Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: ReadBurner and the
Future of Leveraged User Data via ReadBurner | Currently Popular |
English on 1/22/08 Marshall Kirkpatrick via ReadWriteWeb shared by 8
people


ReadBurner is an interesting new project that displays the hottest URLs
at any given time according to the Google Reader "shared items" feeds
users have submitted for tracking. It's a relatively simple concept but
it just makes sense and the possibilities for the future are exciting
to consider.

One way to describe ReadBurner is that it's adding value by and on top
of aggregating explicit attention gestures. Below are some thoughts on
ReadBurner and what it could do to be even cooler.


Built by Austrian Alexander Marktl, the site has gained some early
traction after up-and-coming Silicon Valley tech blogger Louis Gray
discovered ReadBurner in referral logs and wrote a good review that
surprised even Marktl.
Opt-in as the way to do it
While Google Reader recently screwed the...well, dropped the ball, by
pulling in Shared Items from your GMail contacts whether you liked it
or not - ReadBurner is a good example of the kind of opt-in sharing
that is much more consistent with user-centric leveraging of Attention
Data. That's the polite way to say that most people will never find out
about it. Just kidding.

Vendors need to learn that the era of lock-in is gone and much of the
data-centric innovation of the future will probably need to be opt-in
only. People have always believed that forcing others to do your
bidding is the best way to get things done, but when power parity is
approached - coercive steps like opt-out data sharing breaks a social
contract that users are no longer tied to by necessity. We can leave
and go somewhere else, so you have to get our permission to use our
data.

That's probably overstating the situation - do Twitter users need to
opt-in in order for API driven services like Twittertale (NSFW) or
Twitterwhere to use their tweets? Hopefully not. This is a complicated
question, but starting with opt-in seems like a good idea, generally.
Risks taken
Marktl seems intent on pushing the envelope with the application; his
logo originally used the Google colors and now he's experimenting with
running AdSense next to the content - including against the full feeds!
That's something even Google hasn't dared to do yet. That move doesn't
seem so wise to me given that it's the supposed tech savvy nature of
Google Reader users that Marktl says make Google Reader shared item
feeds particularly...tech savvy. Such users are widely believed to be
the least likely to click on ads.

Marktl is adding submitted feeds manually but I've submitted my
personal link blog from Ma.gnolia because Google Reader doesn't deal
well with accounts subscribed to more than 1k feeds. I'd like to
participate in ReadBurner too. If it's tech savvy users you're looking
for Google Reader is not the be-all-end-all by a long shot.
Recommendations
ReadBurner is a great example of one of the cool things you can do with
feeds. Here's some next steps I'd love to see from the app.

Recommended users. Let me sign up for an account with ReadBurner (using
or tied to OpenID please) and recommend other users' feeds to me that
have a lot of overlap with mine. Something like the recommendations at
ShareYourOPML but dynamic so people will keep using it. I'd love to get
a feed of newly recommended users too, and perhaps the ability to add
recommended users' feeds to a spliced feed just for me.

Hot users. I'm guessing that ReadBurner could show me a LeaderBoard of
the contributors who most often share items early that end up being hot
later. I would subscribe to those peoples' feeds in a heartbeat. The
site has some interesting stats now, specifically the most shared-from
sources and authors, but a lot more is possible I'm sure.

It's exciting to think about. This is the kind of innovation that gets
the mind spinning. I hope ReadBurner will continue developing, will see
continued adoption and won't be shut down by Google. Goodness knows
someone outside has to keep the pressure to innovate on Google Reader -
remember how long it took GReader to add a search box? Google Reader is
very good, but so much more can be done.



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