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The Roman occupation of Judea (Israel) during the first century AD was disrupted in 70 AD when the Jewish people revolted. Rome, being a kick-ass military power, put down this rebellion. However, they couldn’t let the Jews get away with this attempt at self-rule, which might encourage other provinces to do the same. The new, crushing occupation and settlement of Judea led to the beginning of another diaspora of the Jewish people (the Jews had been scattered before, read your Old Testament).

I’ve talked about my idea of the new information diaspora a couple times before. We fill up all these different social networking sites and online services with personal information about our hobbies, preferences, friends, etc. This information is separated by incompatibility between platforms. OpenSocial is a move towards removing these boundaries, but so far it hasn’t caught fire.

In Facebook’s terms of service, you are not allowed to scrape Facebook for content. They don’t want you to gather information about your social graph, since that would potentially undermine their service. Ergo, you can import information into Facebook, but can’t export it out. Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook (though whether it was really his idea or software is disputed), seems to be shaping up to be quite a tyrant in this realm. It’s almost daily that some news about his bungling comes over the blagoblag.

The latest fiasco surrounds Robert Scoble, one of the better tech writers out there (in my opinion). He was using Plaxo Pulse, a service that attempts to solve a small part of the information diaspora problem by consolidating your friends’ activities on different sites. Facebook, however, put down this rebellion by disabling Scoble’s account. Robert’s crime? Trying to get the names, email addresses, and birthdays of the 1800 friends he has on both Facebook and Plaxo.

The Empire never ended.

Perhaps it’s a little late to do a recap of my blogging from last year, but I was just thinking about which posts I made that were the most popular and which flopped. It was very interesting to me that the most popular ones tended to be those I invested myself in the least. The ones where I felt like the writing and/or content was the best saw relatively few hits. There are exceptions, of course. My favorite post almost made the top 5 most popular list and the 4th most popular would be in my top 10 or 15 favorite. So here are the top 5 most popular posts and my top 5 favorite posts from 2007, my first year in the blagoblag.

Top 5 Most Popular

  1. You have no soul — 9 Nov 2007 — 29,326 hits
  2. Ambigrams — 16 Oct 2007 — 353 hits
  3. Hanukkah Dog — 24 Nov 2007 — 245 hits
  4. Old English Translator — 8 Nov 2007 — 193 hits
  5. Salad Fingers 8 — 30 Sep 2007 — 176 hits

Top 5 Favorite

  1. Netflix Prize: Good science or not? — 14 Dec 2007 — 161 hits
  2. Mrs. McGrath — 6 October 2007 — 26 hits
  3. The Noob’s Guide to Parsing — 25 Oct 2007 — 27 hits
  4. The case for nuking Greenland — 6 Dec 2007 — 79 hits
  5. Inbred Mice and Appalachia — 14 Aug 2007 — 20 hits
My lemon beagle Daedalus’ nose sticking out from under the covers

About Me

Jason M. Adams

My name is Jason Adams and I work on opinion mining for a growing startup in Atlanta, GA.

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Header image credit seakwenby.

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