As promised, open source social network and Facebook alternative Diaspora
released its source code yesterday. And while it's a developer release
meant to be hacked on and is by no means a finished, there are already
of plenty of predictions that Diaspora will fail - or at the least, that the project represents no threat to Facebook.
Diaspora is hardly unique as a startup that faces major challenges by
entering into a market or an industry where big companies are
well-established.
On a recent TechZing podcast, for example, hosts Jason Roberts and Justin Vincent asked Gabriel Weinberg, founder of the search engine DuckDuckGo
if being in the same realm as Google "isn't that, like, crazy?" But as
Weinberg points out, he's able to "do things that Google can't copy
easily." For example, DuckDuckGo is able to delivery more satisfactory
search results than Google, contends Weinberg, because he can actively
address questions of spam without facing charges of censorship or
anti-trust - something Google can't do because of its size.