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Diaspora: NYU Students Develop Privacy-Based Social Network

Huffington Post  
First Posted: 05/11/10 12:26 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:25 PM ET

Amid complaints of Facebook's erosion of personal privacy, a team of students at NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences is developing a social network built on privacy.

The Chronicle of Higher Education reports:

Diaspora is a planned personal Web server that stores information to be shared with friends securely. Instead of centralized social media, such as Facebook, the server is meant to provide a more secure, decentralized network. Some Facebook users have criticized it for lifting privacy restrictions in recent months; for example, Facebook now classifies a user's hometown, friends, current city, and other information as public.

The four students have more than 700 backers and have raised about $22,000 for their project.

UPDATE: Overnight, the network's backer count went up to 1,050, adding nearly $13,000 to its nest egg.

UPDATE II:
Six hours later, the backer count is up to 1,450, the nest egg $48, 594.

UPDATE III: As of 11:45 a.m. EST on Thursday, the site has 2,281 backers and has collected $96,907 in donations.

The New York Times wrote up the "four nerds" behind Diaspora:

Working with Mr. [Max] Salzberg and Mr. [Dan] Grippi are Raphael Sofaer, 19, and Ilya Zhitomirskiy, 20 -- "four talented young nerds," Mr. Salzberg says -- all of whom met at New York University's Courant Institute. They have called their project Diaspora* and intend to distribute the software free, and to make the code openly available so that other programmers can build on it. As they describe it, the Diaspora* software will let users set up their own personal servers, called seeds, create their own hubs and fully control the information they share. Mr. Sofaer says that centralized networks like Facebook are not necessary. "In our real lives, we talk to each other," he said. "We don't need to hand our messages to a hub. What Facebook gives you as a user isn't all that hard to do. All the little games, the little walls, the little chat, aren't really rare things. The technology already exists."

WATCH: Team Diaspora discusses the site.

Diaspora: Personally Controlled, Do-It-All, Distributed Open-Source Social Network from daniel grippi on Vimeo.

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Amid complaints of Facebook's erosion of personal privacy, a team of students at NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences is developing a social network built on privacy. The Chronicle of Hig...
Amid complaints of Facebook's erosion of personal privacy, a team of students at NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences is developing a social network built on privacy. The Chronicle of Hig...
 
 
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10:33 AM on 05/15/2010
I have a hard time seeing the difference between this and my own elist and blog page... I use Facebook for my "public" face and I talk with my friends and family via my email... can't really imagine what could fit in between...
Good luck though privacy and the internet seem like an incompatible combination...
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webandgraphics
06:30 PM on 05/14/2010
NOTHING on the internet is private of ever will be.... If you got something to hide... USE AT YOUR OWN RISK!!
01:40 PM on 05/14/2010
Yay. Alternatives to global domination is always good. At 400 million users, Facebook is it's own country, even bigger than the U.S. Let's shake things up.
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SPQR1775
08:06 AM on 05/14/2010
Talking about Education: I am deployed in Iraq until November and would like to start educating myself on some real philosophical studies and plan my future goal of one day becoming "President or Governor". I would be very appreciative if you could mail me some reading books, education stuff that you think should help define or shape the knowledge and mind of a current US Soldier and future political leader!

CAPTAIN ATHILL, AURTEMUS J.
TF 1-15 INFANTRY, HHC/SI
FOB ECHO (US ARMY)
APO AE 09332-9998

THANK YOU!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tressie Mc
Sociologist, Researcher, Human
03:07 AM on 05/14/2010
I'm so rooting for David in this match-up with Goliath.
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01:25 PM on 05/19/2010
Totally agree. I've always loved underdogs!!! :)

GO Diaspora!
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hockeyfanphx
08:14 PM on 05/12/2010
Good luck!! I'm on board!! :)
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Kamen Gullberg
05:12 PM on 05/12/2010
I look forward in trying Diaspora.
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cabaretchatnoir
Student
04:26 PM on 05/12/2010
This sounds promising.
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captainswife
03:30 PM on 05/12/2010
Didn't FB start out w/generous amounts of privacy? I wonder how long it'll take for these guys to fold.
09:50 AM on 05/13/2010
Read it again. There is no hub. No central control where privacy can be turned on or off. You control your data; I control mine.

Makes sense. I'm in.

Facebook's "privacy is an obsolete concept" and Huffpost's tabloid style sensationalism say it is time to leave both behind for venues or technologies which represent my values.

See you around.
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Dori Scottie
02:45 PM on 05/12/2010
GO Diaspora!!!! you have me on board!!!....... so far we still have "freedom of choice"
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levelshot
I lack the capacity and ability to believe b.s.
01:59 PM on 05/12/2010
Can we bang or stick it instead of poke?
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hockeyfanphx
08:14 PM on 05/12/2010
Haha nice. fanned :)
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laaambchop
Cheerfulness is a sign of wisdom
06:56 AM on 05/16/2010
snicker
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DirectProf
12:29 PM on 05/12/2010
Go get 'em, guys! I'm ready for a change!!
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Craig Kanalley
An editor at HuffPost
12:14 PM on 05/12/2010
Good for them! Definitely something to watch.
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colomom
12:11 PM on 05/12/2010
Do they have Farmville?
02:10 AM on 05/13/2010
Let's hope not.
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Tierce
We need less government! That empowers the ppl!
01:24 PM on 05/11/2010
It didn't take too long for another site to start after the privacy restrictions were lifted on FaceBook.
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Zackery West
Moderate, informed US citizen.
12:57 PM on 05/12/2010
No, it really didn't. Wired, FastCompany, and a few other big tech news sites are fueling this budding competition between FB and an open-source competitor

The bottom line is that we are products on FB, not consumers, and they've tampered with stuff to such a degree that you never know where/what security loopholes exist

FB started out unintuitive, and became a clusterF pretty quickly

The kicker is they're making billions while we're left befuddled, exposed and resentful. Nobody wants that. Zuckerberg needs to go back to CEO school and get his ego in check. You never alienate your core users, with any product or service. Kids...
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EpicSarcastic
08:48 PM on 05/14/2010
Yes exactly, "we are products". It's not that there's any expectation of real "privacy" it's that it's a one-way info. flow for the benefit of FB. But they overstep and don't create the value they're "charging" for now.
But like the last gasps of AOLs chats and overpriced memberships, the death-throws are often more lucrative than the growth times. You have a ready-made group of only suckers to sell to!
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01:48 PM on 05/19/2010
Exactly right. You never piss off your base.

Worse, you never betray them or their trust.

Once trust is screwed, it's d amn near impossible to get back.

Zuckerberg perfectly illustrates ego selling its soul and integrity for power and money.

Perhaps this massive backlash will kick him in the a ss with a little more humility - though, honestly, it's doubtful.