Ever since the Strikethrough of '07 -- actually, ever since I realized that LJ was something of an attractive nuisance of basket in which to store eggs, way back when -- I've been thinking about how one would go about turning LJ, the software, from a client/server model to a peer-to-peer model. That is, how to make LJ distributed
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But I must say: All this "But the reasons this doesn't happen are all business ones" thing has me puzzled. There was no business reason to write a Unixoid OS and give it away for free, either. Nor to write a free [fill in your favorite OS project here] either. Yet, somehow, programmers decided they wanted such things and went and wrote them. Gee. Whodathunk.
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If a workable system for aggregating social networks is developed and various open-source systems implement it and smaller sites take advantage of it, then the big boys will eventually cave in and adopt it, for the same reason that AOL eventually caved in and connected with "the real Net".
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