Tag Archive for 'recognition'

The DataPortability governance framework: a template

This is a post to give recognition to individuals who have contributed, in my eyes, an excellent step forward in our online world. It is with regards to the DataPortability governance task force, who have developed a governance model for the DataPortability Project. Six individuals contributed hours upon hours (I lost count after 30 on my own contribution as chair!) but before I profile these individuals, some context.

History of the DataPortability Project
The DataPortability Project was originally a workgroup. Chris Saad and Ashley Angell, with guys in the Faraday Media team like Paul Jones and  Stephen Kelly, shared an idea with Daniela Barbosa, Ben Metcalfe, Marjoelin Hoekstra and myself. The concept of promoting open standards, whilst allowing people to own their personal data, to enable interoperability. After discussing it privately, we created a workgroup and invited some brilliant minds in the industry to explore this concept.  Several ideas were explored, with the most prominent being a Web Relational File System. A bit like the entire world wide web being like your desktop computer, where you could control your data like you can with files at the drag of a button ie, you could copy your Facebook photos into your Flickr account.

Example of DataPortability by Chris Saad

Discussions on the workgroup were diverse, and often, on completely different themes - something that frustrated people. However within two short months, news broke out - and the existence of the workgroup dominated the news of the tech industry. A public list created for people not on the workgroup skyrocketed in subscribers (currently around 1240 people). A simple idea that we were still exploring what it meant, was now being flagged as one of the key trends for 2008.

Things literally exploded overnight - and we now had this massive, vocal, enthuasiastic community. So over the course of January 2008, the closed workgroup was deprecated in favour for specific “action groups”. Learning from our experience in the workgroup that different people had different interests (ie, the developers and the marketer’s had different areas of interest, which frustrated each other), separate groups were created. One group focused on evangelism of what we did; another on the policy aspects that is one big chunk of the problem. A third on the technical blueprints of putting together these different open standards into a cohesive whole. A fourth on supporting people who are trying to implement DataPortability; and finally a fifth called the “steering group” which would host representatives from companies, representatives from the other action groups, and from a big picture point of view determine the strategy of the Project.

A unique thing about this community however, was that few people actually knew each other. There were (and still are) people from San Francisco, Boston, Los Angeles, Washington DC, Washington State, Florida…and that’s just some of the places in the US! People in Dublin (Ireland), London & Bristol (UK), Den Haag (The Netherlands), Hong Kong (China), Adelaide, Sydney & Brisbane (Australia) as well as several cities in Germany being ones I can think of off the top of my head. All these people, communicating daily - would do so via e-mail and teleconferences. I often would joke that the sun would never set on the DataPortability Project, as you would have different “tribes” waking up throughout the day. I would wake up and find an avalanche of messages awaiting for me catch up on.

Something else was more remarkable however, if I may say so myself. As co-founders of the Project, we thought this was an amazing opportunity to explore a concept of a non-hierarchical, de-centralised decision making group. A global community where everyone is equal, working towards this goal that if successful, could fundamentally change the Internet and consequently the economy.

Needless to say, it failed. Not in in the “it’s all over” sense, but it was “blood frustrating”. How can you make even basic decisions, when there is a six hour time lag with the group of people you are collaborating with? What happens when there is a disagreement - who has the final say? There was also a clash of cultures, between the entrepreneurial types and those who work as contractors, who have a “let’s just do it” attitude which was at odds with the people with organisational experience that operate when there is “process”. The former is used to getting things done on the fly without having to consult people; but as the latter group would argue, things don’t work like that with a group of people. Without a formal process of how things work, the boat so to speak, will sink.

Submarine?

As were were realising these issues however, we also were given a remarkable opportunity: the kind folk at TechCrunch donated $6,625 to us . We also privately had other companies and people asking how could they contribute. But how are you meant to donate money to an online community? To do that, you need a bank account - but who controls the bank account? The right answer is a legal entity. But how can you create a legal entity, when you don’t have a formal decision making body?

And so the governance task force was created.

