The Fall Of Facebook Social Readers

John Herrman dissects the news about the declining popularity of social news readers on Facebook, and points out the key observation:

Sharing isn’t really sharing if you don’t mean to do it.

He also suggests that Facebook’s rejiggering of ‘trending stories’ so they are segregated and pulled to the side of actual posts by actual people could be a devastating blow to companies like the Washington Post. Ryan Kellett, the WashPo engagement producer, agrees.

No surprise that the social platform shapes discourse, but it’s a hard reality for the papers who were holding out their Facebook stats to advertisers as confirmation of a social strategy and now they are collapsing.

Here’s the crash for Washpo:

5 Minutes on The Verge: Khoi Vinh via The Verge

Q: Who’s doing the most interesting desktop app design these days?

Vihn: I’m passionate about the Mac and what’s possible on the desktop, and I think independent Mac developers are some of the most creative minds in technology… but right now the most interesting thing happening on the desktop, by far, is Apple’s iOS-ification of OS X. They’re clearly in the process of upending a decades-old paradigm for thinking about desktop software, and whether it’s successful or not is going to be very interesting.

[…]

Q: How should media publishers deal with the fact that readers are increasingly getting news, links, and more from a range of sources filtered through social networks? Is anyone doing it particularly well?

Vinh: I think news organizations have to get really, really serious about creating a social software product that leverages their product in a value-add way. This is basically what a few dozen startups are doing, and somebody is going to figure this out; if I were the owner of a news organization, I would put $10 million towards funding a few of my own startups to get a better shot at owning the winning solution. Because none of the existing ‘old media’ news brands are going to do it. Anyway, within a decade, we’ll have a social news powerhouse brand that can sit comfortably next to the New York Times, Economist, CNN, etc. That seems inevitable to me.

I really think Vinh is one of the smartest people out there in new media.

news.me - John Borthwick

John Borthwick announces (at last) the release of News.me, a social news app, for the iPad:

John Borthwick, News.me

Why News.me?

For a while now at bitly and betaworks, we have been thinking about and working on applications that blend socially curated streams with great immersive reading interfaces.

Specifically we have been exploring and testing ways that the bitly data stack can be used to filter and curate social streams.   The launch of the iPad last April changed everything. Finally there was a device that was both intimate and public — a device that could immerse you into a reading experience that wasn’t bound by the user experience constraints naturally embedded in 30 years of personal computing legacy.  So we built News.me.

News.me is a personalized social news reading application for the Apple iPad. It’s an app that lets you browse, discover and read articles that other people are seeing in their Twitter streams.   These streams are filtered and ranked using algorithms developed by the bitly team to extract a measure of social relevance from the billions of clicks and shares in the bitly data set. This is fundamentally a different kind of social news experience. I haven’t seen or used anything quiet like it before. Rather than me reading what you tweet, I read the stream that you have selected to read — your inbound stream.  It’s almost as if I’m leaning over your shoulder — reading what you read, or looking at your book shelves: it allows me to understand how the people I follow construct their world.

As with many innovations, we stumbled upon this idea.  We started developing News.me last August after we acquired the prototype from The New York Times Company. For the first version we wanted to simply take your Twitter stream, filter it using a bitly-based algorithm (bit-rank) and present it as an iPad app. The goal was to make an easy to browse, beautiful reading experience.  Within weeks we had a first version working.  As we sat around the table reviewing it, we started passing our iPads around saying “let me look at your stream.” And that’s how it really started.  We stumbled into a new way of reading Twitter and consuming news — the reverse follow graph wherein I get to read not only what you share, but what you read as well.  I get to read looking over other people’s shoulders.

News.me is a sort of reading triangulation tool. If someone you follow is a great curator, much of that is due to what they are reading, so ‘looking over their shoulder’ can be a great leg up on gaining a better understanding of the world, or some corner of it.

[disclosure: I am an advisor to Bit.ly and Betaworks, and have a financial interest in the company.]

Keller, Huffington, And The Remassification Of Media

I read two argumentative posts this morning, one by Bill Keller, the NY Times Executive Editor  and the second by Arianna Huffington. Keller started the hair-pulling by writing a column, in which — after a long build-up about his throw-weight as a Lion of Media — he complains in an aggrieved tone that Huffington lifted some of his observations about the future of media:

Bill Keller, All The Aggregation That’s Fit To Aggregate

The queen of aggregation is, of course, Arianna Huffington, who has discovered that if you take celebrity gossip, adorable kitten videos, posts from unpaid bloggers and news reports from other publications, array them on your Web site and add a left-wing soundtrack, millions of people will come. How great is Huffington’s instinctive genius for aggregation? I once sat beside her on a panel in Los Angeles (on — what else? — The Future of Journalism). I had come prepared with a couple of memorized riffs on media topics, which I duly presented. Afterward we sat down for a joint interview with a local reporter. A moment later I heard one of my riffs issuing verbatim from the mouth of Ms. Huffington. I felt so … aggregated.

In her rejoinder, Huffington details with dates and locales, the same thoughts she had espoused for years prior to that joint interview with Bill Keller, stopping along the way to dis him about all the talent he’s lost to her, and how much bigger AOL’s readership is:

Ariana Huffington, Bill Keller Accuses Me of “Aggregating” an Idea He Had Actually “Aggregated” From Me

The trouble for Keller is that this viewpoint, right down to the use of the word “convergence,” is one I had been expressing to describe the changes happening in the media for years.

For instance, in May 2008, two years before the Milken panel, I told the Star Tribune, “I think that what we are seeing is a kind of convergence of the mainstream media doing more and more online, and those of us in online media and the blogosphere doing more and more reporting, along with citizen-journalism projects.”

