Reverse Planning and Goal Setting

Swooshable Planning

(Image by Bohman via Flickr)

A New Year is usually the time that forces you to stop and think about what you’ve done, what you haven’t done, and what you want to do. I chose to put more work into things that matter, and less into things that don’t matter. I chose to drop quite a few things altogether. I’ve also chosen to reverse the planning process. Here’s how.

I work with and think about startups most of my waking hours and a few of the non-waking ones, so ‘lean’ and ‘agile’ and ‘iterative’ are thoughts that I’ve applied in my personal routines as well. A year ago, I was even creating an iteration-driven personal productivity system, but I realized soon that it doesn’t work for me anymore. I’ve encouraged and followed the idea of ‘efficient drifting’, where you head onwards with the flow and steer as new channels are revealed (not too far from evidence-based management, or lean principles).
The problem with iterative models both in life and in product development is that it is too easy to bend and change direction. In pivoting a startup, you bend rather than break, and this is good. You get a new direction that is more sustainable, and you head there as long as the evidence and customer adoption is there. Say, a social news service can’t find sustainable revenues, and pivots into a vertical ad network that makes money and is profitable. But what if you don’t like vertical ad networks? (more…)

Idea: A free crowdfunding site for Creative Commons projects

I just posted this idea on Hacker News. Let’s see if there’s any interest (my karma is pretty low, I don’t think it gets seen by a lot of people…). Here’s the post:

Summary:
* Crowdfunding for GPL/Creative Commons projects
* Free service, non-profit entity
* Technical help needed
Sparked by the copyright discussion on thread http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3303796 I thought we should properly experiment in crowdfunding of open source and free projects, especially in arts but all creative projects (including software) aimed at creating freely distributable results where the creator still gets paid.
Crowdfunding is big, but IPR ambiguity hovers over the model in many cases. Sites like Kickstarter also take a notable cut (as is their right, of course) from the donations and pledges.
I want to create a crowdfunding site that is 100% free for project creators and pledgers. By listing a project on the site, you will also agree that everything produced in that project will be released under GPL or suitable Creative Commons license level. Let’s discuss a model and license that makes sense.
I need help in creating this service. I am happy to shell out for hosting, any design needs & legal help as required, though in the spirit of the project maybe we can enlist help for those areas as well. I have a long experience in product management and product marketing from corporations and startups alike.
The service itself should be non-profit, and only accept donations (and maybe sponsors – discuss?) to cover costs.
Also discuss if you think the idea is stupid / redundant / against your political views.

First obvious questions:

Q1. Kickstarter et al. don’t take that big a cut and already have an established audience. Why not just use them?

A1. Good point. However, they still take something. Listing an open source project where the budget includes funding platform fees always feels a bit silly.  Making it 100% free (payment processing may be an issue) can encourage creatives to list their projects, feeling that everyone is an equal partner. They list the project with us, and we are not taking a cut. The pledgers know their money goes directly into the project.

There is Elveos.org that tries to do this for OSS, but it doesn’t look like it’s going anywhere.

Q2. What kinds of projects would this be used for?

A2. Anything where the end result and the aggregate results of the project are released for free per the selected license.

  • Books & publications
  • Music
  • Videos, documentaries
  • Fine arts
  • OS Software projects
  • Free web services
  • Research projects

Thoughts about the mechanism

- Pledge system, most likely. Only after enough pledges are in, the project will happen.

- There should be a blind reserve for the project. This is the pledge threshold, and it is the level at which the project creator prices their work. The project does not bindingly kick off until the reserve has been met. After the blind reserve has been met, the pledgers and future pledgers will be informed that the project will happen, though they can still contribute to the project. Creators can choose not to have a reserve.

- Reporting of the project. There should be a very accessible and easy-to-update project reporting feed.

- What’s in it for the artists? They work hard and get little if their work breaks big? If people are willing to donate, there is always the possibility of some kind of upsell. Let’s remain open to the possibilities and see if we can invent new models of supporting artists that do not involve IPR.

Any thoughts about this? Want to help? Let me know.

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At the end of time (#trust30, #1)

At the end of time, there are no more stories. While there is only history, stories lose their meaning. Stories are told for the future, often in the context of the past in order to be understood, but always for the future. If there were only a handful of minutes left, what story would be worth telling? Only the one that would touch the immediateness, the moment, the now – not the next. Nothing is left of the individual, the instantiation of a lineage. A human is a footprint in the sand. Time is the only source of meaning, and while time runs out, the human runs out meaning. Will the last minutes be as meaningful as the first ones? While it would romantic to think so, the classical narrator (in the mode of Pirsig) must disagree.

This is my first entry for the #trust30 challenge. A bit of a morbid prompt, or is it just me? I will try to keep it up, but there will be gap days.

#trust30 is The Domino Project’s, Seth Godin’s brainchild’s, latest crowd-engagement act. And it sounds like fun.

Topiikki Launches

Today, a new news site launched in Finland. Called Topiikki (www.topiikki.fi), the service is a bit like Huffington Post and The Daily Beast (both excellent, innovative services) in its news curation. Topiikki sources the best-written and most insightful news items about the most important daily news and links to them. Topiikki for example gathers the ten most important news items each day and features them on Twitter and on the site as the daily “10X” collection. The site also features own content and debates. I am both an advisor and a columnist on the site.

