But is there evidence of that?
I think the thought of *my* particular community is that as soon as there's a better option, there will be a migration away. The same thing happened when we moved from mailing lists to LJ. Slow, gradual adoption, and one day, the lists were a ghost town. The problem right now is that there aren't a lot of other options out there that aren't regressions from where we are now, or are likely to be stable for a long-term move. (Where long-term = 3-5 years.)
LJ will become, um, Brentwood.
Wouldn't MySpace or FaceBook be more logical comparisons?
That said, I'm not convinced your analogy works (is LJ providing me with something as substantive as housing?) Maybe it's more like a public park--like when the parks services started charging a nominal fee to use the parks/parking lots. At least that's how it feels to me. Was I a bit annoyed the first time I discovered I had to pay $8 or whatever to go to Will Rogers Park? Yeah, but I got over it.
MySpace is a trailer park. Facebook is Pasadena.
I think people have kind of suggested this, but not stated it so much. The underlying issue is partly that, like TableTalk, LJ will go pay-for-play. And then it will fall apart and people will lose something that is very important to them. So this is kind of alarming -- if this doesn't raise enough income to support them, what's their next step?
As for this latest dust up, it's not really even about the ads; it's the continued failure to communicate.
This. I think if SUP had made even a tiny bit of effort to communicate with or understand their user base, we'd be a hell of a lot more forgiving. Instead, they're running to the press and making ginormous wankery asshats of themselves by basically saying that running LJ would be so much easier if it weren't for those pesky users. As if social networks existed in some kind of magical vaccum where content is generated by the blog fairies. (Which, incidentally, nobody on LJ cares about anyway. I know because I checked the top 100 interests list.)
As if social networks existed in some kind of magical vaccum where content is generated by the blog fairies. (Which, incidentally, nobody on LJ cares about anyway. I know because I checked the top 100 interests list.)
Don't you mean "faeries?"
AhahahaHAH. This is the same kind of kerfuffle as with my local public radio station. Transparency and communication when making likely controversial changes within/to a community used to having ( or even under the encouraged illusion of having) a voice is crucial, peoples. Much smarter way to run a business. People may not like the changes, but they'll hate having their illusion completely blown worse.
The underlying issue is partly that, like TableTalk, LJ will go pay-for-play. And then it will fall apart and people will lose something that is very important to them
Exactly. And while thank god, Buffistas managed to emerge from TT, and I love love love it here at the b.org, there were a lot of other parts of the TT community that didn't make it, or went somewhere else, and I lost touch with them, or stayed at TT...and it's just not the same. And I fear similar things will happen with LJ. People will go off to other journaling places, or quit altogether, and even if I stay in touch with some of them, I'll lose others, and it will be sad.
People may not like the changes, but they'll hate having their illusion completely blown worse.
This.
The communication thing is crucial when a goodly portion of your customer base are crazy internet people who were shoved in lockers, have limited social skills, and have weird entitlement issues, anyway.
And be this I mean fandom. But not any of ours. Of course. We're all totally centered.