Tag Michael Arrington

Living in the Valley, the perfect recluse recipe

Apparently you can wake up and open your eyes to the outside world, even if you live in Silicon Valley. Of course for any European, especially fans of the football game, this is no surprise at all, we actually would prefer Russian riches to invest in our clubs than poor Americans who constantly need to renegotiate the debts taken on to buy out our clubs. Of course the internet is no exception to this, Arrington gets the wake-up call:

A controversial comment on Hacker News makes us wonder if hot U.S. startups are the new vanity purchase for rich Russians.

What Happened to Online Privacy

Michael Arrington on the topic of online privacy.

Back in 2006 people still had a notion of privacy online, particularly around contact information. Today those walls are crumbling. People share information today without blinking that they never would have considered sharing in the past. Things that bother us today probably won’t matter much this time next year.

It might seem a lost battle in the mindset of people, but the more information is readily available the more people will become aware of sharing less. Expect big battles with law makers in countries such as Germany.

If You’re Arrington, The Rules Don’t Apply to You

Where I go on a tangent about Arrington, online disclosure and building trust. Written for The Blog Herald.

♣ Admirable Words

Very admirable words from Techcrunch’s Michael Arrington after TC got sued by a dreamer. I can only say that I share this attitude with Michel Arrington and would rather destruct myself than allowing someone to bully me. Hats off, Michael.

We will not be bullied, and people who file frivolous lawsuits need to be put down. I would rather run TechCrunch into the ground and go out of business than let this guy win.

TechCrunch Has Peaked ALREADY

Second, on the issue of community – I don’t know how to respond to this exactly. The problem isn’t that our community is growing. The problem is that growth, by definition, leads to the degradation of a community. The wingnuts arrive, and the trolls take up residence. Our challenge is to find a way to engage a larger audience while keeping the interest of our core readers. That may be impossible – and someday I may spin myself out of TechCrunch and start a new blog. The topic – new startups.
[Crunchnotes]

Michael, do it. Do it now.
The stealth way. Give yourself 6-9 months time and write as you did at the start of TC. Go the uncov way after all the TC experience you gathered.

Together with the community gathering the trolls, your crew also did. Don’t get me wrong, I love Duncan, I’ve been reading Duncan for more than 3 years now and always will continue, but people like you, people like Ted, people with inside knowledge or extended coding knowledge, should go solo again.

And if you do, screw the echo chamber Techmeme-osphere, you’ll be surprised of the following you could gather within only some weeks.

TC, the magazine, works well and does its job, now it’s time for hardcore opinions again.

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