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@pereramedia I don't see how that's different to storage solutions (eg Dropbox, S3, or even a shared host) that already exist?

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@pereramedia If it's your own your own, that implies you own the box. I'd pay for that, because it would presumably come w/ other features.

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Organizations (like schools & businesses) can set up @withknown social media integration so their users don't have to.

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Learning a lot about KQED Science's use of social media!

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Learning a lot about how KQED Education uses social media!

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Learning a lot about social media use at KQED!

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A simple, beautiful way for you to post all kinds of media to your own, responsive site. http://withknown.com

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Buried within: $8bn in local TV station sales was fueled by the same retransmission fees that scuppered Aereo. http://www.journalism.org/2014/03/26/state-of-the-news-media-2014-overview/

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My #indieweb life: how my site gives me an awesome social media archive of everything I've ever written

Here's how I post from my Known site.

When I log in, Known gives me the option to post lots of different kinds of things: status updates, photos, streaming media, and so on. Because it's what's called a "responsive interface", it adapts to whichever device you're looking at it on: it works just as well on a phone as on a desktop browser. These buttons work great on a touch-based interface, and I post on my phone at least as often as I post from my computer.

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This morning, I decided to write a status update:

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I decided to post it to my friends on the traditional social media sites too. Above, I've selected Twitter - after I took the picture, I decided to post to Facebook as well.

Known posts the status update to my own site:

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But because I selected Twitter, it posts it there too:

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And because I selected Facebook, another copy ends up there:

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My friends can interact with me over on those sites:

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And those replies - whether they're from Facebook, Twitter, or my friends' own websites (running Known or something else) - will show up on my site too, thanks to great indieweb technologies like brid.gy:

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This way, I have all of my interactions around that content in one place.

If I want to reply to my friends on the silos, I can do that too. I can just do that from my site using the bank of buttons you've already seen, but if I'm using Firefox, I can use a direct "reply" button integrated with my browser:

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Or there's a "bookmarklet" - a button that I drag to my browser's bookmarks toolbar - that makes it easier, which works with every browser.

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Either way, those replies will show up on the site my friends replied from, as well as on my own site.

Because I post everything from my own site, I have an archive of everything I've ever written to social media. That means I can look to see everything I've written about "Wimbledon", for example:

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And I can filter my search to particular kinds of content:

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Because this archive is hosted on my own site, people are likely to find it when they search for me. That means I have more control over how I'm represented on the web. One of the ways I can customize my appearance online is through themes:

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But if I'm a developer (and I am!) I can build my own themes and plugins to integrate Known into my existing site, create new kinds of content or radically change the look and feel. It's a pretty great toolbox.

My archive of everything I've posted and all my replies lets me analyze my data in all kinds of ways, that let me post better and participate more directly with my community. I'll be talking more about that another time.

In the meantime, you should sign up to our beta list.

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@eventifierapp It would be nifty if you could listen to our personal pages to curate rather than just using social media silos?

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It's possible - just possible - that my last twenty minutes of social media activity is a clue that I need to relax.

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@johndyer We're making MediaElement.js the default supported media player in @withknown. Thanks for your great work!

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MIT Media Lab's $1.2m grant to develop & identify tech for newsrooms is great news. http://newsoffice.mit.edu/2014/media-lab-bring-more-digital-tools-newsrooms-12-million-grant

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Are platforms like YouTube & Twitter just new kinds of media networks? How can artists have more ownership over their work?

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The Editorially founders just joined Vox, to work on Chorus. CMS as competitive advantage. http://product.voxmedia.com/2014/6/24/5837406/editorially-joins-vox-media

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Children caged like animals in immigrant detention facility. http://kjzz.org/content/34283/media-gets-first-look-children-inside-nogales-detention-facility

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Gathering content in a space you control: doubling down on #indieweb & journalism

Journalism and the indieweb were made for each other.

