doughaslam’s posterous

 
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Holding On to Your Stuff

There are tons of tools to publish your content that make it extremely easy to inform, entertain and reach people. What concerns me about these channels is that we don't own them. The price we pay for "free" is often depending on what Dan York (http://disruptiveconversations.com) likes to call "single point of failure."

If Twitter/Posterous/Utterli/Flickr et al go down, what happens to your content? Do you have a backup? Have you thought of it? I have, but thinking and doing are distinct.

Can you recommend these tools to companies to use for content and outreach if you are worried the content might disappear? I don't know if people think enough about this- and also wonder if Posterous et al see a business opportunity in providing self-hosted versions of their tools to give companies more control.

What do you think?

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Comments (2)

Dec 01, 2009
sophwell said...
I guess you could say that the internet is forever, until it isn't. If you value your stuff, do like your mother said and keep it in a safe place. Images you upload on the go from your phone may not have that much value, but ideas, reflections and analysis you spent time putting into words probably do (at least to you). It's worth taking a moment to consider whether it's something you would miss if it were gone.

I use a self-hosted wordpress platform for my company's blog and website. It is the face of my business online, and an important extension of my brand. The information has SEO importance. Whenever there is a software update, they remind me to back up my files. I do. I hope all of you are doing the same.

Dec 01, 2009
Doug Haslam said...
What's interesting about how Utterli (and I believe, Posterous) post to blogs is that the text transfers as text. Other media is hosted though, and we must decide what is worth taking the time to back up

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