Picking on a crew of quixotic college kids,
Business Insider asks
why their would-be Facebook-killer even exists. No doubt, their privacy-centric social network, dubbed Diaspora, rode a wave of bad press that tarred Facebook as a power-hungry, privacy-invading
monster.
In May, a New York Times
profile linked Diaspora's efforts to a growing collective resentment against
Facebook "for devouring every morsel of personal information we are willing to feed it." But, now that the most recent Facebook backlash seems to have blown over, Business Insider is telling
Diaspora's young founders to kindly move along. "Everyone did their best to deemphasize the details while the funds [$200,000 in total] were flowing in, but Diaspora is not just another Facebook, but
with better privacy controls," it assures. "Instead, the team wants to provide software for people to seed their social networking profiles themselves, and protocols for sharing them with others.
There would be no centralized server that had control of your personal data." In a word, Business Insider calls the notion that average users would ever do anything like that, "insane."
Read the whole story at Business Insider »