
Tim O'Reilly, Ray Ozzie
Tim O’Reilly created a bit of a stir last night in the tech world by writing a thoughtful essay entitled “The War for the Web.” He’ll be expanding on his thoughts in his keynote address today at the Web 2.0 Expo in New York. From the essay, here’s the core argument:
“[W]e’ve grown used to a world with one dominant search engine, one dominant online encyclopedia, one dominant online retailer, one dominant auction site, one dominant online classified site, and we’ve been readying ourselves for one dominant social network. But what happens when a company with one of these natural monopolies uses it to gain dominance in other, adjacent areas? I’ve been watching with a mixture of admiration and alarm as Google has taken their dominance in search and used it to take control of other, adjacent data-driven applications.
It could be that everyone will figure out how to play nicely with each other, and we’ll see a continuation of the interoperable web model we’ve enjoyed for the past two decades. But I’m betting that things are going to get ugly. We’re heading into a war for control of the web. And in the end, it’s more than that, it’s a war against the web as an interoperable platform. [emphasis added] Instead, we’re facing the prospect of Facebook as the platform, Apple as the platform, Google as the platform, Amazon as the platform, where big companies slug it out until one is king of the hill.
… P.S. One prediction: Microsoft will emerge as a champion of the open web platform, supporting interoperable web services from many independent players, much as IBM emerged as the leading enterprise backer of Linux.
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Filed under: innovation, Microsoft, R&D, Society, Technology | Tagged: Amazon, ancient, Apple, data, eBay, enterprise, Facebook, Flavius, FOSS, future, Google, Google Wave, innovation, internet, interop, interoperability, interoperable, Latin, Microsoft, military, open, open software, OSS, Ozzie, PDC, PDC09, Publius, Ray Ozzie, Renatus, Roman, Rome, strategy, Sun Tzu, tech, Technology, Tim O'Reilly, Twitter, Vegetius, w2e, Wave, web, Web 2.0, web services, web20 | 3 Comments »