intertwingly

It’s just data

Weblog to Journalist

CBS Marketwatch: MSNBC.com, a leader in breaking news and original journalism on the Internet, announced Glenn Reynolds, who has carved out his own niche in cyberspace with his independent Weblog, InstaPundit, has joined the MSNBC.com family of Weblogs at weblogs.msnbc.com.


The Solution

Mark Pilgrim: Regular expressions are the messy solution to all of life's messy problems. Want to parse invalid HTML and XML? Regular expressions. Want to parse invalid RDF? Regular expressions. And may God have mercy on your soul.


Three New Apache Projects

James (from Jakarta), Cocoon and Web Services (both from XML).


Rights vs Responsibilities

There are all sorts of interesting responses to Ken's inner thoughts on openness. My point of view seems to be closest to Sterling's. In fact, my thoughts on the subject are very much related to, and again quite distinct from, Ken's thoughts on rights. And indirectly related to what lead to my parody of the Creative Commons licenses.

Since code costs essentially zero to distribute, my first thoughts are not on what rights I want to assert, but what obligations I wish to assume. If you look at software licenses, both commercial and open, this is something that they are careful to enumerate. In most cases, it essentially comes down to: "if it breaks, you get to keep both halves". This is harder to get away with if you are a commercial vendor, but most try anyway.

If I choose to keep source to myself and I know and accept that others are depending on it, I feel that I have an implicit obligation - even if I received no recompense for their depending on me.

If somebody copies something that I have done, then generally I am quite flattered. If they chose to give me attribution, I am OK with that as long the recipient takes responsibility for making the copy.

If somebody makes a change to code that I wrote, my first thoughts aren't "what right does he/she have!", but instead, "tag, you're it!".


Userland vs EFF

Dave Winer: An interesting discussion is brewing about validating RSS, if you like arcania about XML-based formats

You know this is the type of thing I can't resist ;-)