Starting in April under the approval of the Steering Action Group,  the mandate was for the task force to:
1) Propose a lifecyle of an idea with it’s involvement with DataPortability, and ultimately it’s implementation.
2) Propose a working decision making framework to be used within the DataPortability Project.

This goal encapsulated the frustration we as a community has experienced of not effectively being able to get things done; as well as a formal process of how decisions were made. Relatively simple things, but criticial DNA for any organisation that when you get into the details, is actually a difficult subject. And although Robert’s Rules of Order are a standard in the world for protocol, this is by no means easily applied to the online world and is subject to academic research .

So we did a few conference calls (some documented here ; others not documented - with a period where we did daily ones for a week); we discussed via e-mail quite a bit; as well as a chat room (which is now closed off). The final output of our discussions lead to a proposal . All but four provisions were ratified, with a crucial one being the means of how the ‘new’ steering group was seeded, which followed with further discussions and votes, and which resulted in an electoral system being adopted. As of last Friday, the Steering group was seeded, and a few days ago, we held are first Steering teleconference in accordance with the governance framework.

We still have a lot of work to do, and so a revised governance task force has been created to build on the work to date, but that’s not why I am writing this. Instead, what I wish to do is give recognition to the five individuals who made a massive effort to perform what is a very difficult task.

The people
J. Trent Adams
J. Trent Adams
Trent is one of the hardest working people I have ever come across. He magically seems to be able to balance being in the senior management of the company he founded; a dedicated husband and father; as well as contributing to the demand of the DataPortability Project which quite frankly is demanding beyond hell. To call Trent’s involvement in the DataPortability Project as simply a “participant”, is a bit like saying Steve Jobs is just an “employee” of Apple. Trent may not be the CEO, but God damn, if you need to get things done Mr Adams is your man. A Native American, whose name means ‘peacemaker’, when you have a team of people collaborating on a goal, Trent is what oil is to a car.

Brady Brim De-Forest
Brady Brim-DeForest
Brady is an intelligent man with a lot of experience to share, and like Trent, is one of the pillars of the DataPortability community. He has played a major role in executing a lot of the internal deliverables of the DataPortability Project, and having now worked with them extensively twice, I find his contribution invaluable. I have come to admire Brady’s input because he draws on his natural creative sense and his analytical mind on the back of his diverse experience as a film director, entrepreneur, consultant and man of culture. I’ve seen him churn out work previously (with the DataPortability logo competition) and it’s an privilege to think we have individuals like that involved with DataPortabiliy.

Steve Greenberg
Steve Greenberg
I don’t know what to think of Steve - he is either one of the smartest people I have ever (not) met, or he’s just done so many things in life that he’s learnt the hard way. Either way, one thing I am sure of is that he is one of the wisest guys I know. His input, in between his passionate outbursts, are second to none. I don’t want to say too much because with a great mind can also come a great ego. But put it this way: if Steve says something like go read this book, within five minutes, I’ve already got Amazon confirming my order. It takes a lot for me to respect someone, and for Steve, I have all the time in the world for him.

Brett McDowell
Brett McDowell
Brett is the executive director of Liberty Alliance. At first, I though he was extremely useful because he has so much experience in dealing with issues like this. But as time went by, I actually realised he was valuable for something else. Back in my university days, I was sitting at the end of the table with my co-founder of the now-defunct Sydney University Journalists Society (a group with 200 volunteers). We threw a question to the table, which had people shouting back answers. Standard stuff. However the turning point for me, was when my co-founder leaned over and pointed out the girl who instead of throwing “new” ideas, instead built on the original idea we proposed. It is a sign of remarkable intelligence when someone can adapt (indeed I’ve written about this before ). Needless to say, that girl is someone subsequently that I came to realise is one of the smartest people I have ever met (no secret, her name is Natalie Zerial - and quite frankly, still is); and it was observing Brett’s responses, that I came to realise another brilliant mind was in my virtual presence. That’s the long way of me saying this guy is a brilliant thinker, not to mention some other hints that proved him as a forward thinking leader.