In November 2008, 17 months before the panel, speaking of the media’s coverage of the ‘08 race, I told Reuters, “There’s this real convergence, where basically you found that the best and most accurate rose to the top, whether it originated from Time magazine or from Nate Silver’s fivethirtyeight.com, which did not exist before the election.”

And in January 2010, three months before Bill Keller’s “memorized riff” on convergence, I told Canada’s CTV, “And then we can have a hybrid future where there is a convergence between old media and new media. It’s not an either/or world.”

Indeed, as far back as March 2007, over three years before the Milken panel, I wrote a post outlining my take on what was happening in the media world: “Those papers that wake up in time will become a journalistic hybrid combining the best aspects of traditional print newspapers with the best of what the Web brings to the table.”

So who was it, Bill, who was “aggregating” someone else’s ideas?

In this interchange, Huffington comes out looking more like the diligent reporter, fact checking the provenance of the ‘convergence’ meme, and who likely uttered it first. She’s obviously the better counter-puncher of the two, at least.

But the idea that they are fighting over is fairly humdrum, so the whole thing is almost laughable. Mainstream publications are adopting the tools and sensibilities of online media, and there is a ‘convergence’ as both sides move toward the new blendo mainstream. Yawn. Sounds like two hipsters arguing about who listened to some cool band first.

From the perspective of a longtime online media observer and participant, this convergence is the stripmalling of the web, where pioneering socially-scaled advances — like blogging and social networks — are being repurposed by old media companies. They are taking these tools, and in a sense, using them against us. It’s wolves in sheep’s clothing: they use online content management, they put up an area for comments, and allow us to share and like through Facebook and Twitter. It seems like we are talking among ourselves, but it is all done in these gigantic mall-sized, privately-owned semi-public spaces, and they are so mass scale that most voices are crowded out, aside from those of the owners and their staff.

We will have to start talking about socially-scaled media, I think, to distinguish it from this convergence into remassified and superficially socialized media, the sort of media that AOL and the New York Times are churning out.

I think there is still a great deal of innovation in socially-scaled media, particularly in social news tools like Flipboard and the newly released LinkedIn Today (another post in the works). In this niche we see the possibility of the long-awaited ‘daily me’ coming to the fore, where your user experience will be grounded in the specific people that you chose to follow, and much less in the hands of Huffington or Keller.

I recently wrote You Are Who You Follow arising from a Mathew Ingram-inspired discussion about online influence, but it is salient, here, again. As users of and active participants in media (I dislike the metaphor of ‘media consumption’), we have to chose what kind of media we want to follow. We can chose to be ‘consumers’ of the hybridized, remassified semi-social ‘product’ that Keller and Huffington want to create. Or we can connect to other people through socially-scaled news networks.

This doesn’t mean I won’t read anything from the NY Times or HuffPo, but the difference is that I will be following specific individuals (like Paul Krugman), specific topics (like union busting), or finding out what materials are most interesting right now to those specific people that I follow. And then I also curate, making observations, comments, reposing, and so on. And by so doing, I become an integral part of the news network, not a passive ‘consumer’ of news. I become someone worth following, not just another random reader who occasionally writes an online comment.

This may seem like a niddling difference, but it is not. Small talk is big again. And big media wants to make us small again.

(Source: underpaidgenius)

Where’s The ‘Daily Google’?

In a review of the new Zite iPad social journal — competitor to Flipboard — Mathew Ingram asks a killer question:

Matt Ingram, The Race to Build the “Daily Me” Continues

There’s one nagging question that keeps jumping out at me as I look at all of these apps and services, however, and that is: Where is Google? The combination of smart aggregation and algorithm-driven personalization seems like something the search engine should be all over. Google News has added some personalization aspects, but they are anemic at best, and one of the original customized news-readers — Google Reader — hasn’t really capitalized on that opportunity much at all (although it does provide some recommendations for readers related to new feeds).

The reality is, the RSS reader has been eclipsed (for the small proportion of the population who even used one) by Twitter and Facebook and other social news sources, or smart aggregators such as Techmeme and Mediagazer. Google has more or less failed to take advantage of that transition at all when it comes to news reading, although it is trying to add social signals to search. Why not take FastFlip and try to make it a Flipboard or Zite or News360 competitor?

Why doesn’t Google take it’s enormous advantage with Google Reader, Gmail, and search, and create the killer social news tool?

Perhaps they are planning to scoop up companies like Zite, Flipboard, or Betaworks News.me, and simply transition them into a Google offering.

But is Reader an unloved child at Google? Why has it stagnated as a mere RSS reader when the marketplace has been dribbling over into streaming social news? Google could have scooped up the interesting Feedly years ago, and integrated that technology as an alternative front-end — but they didn’t.

Is Google really going to sit this out?

[disclosure: I am an advisor to Betaworks, Bit.ly and News.me, and I have a financial interest in News.me.]


News.me

The hush-hush News.me development project at Betaworks — based on technology acquired from the NY Times — has been leaked to the press, by Mashable’s Jolie O’Dell.  Few details have been revealed, but John Borthwick, CEO of Betaworks said “We’re building something wonderful and amazing in the social news space.”

No real details, just vague allusions to personalized and customized news. Seems like the news led Betaworks to launch the News.me stealth website on Thursday.

Update: I have been informed that it appears that Jenna Wortham at the NY Times (Betaworks and The Times Plan a Social News Service) was the first to break this story (thanks @mathewi).

[disclosure: I am an advisor to Betaworks, and have a financial interest in Bit.ly, one of the incubators product companies.]