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Khris Loux interviews Chris Saad about Dataportability

Ernst-Jan Written on April 4, 2008 – 4:35 pm
Ernst-Jan Pfauth, editor in chief

Khris Loux and Chris Saad became friends because of the Next Web. During all the meetings they noticed they generally had the same interest and ideas. Not that those shared interests matter though, since Khris started the couch interview with the remark that we all have to be friends with Chris. Whether we’re publishers, entrepreneurs or bloggers, Chris Saad’s Dataportability is good for you.

Thus I’m really glad that I digitally met Chris a couple of months ago when I interviewed him for this blog. I asked him how I should explain Dataportability to Average Joe and his answer probably is a good start for this post: “A user would simply log onto a site, grant permission, and their friends, personal details and media - images, video, documents - are already populated and accessible - Nothing more complex than that.”

Khris and Chris having a beer and chatting
Just like during Diggnation, there was beer on stage. The Next Web is one rock ‘n’ roll conference

When he said something similar on the couch, the audience rewarded with a round of applause. So it’s clear that users are looking forward to get control of their data. Yet what are the advantages for the vendors? Chris: “Vendors get a broader picture of the user. Google owns the search space, yet they have no idea what books people buy on Amazon.”

This sounds good, but at the same time companies traditionally make money because they have locked in their data. So all the big guys who are joining Dataportability now, aren’t they just doing that for good PR? Chris: “If some companies joined the Dataportability group just for the PR that is just fine with us, since they do endorse the conversation. And if they don’t implement the new open standards, others will. So if they don’t implement, that’s actually great since it gives everyone in this room a chance to out-innovate them. Now, the task of Dataportability is to give the companies best practices for implementing new standards. If those companies say they will implement, but actually don’t, it’s up to the bloggers and the audience to confront them with this flaw”.

Chris then threw out some great one-liners, like: [to companies:] “You don’t own users, users own you” and “If you don’t join the standard of the time, you’ll loose”. But I’d like to conclude with probably the most important one: “The new innovation platform is data”.

By the way, the audience could ask questions on Twitter. So I asked Chris which major company is taking a lead on the field of open data standards. His answer? Microsoft! Chris: “The ones who are loosing now are very interested and they’re the ones who apply pressure to the others”.

I hope you like that post!

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About the author: Ernst-Jan is blogger and co-organizer of BLOG08, who previously worked in New York to cover news at the United Nations. Next to writing, he's also a singer in the band Christina Five. Follow him on Twitter or read his personal blog Dutchproblogger.com .

3 comments/trackbacks to “Khris Loux interviews Chris Saad about Dataportability”

  1. Apr 7, 2008: Enough for the conference now, this blog must go on

    [...] Kevin Rose: ‘Digg will soon start suggesting stories’ (this one made it to the Digg frontpage!) Khris Loux interviews Chris Saad about Dataportability [...]

  2. Apr 7, 2008: Nova Spivack: “The Semantic Web as an open and less evil web”

    [...] This is where the semantic web meets current initiatives such as DataPortability.org which will be presenting tomorrow. it isn’t easy a startup contribute to a semantic web because the tools are not there yet but [...]

  1. By Stefan on Apr 7, 2008

    I loved Chris’ answer to a question from the audience who was concerned he’d lose user on his site when using OpenID. Chris’ answer: “What so you have a website that provides just ‘Signing in’?”

    Aside from down under humor, I reckon it was a good overview roundup of what DataPortability is about. However I do think we need a better answer to the returning question of why it makes business sense to open up data silos, beyond “It sucks if you don’t”.

    I think a big part of that answer is an innovators dilemna.

    [Reply]

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