RE : "those competitors should include VRM-friendly players.” such as the indie web ? and people like micro blog ? …. an open blogging system that currently supports text, photos and podcasts that can be syndicated into third party spaces like twitter and facebook - with a social layer on top - where you can build social connection, develop conversations - but never lose you content - where your data isn’t sold - because you are running it yourself etc etc yeah - it exists - we are just trying to build the community. Come on over.
On Apr 19, 2018, at 9:11 AM, Guy Higgins <
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> wrote: On Tuesday, we had a serious wind storm locally and one of my neighbors had a fir tree blown over in his front yard. While I was helping him and his wife attempt to save the tree, we fell into a discussion of monopolies and success. I’ve held for a long time that success is a self-correcting condition. Successful companies, like FaceBook and Amazon and Google (and US Steel and Standard Oil and AT&T), become successful, then they begin to suffer from the pathologies of large organizations. These pathologies include, but are certainly not limited to, large, rule-bound bureaucracies, slowing growth, fiscal laxity and hubris (my personal favorite). These pathologies create risks for the organization — risks that are extremely difficult to effectively address because addressing them would require the leadership to take actions that do not reward said leadership (short-term bloodletting for long term health). That opens the door for competitors. Is any of this inevitable — of course not, it’s merely the way the Second Law of Thermodynamics (paraphrased as, “Left to itself, everything goes to s#*&.”) weights the evolving ecosystem. Look at the Dow Jones Industrial Index. The average time that a company is on the index has been monotonically declining for a century. I suspect that the contortions that the illustrious Mr. Zuckerberg is going through will ultimately open the door for competitors — and I think that the most effective thing government could do is to nature the economy/economies to enable those competitors — and those competitors should include VRM-friendly players. Guy From: Tim Walters <
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>Date: Thursday, April 19, 2018 at 6:44 To: Iain Henderson <
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>Cc: ProjectVRM list <
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>Subject: Re: [projectvrm] Facebook and GDPR And as expected/feared. I suspect this will be worth a court battle. It's not clear to me what it means to "switch the data controller entity." If FB Ireland continues doing all of the processing, I doubt that FB can simply *designate* FB US as the controller. https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/18/data-experts-on-facebooks-gdpr-changes-expect-lawsuits/ <Screen Shot 2018-04-19 at 14.40.52.png> On Thu, Apr 19, 2018 at 9:27 AM, Iain Henderson <
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> wrote:
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