Aww frak. I didn't realize downstreams didn't have that level of url detection. 
Blasted! I guess it has to be undone. 
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Messina <[email protected]>

Date: Thu, 10 Sep 2009 00:26:07 
To: Evan Prodromou<[email protected]>
Cc: Craig Andrews<[email protected]>; <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [StatusNet-dev] Remove http:// from shortened URLs


On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 12:11 AM, Evan Prodromou <[email protected]>wrote:

> Craig Andrews wrote:
>>
>>
>> If a shortened URL begins with http://, don't include it in the shortened
>> url. Saves 7 characters, which is pretty awesome for 140 character max
>> length notices.
>>
>> I don't know why this wasn't done before... I think this will be really
>> liked by users.
>>
>>
> But it won't be recognized as an URL by downstream systems like Facebook,
> FriendFeed, and Twitter.
>
> I'm not sure it's the right thing to do. Opinions?


Definitely a -1.

As Evan said, the http:// is usually part of the regex for detecting URLs.
If you remove that, clients will treat links as plaintext, making them
unclickable. I'm thinking users definitely WON'T like that!

I think it's also possible that certain URLs will look confusingly like
words and NOT links — and depending on the color of one's links, might cause
confusion (since the link won't be discoverable).

Anyway, while this is a clever idea, it'd probably break more than you might
expect!

Chris

-- 
Chris Messina
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