Mike Smith
Mike Smith
Mike is a random. He never contributed to DataPortability before, and he literally popped up out of the blue. And thank God he did! A fellow Australian, he was one of the most committed members of the task force, providing an invaluable perspective grounded in common sense. He is an IT consultant (the stinky, Lotus Notes/Domino kind) and was interested in learning about our governance model for an environmental group he wants to set up. In the process however, he made an invaluable contribution. He was able to synthesise the issues, ask the right questions, and put his hand up when work needed to be done.

Gentlemen - thank you. No one outside of the task force truly recognises the work and effort put in, but this is a small token of me thanking you.

The future
Steve Greenberg is now chairing a new governance task force to update, expand, and evolve the adopted governance framework. More importantly, as we as a group operate within this framework, we offer a living example of how a distributed online community doing some tough work, can now organise. With the hundreds of man hours invested into our governance framework, I hope we can help other communities by learning our lessons and adopting our structures. Our experience is not something you can replicate overnight, and culturally, it now puts us in good stead for a bright future - but for other groups that wish to evolve from being a community that in reality is run by a benevolent dictator, I hope we can help you with an alternative solution that works better.

The DataPortability Logo competition

As one of the founders of DataPortability that plays an active role in driving the project, I am writing this post to give recognition to some key individuals as well as transparency in line with the DataPortability philosophy. I also want to promote the fact that the social experiment that is DataPortability, something that both Chris Saad and myself actively are trying to build, has had a massive evolution and validation that it works. The example set by this team on the first major deliverable external to the Project, is a model to how things will occur in the future

In February, RedHat sent a cease and desist letter to the Project, that we must drop our logo as it infringes on their copyright. Whilst the threat could have been debated, the decision was made after community consultation that it was not worth a fight, and we sould pick a new logo. However, what was different was how we were going to pick a new logo: we decided to reach out to the broader community on this one.

So a competition was launched , that soon followed with some generous prizes, for who could design the best logo. Over the course of those next few weeks, we received 403 entries that vied for the prize .

Now what?

DataPortability is a completely decentralised, non-hierarchical movement. Chris calls it participant democracy, where I prefer the simpler wikiocracy term. There is not formal management structure, and everyone is considered equal. No one is forced to do anything, but everyone involved in enthusiastic to make our vision a reality. So how do you convert those 403 submissions into a list of 15 logos that the public can easily vote for, with the pressure that the whole industry is looking and everything must be done with complete accountability? Add to the fact people involved in DataPortability all have full time jobs, and other commitments - turning around something like this in a few short weeks is not easy.

Mary Trigiani (a founding member of San Francisco based Foldier) took the initiative, and formed a group to spearhead this mammoth task. She was joined by Phil Wolff (editor of Skype Journal , and from San Francisco), Brady Brim-DeForest (a Director and entrepreneur from Los Angeles),  Navarr Barnier (a 17 year old Texan high school student on the W3C HTML committee), Triona Carey (a technical writer from sunny UK) and myself - where the team started assembling themselves. Remember, we have no authority formalised in the Project, and with such a mammoth task, the ability to self-organise and get things done should not be underestimated. Both Triona and Mary who initially led the team, lived in completely different time zones - it’s not an easy thing to make even simple decisions with such a factor, making the team completely virtual.

What followed was an amazing team effort that did the following:

  • Discovered a technical issue where everyone seemed to be getting a different count, and therefore, not necessarily seeing all the logos submitted on the Flickr pool. This created a big problem: how do we ensure all our judges give equal consideration to all logos? Sure - you can download the logos and wack them on another server…you try doing that for 400 separate images in a semi-closed application
  • Coordinate to get all these well recognised judges onto the same page, to vote their favourites, and thereby create a shortlist of logos.
  • Reduce that shortlist of entries to a maximum of 15 (of 55 as picked by the judges), with all logos investigated for potential trademark issues and other factors that bore consideration on an appropriate logo
  • Battle with timezones, evolving decision making processes, constantly changing leadership and commitments due to personal circumstances, and the dozens of hiccups along the way
  • …as well as numerous other logistical issues which are still occurring and I don’t need to bore you with now

