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But what we want to know if this will last and remain "forever". (We'll ignore the obvious flaws with the concept at this time). Their 'about us' page is friendly enough (and a nice rejection of corporate formality it seems), but the link to the terms of agreement -- very reasonably -- mentions that the part company "reserves the right to modify or discontinue the Service with or without notice to the Member." So yes, "forever" as long as we'd like. I've been researching hosting -- dedicated servers and grids, offered by the likes of SoftLayer or MediaTemple -- and they are expensive to maintain. It'll be very interesting to see how far "forever" goes in the case of DivShare (once and if it hits off, of course, and goes over that tipping point).
Also relevant -- especially with the sort of questions people are raising about YouTube - is section 11 of said terms of use, "Notification of Claimed Copyright Infringement
Pursuant to Section 512(c) of the Copyright Revision Act, as enacted through the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, Diversion Web Publishing designates the following individual as its agent for receipt of notifications of claimed copyright infringement."
So good, someone's been appointed to handle this, and they have given the DMCA consideration. And yet, no file restrictions. And nothing in the terms of use about what you can't upload. Simply that the laws of NY shall apply.
I think that last bit -- "we reserve the right, at any time, to modify, alter, or update the terms and conditions of this agreement without prior notice" -- they'll need eventually.
Wishing DivShare - yet another Web 2.0 starup - success. It's saturated yes, but pulling off a Facebook (so to speak) seems entirely possible.
Uploading is so easy, it feels criminal. An image upload will get you links to the full-size, mid, and thumbnail, for forum posting, and a very important direct link. A thumbnail image right there would've been nice, of course, but it's still awesome.
Clearly, this is a very ambitious project. I was on the prowl for web hosting services, and dedicated hosting -- Media Temple and SoftLayer seemed nice -- isn't cheap. The numbers quoted in this post - 100k+ users, is indeed encouraging. A single input textbox: browse, press upload and done.
But those "whole bunch of legal strings attached" should be something worth exploring. Their terms of use very interestingly avoids discussing copyright infringement or intellectual property. Except, understandably, their own. This is as close a reference to "don't upload copyrighted stuff" as it gets:
Member assumes all knowledge of applicable law and is responsible for compliance with any such laws. Member may not use the Service in any way that violates applicable state, federal, or international laws, regulations or other government requirements. Member further agrees not to transmit any material that encourages conduct that could constitute a criminal offense, give rise to civil liability or otherwise violate any applicable local, state, national, or international law or regulation.
But that's really saying a lot and nothing at all. All sorts of questions are being asked about the legal implications of YouTube. But the voices really only surfaced after it really took off. Google came into the picture, the media followed. How far will DivShare go? And when will it really reach its tipping point and really take off?
The "forever" bit is, IMO, the most ambitious. But they, rather understandably, reserve "the right to modify or discontinue the Service with or without notice to the Member". Yes, it's a legal requisite, but something that could prove to be very important.
We have here a new wave of Web 2.0 startups. There's new hope and changing the world with the web isn't a very distant dream anymore. It's exciting, and the efforts of such services as DivShare is certainly exciting. Keep 'em coming!
Divshare sounds great . I heard it from my friend .
Thanks for the useful information , I would definitely try it out. Thanks !
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