Because of the way we've been describing Known - particularly focusing on our ability to syndicate content to third-party social networks and important social interactions using brid.gy - we've received a lot of feedback that this is how we should describe ourselves as a business:

Known is a social media marketing application that allows marketing departments to justify ROI using aggregated data from audiences across multiple platforms

For all kinds of reasons, this isn't what we want to do. There are solid business reasons - social media marketing is a crowded market, for one - but there are deeper reasons, too. It's not why we got into this. It's not, on a fundamental level, what we're trying to do.

After all, this is how you could describe the product:

Known lets you own your own social website without having to give up talking to your friends on the web.

I believe in the indieweb as a movement that will empower people to own their own representations on the web. I know that will have broad implications over time, and that the success of these ideas and technologies will make a profound impact on the way the web works. I also think that running a commercial business based on indie web principles is a great thing.

I also think that certain groups of people are ahead of the curve when it comes to privacy and ownership - and journalists are very much among them.

There is a long-term trend towards greater ownership and privacy. Partially this is due to post-Snowden sentiment, but it's also driven by factors like generational differences, a growing commercial dissatisfaction with Facebook, and security breaches at companies like Target. Providing a service that is as easy to use as Facebook, while being respectful to its users, mindful of privacy, and yours, is a good idea. There will be a tipping point where people will be looking for something new, and we will be there for them, alongside other software in the indieweb ecosystem.

But there's also a growing need for this right now. Edward Snowden's whistleblowing was, of course, an important moment in journalism. We participated in a workshop run by the Tow Center for Digital Journalism on newsgathering in a post-Snowden world this week, and were inspired by the renewed focus on protecting sources and swiftly building stories, while being simultaneously dismayed by the lack of effective software to support them. Journalists value ownership, privacy, control and ease of communication - which, of course, are indieweb fundamentals.

We're investigating how Known, and the indieweb, can be effectively harnessed for journalism. This includes heavy research into the workflows people are using today. My experience with latakoo (which is used by professional newsrooms around the world) has told me that every organization is different - but then, my experience with Elgg tells me that it's possible to build a light-touch tool that allows people to customize it for their own needs. In fact, that's what Known already is, whether you take the open source code and build on top of it, or use the hosted service we'll launch this summer.

Journalism is fundamental to democracy. We need to know what's happening in the world around us to make effective democratic decisions. We're also living in a world where journalism is being pinched by changing models and rapidly evolving audiences. If we can help, we would love to.

If you're a journalist, or if you work in a media or news organization, we would love to talk to you. You can email me at ben@withknown.com.

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People like @Shanley & publications like @ModelViewMedia are starting fundamental conversations about tech culture. We must support them.

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21st century politician to watch: @stellacreasy (whose icon is her dressed as Boba Fett), v actively engaging on social media. The future.

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Replied to a post on werd.io :

4. You'll be able to post using all kinds of media, decide what your site looks like, and decide who can see every piece of content.

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I'd really like to talk to people involved in social media strategy and/or community management for brands. Can you help?

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"Why can't we have all the [..] things we like to do online without Mark Zuckerberg in the loop?" http://www.inc.com/magazine/201407/ceo-of-wickr-leads-social-media-resistance-movement.html

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I'm going to Cyborg Camp at the MIT Media Lab in October. You should come too! http://cyborgcamp.com/Main_Page

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Tell story on your own site, using all kinds of media. We've got exciting plans this summer. Get on the beta list: http://withknown.com/

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Project Xanadu: a screenshot. It's obvious that this won't replace the web. But what if these were film clips, not text?

Project Xanadu: a screenshot. It's obvious that this won't replace the web. But what if these were film clips, not text?

Kudos to Mr Nelson for shipping.

While it's obvious that this isn't going to be troubling the web any time soon, I have to wonder what this would look like with multimedia content rather than hypertext. Wouldn't it be fun to take these ideas and apply them to remix culture? What if you could take pieces of footage and link them together like this? Could be kind of neat.

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Email me: ben@werd.io

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Werd I/O © Ben Werdmuller. The text (without images) of this site is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.