts users. The same attracting is what draws spammers and just regular delinquents who abuse the system for profit, or simply to be a pest aka “Troll”. They may survive as part of something (MySpace is now part of News Corp.), but as a stand alone operation? I’m not to confident. People get tired of things. Video is fancy now, but eventually it will be just another GIF. Advertising will further help us become blind to the content, just like it did to GIF and Flash that came before.

YouTube today, YouGIF tomorrow.

Does that mean “Bubble 2.0″ is confirmed? Hardly. There are many useful applications around with a more stable and reliable model, such as Flickr, WordPress, Technorati, Bloglines, JotSpot, LinkedIn and of course Google which seem to have some sort of a balance, by being more service driven than content driven (you go there to do something, rather than see something).

Or in the cases of Flickr, WordPress, and Technorati, they have done a good job keeping spam and other abusers out of the system, while fostering an open community using things like API’s to further growth. Flickr and WordPress have “Pro” features for paying customers. Technorati doesn’t (that I’m aware of) but uses advertising to cover its cost. Its main problem is spam, and competition from the likes of Google. Though Google doesn’t seem to have figured out how to handle blog searching yet, either just like a regular website, or though a special blog search interface. LinkedIn has a social networking aspect but also bundles in useful things such as job /people finding tools, which let's face it aren’t a fad.

Who will survive? Those that can correctly manage and balance user generated content. It’s that simple. The days where there is no balance can’t last. While the days of totalitarian websites that ruled the web are gone, the days of anarchy cannot last. There is a balance, and likely a profit for the one who can find it, and use it effectively to allow users the freedoms they desire without the problems facing today's websites.


This essay appeared originally at Robert Accettura's personal website, "Fun With Wordage." Reproduced here by kind permission of the author.


About Robert Accettura
Robert Accettura, an aspiring web developer and an active Mozilla Contributor, is a recent college graduate with a degree in Business Administration, with a specialization in Management Information Systems (and looking for a job). Initially starting off as a Mac Shareware developer in 1999, Robert moved into web development a year and a half later and stuck with it since. These days Robert?s still obsessed with Apple hardware and software, as well as open source software.

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Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1

This author's comments are more at the level of what we would expect from local/national news sources with few if any technology insights. That's what's expected in those venues but certainly not compelling enough for Enterprise OpenSource Magazine. I would suggest choosing viewpoints that not only discuss the issues but also provide suggestions about what can be done to address the issues. It's frustrating reading an article only to find that it simply regurgitates common knowledge with no corresponding insights.

YouTube is no longer defining itself as a video sharing site. According to YouTube, it is now a "consumer media company."

I've just come back from a conference where a Web 2.0 zealot or two did their usual trick of proclaiming that almost anything can be fixed with a blog and that anyone who ignores their belief that social media will take over the world will find themselves sweeping streets for a living in about two weeks, just after News Ltd. goes bankrupt.

My cynical tone about this stuff comes from recent experiences with Last.FM and Pandora.


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