Playing it safe with our data

Annalee Newitz

Web 2.0 is well established, and sites like YouTube, Flickr, Facebook
and Digg have turned the internet from a static source of information
into a huge, interactive digital playground. So where to next? What
will the next stage of web culture - what some people call web 3.0 -
be like?

The overall message seems to be that there are profound changes on the
way. If web 2.0 is about generating your own content and sharing it,
web 3.0 will be about making information less free. Privacy fears, new
forms of advertising, and restrictions imposed by media companies will
mean more digital walls, leading to a web that's safer but without its
freewheeling edge.

One reason for this is a new realism about personal information. Right
now, most web users casually store scads of personal information on
the web - email on webmail servers, photographs on Flickr, appointment
calendars on Google Calendar, travel plans on Dopplr, and so on. This
openness is one of the defining features of web 2.0, but software
specialist Nat Torkington of high-tech publishing house O'Reilly Media
predicts a backlash.

He argues that one major leak or theft of private data could change
the climate overnight. "It could be a Three Mile Island of the net,"
he says, referring to the 1979 accident that turned the US public
against nuclear power. If this happens, users will start to remove
their personal details from web services, Torkington believes, or at
least impose restrictions on it.

"We'll see a hybrid model," he says, with software that communicates
with the web while storing private information on your own computer.
So you might use Gmail to sort through your mail but download personal
messages to a more private spot. Regions of the web now devoted to the
unhindered exchange of information - YouTube, Facebook and the like -
may evolve into gated communities where only select people have access
to any given piece of data.

Another factor that will restrict web freedom is advertising.
According to Brian Davison, a computer scientist at Lehigh University
in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, its influence will continue to grow.
Desperate to be noticed by people whose attention spans are a mouse
click long, advertisers will invent ever more devious strategies to
suck you in.

A few tricks are around already. Say you are trying to reach
Microsoft.com, but you accidentally type Macrosoft.com. You'll
end up on a page for a company whose name has nothing to do with the
word Macrosoft - they're just parked in that domain to get more
exposure. You'll find something similar at Mycrosoft.com.

Web advertising is evolving quickly, though. The next generation will
sneak into search results, Davison says. For example, a website that
sells movie posters might worm its way into the results for a movie
review. The link might look useful, but clicking through will bring up
an advert. The danger is that such activity will gum up search
results, stopping us finding what we need.

Web advertising is likely to balloon from another direction too. The
next five years could see a dramatic change as "blogvertising" takes
off.

Already, ads that once appeared in print are showing up on blogs.
Bloggers stand to gain ever more of the advertising share for one
simple reason: they can create custom content for advertisers. This is
leading to a new style of blog that blurs the line between editorial
and advertisement.

Federated Media, a company that specialises in bringing bloggers and
advertisers together, has been a pioneer in this area. It helped
Samsung advertise its HD TVs by creating a blog called Defining
Moment. Sports bloggers contributed their posts about the best moments
within sports games in exchange for ad money. All advertising on the
site was by Samsung.

Neil Chase, a former editor at The New York Times and now with
Federated Media, doesn't see this blurring of ads and content as a
problem. He argues that readers are adept at figuring out the
difference between ads and editorial. If anything the new model may be
making good on the old web dream of free media sharing for all, he
argues, because it makes it possible for bloggers to make their
writing available for free, while still getting compensated for it.
Music and video content could go the same way, incorporating adverts
to support their creators.

But wall-to-wall ads are not the only way to support media on the web,
says Michael Geist at the University of Ottawa. He argues that another
system can work for music and video: a media-sharing tax that makes it
legal to download anything you like. Canada already has a version of
this in the shape of a levy on blank CDs and DVDs. It means
Canadians are allowed to engage in music file-sharing without being
sued for copyright infringement.

"The developments we're seeing [with media sharing] aren't going
away," says Geist. "As more companies succeed with open business
models that could be stifled by copyright laws they'll seek to have
their voices heard." When people raised on file-sharing become
politicians, Geist believes, we'll see legislation that encourages
open models of media sharing online.

For now, though, the name of the game is restricting access.
Technological improvements mean that more and more content can be
delivered on the web, but with greater and greater control exerted by
the entertainment companies.

One way this is happening is through services such as Watch Now,
from DVD-rental company Netflix. It allows subscribers to watch movies
online without having to wait for them to download, but the movies can
only be viewed on Windows Media Player, strongly limiting where and
how you can watch the movies.

The Netflix model represents the next step in media restriction - part
of a new, closed era when more content than ever is available on the
net, but only in limited ways. Enjoy web 2.0 while it lasts.




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