Boing Boing Kaboom!

As if on cue from my entry last week, famed community blog Boing Boing posted an item today discussing its explosive growth in popularity. Apparently the site’s popularity is reaching a point where, if the trend continues, the bandwidth costs will exceed the amount the site’s founders can afford to put into the site.

The ensuing discussion has been underwhelming, if that’s a word (I know it’s not ‘cuz I looked it up, it’s one of the skills I learned in my school). The responses have varied from the obvious “charge a subscription fee” or “show ads”, something that’s never well received by those used to getting their daily infoporn delivered free and unmolested, to the positively naïve “put up a tip jar” suggestions from people who have never actually had to sell something to someone. And of course, there have been the techno-centric solutions: use mod_gzip to compress data, redesign the site user interface to use less text/images/data, and limit the amount of old information presented on the front page. All very fine ideas, and all already used to some extent by the designers of Boing Boing.

The part that interests me: this is a longstanding and recognized problem for community web sites. These sites struggle in obscurity for ages, only to suffer a meteoric rise in popularity that is the ultimate undoing of both the site and those footing the bandwidth bill. Boing Boing is just the latest in a long list of community web sites to face this problem. Just ask Rusty.

Given that numerous readers (and writers) of Boing Boing are aboard the Creative Commons and EFF bandwagons, it seems that some thought should already have been directed at solving this problem: how to allow free content to flourish at the interface between those resources that are made freely available by their creators (content, in this example) and those that are not (bandwidth, in this case)? What’s even weirder is that this problem has remained unsolved for so long, especially given the nearly endless supply of software developers that usually comprise these sites’ readership.

One of my MBA professors was fond of pointing out the folly of believing we will move to a pure service-based economy: we can’t all make a living by giving each other haircuts and massages – someone has to make the scissors and massage tables. And, chances are, they want to be paid in cash, not hair clippings and “happy endings”. Well, not hair at least.

If Boing Boing really is a community, where the common currency is not money but something else (whuffie, for example, to use Cory‘s term), then the community membership needs to be willing (and able) to provide the currency required to keep the site running. Readers of Boing Boing already provide one half of the capital required by the site to keep it running, namely content in the form of submissions to the web site (and discussions, if they ever turn comments back on). What we need now is a mechanism that allows the community to step up and provide the other half of the currency Boing Boing must expend to serve the community: bandwidth and processing power.

In the case of community web sites, we can trick the bill collector to accept hair as a form of payment. Smart guys like Bram Cohen and Ian Clarke, creators of BitTorrent and Freenet respectively, have shown us that we can harness the collective bandwidth and CPU resources of Internet. And we can do it for “free” – if by “free” you mean the amortize cost of the maintaining the community over the user base, who will bear the burden, albeit willingly, as part of their monthly Internet bill or pilgrimage to Fry’s. It seems to me a distributed P2P content system that allows the community to be self-sufficient, rather than free-riding on the efforts of the community founders, is exactly the kind of solution Boing Boing needs.

All that remains is some smart guys like Bram and Ian to step up and make it happen – and aren’t these the kind of people that read Boing Boing regularly?

Pity The Children

If there’s one thing I’ve noticed since moving down here, it’s this: it would totally suck to be a teenager in the States. No, it’s not just raging hormones, illicit pot use and the odd swig off the old man’s Colt 45 that’s turning Johnny and Sally into brooding halfwits. It’s a society that lacks any faith in its youth, shows little respect for their ability to think for themselves, and takes protection of its children to absurd lengths.

Take the current “zero tolerance” policy being employed in the War Against Drugs being waged in the school system, a policy that’s turning US schools into prisons. There are numerous examples of kids being expelled for possessing little more than over-the-counter drugs, like Advil and Tylenol, as part of a single-minded application of policy designed to purge the schools of illegal drugs. Some are even going as far as requiring drug tests, despite all indications that teens are the only ones not doing drugs and getting away with it. Meanwhile, kids with legitimate needs for medication, such as an asthma inhaler, are being required to store their medication with the school nurse.

It’s funny – you would expect the threat of legal liability to work in the kids’ favour on this one, but then wham! You’re thrown a total curveball.

Meanwhile, so as not to be disturbed, the grownups have been having a separate grownup conversation about an imaginary guy that lives in the sky, and his relation to the phrase “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance. For those not familiar with the topic, a father is seeking to have the Pledge banned from public schools on the basis that it violates the separation of church and state. The Pledge is recited in schools by children each day – yet it’s likely they don’t understand what’s they’re saying, and couldn’t care less.

What’s interesting is what isn’t being discussed. While funding in US schools is in a constant state of recession, nobody’s too concerned about the quality of the education. Nope, they’re shilling their kids’ futures by signing contracts with Coke and Pepsi, and suspending into the ground any wiseass who dares to point out the irony. Yet they can’t figure out for the life of them why the kids are getting so damn fat on all that sugar water, and outsourcing to India is threatening the US economy. It makes me wonder: has anyone ever sued a school for its liability in failing to educate its students? Why the hell not?

But sugar may not be thing rotting the minds and bodies of US teens.

Everywhere I look here, I see signs stating “No Skateboarding/No Biking/No Rollerblading” – we wouldn’t want you kids getting off your asses and going places, now would we? Has anyone bothered to look at the design of American suburbia? If you can’t drive, you might as well have lost your legs in a tragic screen door accident. Kids can’t drive, can’t skate, can’t blade, and then we wonder why they’re stuck at the mall. When teens say they’re nothing to do, it’s true – there’s literally nothing they can do. Even when they turn 16 and start to drive, they can only look forward to having their every move tracked by satellite.

Americans appear genuinely scared of teens – and I don’t blame them. If the kids figure out that not only are they getting the shaft, but also that the US economy is almost entirely based on exploiting their cheap labour, underdeveloped sense of self-esteem, and disposable income, we’re in serious trouble. Because after all, we may think we’ve figured out how to stop them doing drugs, exchanging bodily fluids, and doing all that other stuff that we enjoyed doing at their age, we sure as hell haven’t figured out how to stop them getting their hands on firearms.

I guess the real question to ask is: if we’re going to have the War on Drugs, when are we going to have the War on Bad Parents Who Blame Everyone Else Except Themselves For Their Kids’ Problems? How about the War on Gutless School Boards That Pass Useless Regulations Instead Of Using Their Heads? I can’t say we’ve seen an appropriations bill for either of those fine programs yet, now have we?