Flowing Your Identity Through the Social Web

Some social networking platforms are beginning to buy into data portability. Whereas any step toward opening up the closed data-silo islands is a positive step, the real question is what does data portability actually mean?


Data portability is defined as the ability to "bring your identity, friends, conversations, files and histories with you, without having to manually add them to each new service."


Does this really solve the most important issue that users face when spelunking the depths of the social networking space?


While it's great that a user has the flexibility, the freedom, even the right to take their data with them, in effect they are not taking anything with them. Users are not actually porting anything from one site to another. Porting implies the moving of an entity from one location to another, the transferring of data from one machine to another.


In reality, data portability is about giving users the freedom and ability to grab a copy of their current dataset and paste it into yet another data silo. They are not actually moving their data as much as copying it from one silo to another. So, their data is now duplicated across multiple locations.


The data silo (the social network) from which the data was copied ("moved"), does not delete the content—often even after a user requests the deletion of their account. Why? Because a member's data, the content, is one of the most important business assets the social network owns. It is their key competitive advantage.


This is the fundamental defect with the notion of data portability on the closed Web. The duplication of a user's data across multiple networks makes it even harder for a given user to control their identity, privacy, and Web presence.


I don't want my personal data exported, copied, replicated throughout the Web. I am for data redundancy where it's efficient and necessary, but exporting a copy of my dataset (or subset) from one social graph to another does not make sense. You are duplicating your effort. You are splitting up–or more accurately duplicating part of–your identity graph into little pieces and then strewing them into different locations, placing them in multiple, closed data silos.


Don't get me wrong. I am for true data portability. I'm just not in favor of the way it is currently implemented by the few participating social networks.


What I am proposing is a step beyond data portability that is even more user centric, that could make the Internet a truly open space, that would help usher in the Social Web.


What is Identity on the Web?


Before introducing my concept, it's important to understand a key difference between my views of Web identity and the mainstream definition.


The commonly-accepted definition of a Web identity is a digital representation of a user. It is one of many possible personae that an individual may have on the same social network or among all the networks in which a given person participates. But I believe this definition discounts the individual in the equation.


In my article, Thinking Outside the Privacy Box, I discuss my philosophical views about identity on the Web. In short, what most people call a Web identity is simply an identifier. The true representation of an individual on the Web is what I describe as the set of all their identity graphs.


Enter Identity Flowability


In our service-centric Web-2.0 world of social networks where each new service is in effect a closed data silo, data portability is an important issue. What I'm suggesting is that the next focus of the Social Web should be to obviate the need for data portability.


Instead of data portability, the Social Web needs to champion the concept of Identity Flowability. Identity Flowablility is the easy movement and control by a user over their identity graph.


Identity Flowablility enables a user to store any part of their identity graph in the places that they choose and then allow other sites to reference that data from those places—not copy the data from those places. Data would be semantically marked up to facilitate their auto discoverability for sharing between other sites. Access rights could easily be assigned.


Thus the concept of Identity Flowablility is to provide each user with an easier, more efficient, and effective mechanism with which to control their entire IdentitySpace. It creates a user-centric container through which data content and privacy rights could be better managed and controlled.


How would this concept change the Social Web? Instead of the quantity of users a site has being its most valuable, monetizable asset, the true value proposition of each Web 3.0-enabled company would be the quality and uniqueness of their service. No longer would a large membership base necessarily equal a big asset as smaller, more nimble niche-market players could compete by offer superior services.


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Published on December 01, 2010 11:42
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