The technical issue, which we experimented with God knows how many options eventually had Phil download all the files with a special utility , and Navarr created an application that could allow all the logos to be seen and voted on (with some initial help from Bob Ngu ). Phil also organised a logo collaboration space generously donated by conceptshare, that allowed the judges to get into discussions on logos to raise issues and generate awareness of potential problems with certain logos - a massive process given how many logos the judges had to review. These judges then placed their votes on Navarr’s application, which then had to be scrutinised quite intensely by members of the team to cut down the combined judges short list as well as research any potential trademark issues. And the people at webreakstuff rushed to build a system to enable the public voting at http://dataportability.techcrunch.com

The end result are 15 logos that have gone through a very thorough process of review that had them considered against every other logo.

Whilst I hesitate writing posts like this on my blog (I like to keep this blog primarily about analysis rather than events), I want to record this as evidence that its requires key individuals whose names are not known outside of the project to get things done - so thank you to everyone mentioned above. Combined I don’t think its unfair to say the team spent 100 hours working together, and this was done in their free time - they are all busy people like the rest of us.

I also want to thank our brilliant judges, who gave very considerate review over the logos and great insight as to what would make an effective logo.

They are:

and I cannot praise these individuals more highly after interacting with some of them and seeing their judging which showed they obviously put a lot of consideration into their shortlist (and well as showing clear talent)

So check out the logos and don’t forget to vote (thanks to Techcrunch) ! DataPortability is a community effort for a new future - your small contribution by voting, together with everyone else, helps us get one step closer to that vision.

Some things will never change: how to create credibility

This weekend in my office with a half dozen colleagues, we toiled away on an (academic) assignment due tonight. When you spend 11 hours in one day around one table, on something that drives you mad - conversation is a aplenty on things not related to what we were doing. And when there as no conversation, procrastination was aplenty with Facebook being the prime culprit amongst all of us.

An interesting scenario happened, which made me revisit something I have long wondered. One of the girls asked how does Facebook make money, and I went on a rant about their $200 million Microsoft deal, how they are heading towards an IPO, and other random facts I just happen to know. They all looked at me stunned, in the sense how could I possibly know such things, and I replied I read a lot - I read a lot of blogs.

“…but how do you know that stuff you are reading is accurate?” with reference to that $200 million that I don’t even know where I read that. The funny thing about the question, is that it’s smart and stupid at the same time. The answer seems too obvious - but it isn’t: how DO I know those facts I stated where true?

Why I bring this up, is because this is an issue I have long tried to come to grips with - what makes information credible? How do you know when you read something on the internet, that it is reliable? The answer is we don’t. Sort of.

This “new media” world isn’t the reason why we have this apparent problem: information credibility has long been an issue, first realised by the citizens of western democracy after the Great War when they recognised newspapers could no longer be taken as fact (due to the propaganda efforts). So its been a problem long before computers and hypertext had even been invented - it’s only that with us being in an Information Age, the quality of information has been under higher scrutiny with its abundance.

How do we know what makes something reliable? Is it some gee-whiz Google algorithm? Perhaps it’s the wisdom of the crowds? Maybe - but there is something else even more powerful that I have to thank Scott Karp for making me realise this, back in the days when he was starting out as a blogger: it’s all about branding.

Why makes an article about the New York Times, more credible than one written by a random student newspaper rag? What makes a high profile author, more credible in what they say, than a random nobody who puts their hand up in a town hall meeting? And going back to the question my colleague asked earlier - how do I know the blogs I am reading have any credibility - over say, something I read in an established newspaper such The Economist?

Simple: branding estabalishes information credibility. And a brand - for any type of entity be it an individual journalist or a news organisation - is dependent on recognition by others. There could be absolutely no credibility in your information (like Wikipedia) and yet you could have a brand that by default establishes credibility - just like how people regularly cite Wikipedia as a source now, despite knowing it’s inherently uncredible.

The power of branding is that no matter how uncredible you are - your brand will be enough to make anything you say, incredible.