Diaspora, an open source challenger to Facebook, hit its first milestone Wednesday, releasing code for fellow hackers to test drive and improve.
The code is not ready for general use, and you can’t go to Diaspora.com
As its name suggests, Diaspora isn’t aiming to turn Diaspora.com into a replacement for Facebook.com, but instead is seeking to create software that allows people to have more control over their social network, without having a single entity holding all the data and making the rules.
The idea is to disperse social networking, so that it works more like e-mail, where users can sign-up for an account with any number of providers or buy their own domain name or use a hosted service or even run their own e-mail server — but all can still interact, regardless of how or where their e-mail service is. Diaspora isn’t the only effort at creating so-called federated social networking — there’s a number of other active open source projects, including the Appleseed and OneSocialWeb.
Diaspora was founded earlier this year by four New York University students as a way to create a social network that put users in control of their data. The four tapped into this spring’s anti-Facebook zeitgeist to collect $200,000 in online donations, even one from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.
The founders moved to Silicon Valley this summer and have remained largely silent, except for very occasional blog updates.
On Wednesday, Diaspora made good on its August promise to release its source code in mid-September. On the Hacker News message board, fellow start-up engineers were generally pleased with the code, which focused more on user interface issues than packing in as many features as possible.
Diaspora says it intends to keep developing the product and that an “alpha” release aimed at users, not just developers, is scheduled for October.
Screenshot: The Diaspora Project’s activity stream as implemented in its developer release.
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Authors: Ryan Singel