Content curation is not a new phenomenon, but we are seeing more and more implementations of the idea. I think it the move from aggregation to intelligent curation – partly by humans, partly by smarter technology – that is at the heart of the move from a 2.0 to the x.0 web. I see it in different forms and platforms: from news curation to hyperlocal sourcing to hyperniche services. It may not be a disruptive revolution, but it is certainly rapid and fundamental change in operating logic and principles online. (more…)

Twitter Identity Fraud: theory and practice

First of all: apologies to Pingstate.nu. They’re a wonderful community and I actually wish them all the best.

The ridiculousness of Twitter continues to amaze me. It is a reasonable news filter for personal areas of interest, I’ll give it that much. But there must be better ways to filter news based on identity. See, Twitter has no respect for identity.

Here’s an example. Pingstate.nu is a large, thriving community of creative professionals and students in Finland. They have 6,500 active daily users (registered users, I gather). Just now, I created a Twitter account under their name and used their RSS feeds to populate the profile. I grabbed their logo and placed it as the image (that hurt a bit already). There’s nothing in the profile that doesn’t look authentic enough (except that there’s a disclaimer in the profile description). I did a rudimentary search for Finnish creative types and added some on the follow list – nothing too much (and nothing personal, in case you read this at some point). This took me about 4 minutes in all, and you could easily keep this going, increase the follower base with someone else’s quality content, and then start using it for spam/advertising/PR (pick one according to semantical preference). Here is twitter.com/pingstate. It keeps getting fresh content with the feeds, so I could now just leave it there to slowly gather followers.

Now, I wish Pingstate no ill (I’ve contacted them to let them know I’ve done this, and will happily turn the account over or delete if they wish me to). I did this to test just how far you can get with Twitter identity fraud, and I had to stop since it got too uncomfortable to carry on any further. Besides, I don’t want the wrath of thousands of people more capable in Photoshop upon me.

I took Pingstate as an example because they happened to have a feed I was following, and I didn’t want to actually pretend to represent them. This way, the content was still theirs. It’s just that the container was mine, and in Twitter’s case, you are the container (sometimes a hollow one, echoing with re-tweets of other people’s echoes).

Bottom line: yes, Twitter continues to be a terrible wild-wild-web platform with no restraints. There must be a landgrab of usernames going on. The terms of service prohibit all but parody impersonation. But this is weak protection, friends. Very weak. Enforcing terms of service for millions of users is impossible. And no, you don’t even need unique email addresses for each new account, there’s an easy way around that.

I don’t know if more control is the answer to chaos, but there might be an opportunity for a precedent case where communication security could be interpreted to encompass all digital communication, including existing and potential instances of a person’s or an entity’s communication channels? It’s a bit like reading someone’s mail just because it accidentally fell from the mailman’s bag in front of your door. But INAL. Here’s an analysis of a court case over identity on Twitter.

What’s next? I think it is too late for Twitter to enforce identity requirements. We’ll see a Twitter bubble burst at some point. The initial quality will be diluted rapidly as identities are compromised and spam, spoofs and other dirty forms of marketing permeate it. We need more transparency and trust in a platform – even if the public profile is a pseudonym or a pen-name, we should be able to trust the structure in background, that there is enforcement even if it doesn’t show. Of course, we don’t have a universal system, and won’t for another 20-50 years (pure speculation). But even a local one would be a step ahead, and the next platform that takes such a step will be the Next Big Thing.


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Prize Pony Open!

A long side project has finally seen the light of day – the Prize Pony store is open and churning orders (hopefully at some point :) ) at www.prizepony.com. The long story of how things happened is on the Prize Pony blog.

Any and all feedback massively appreciated!


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Innovation in the style of 1+1=2

I love finding stuff like this: innovative, at the same time giving you an immediate insight into how it was thought of, and how the same way of looking at other things might yield more innovations. It’s called Replug, and it does to your headphone cable the same thing the Apple did to their laptop charger. Keep making the world better.


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Tech> Stupidity> Copy-Yahoo-Paste-Google

Google promotes IE7. I’m quite ashamed that Google would do this. I don’t even care about the competitive position – I only care about the fact that Google is promoting a program in a sub-standard line of programs, and one that is only available on the most miserable platform of all: Windows.

I don’t know* what went wrong, but sure enough, looks like Google hosted and promoted a page with code copied from Yahoo!, and an image with the Y! logo just blurred off – not even substituted by a Google logo, but just blurred away. Miserable.

*as always if posting something about Google. See footer.

Stupidity> Cool Spam

I just received an enkindling piece of spam from JOHN UPPER (in all caps, of course).

Good day.
look
I had learned on a number of planets. They made up in
engines of destruction ever manufactured. Over a half
there were no cigars in the ship. Then the service unit

Good golly, sounds like they’re screwed, and no over a half cigars left in the entire ship! And whatever happened to the service unit – can’t be good at all. What happens next?? [turns spam filters off].