Tim O'Reilly is blowing it

posted by Jeff | Thursday, June 1, 2006, 11:18 AM | comments: 2

There was a big uproar over CMP and O'Reilly sending some guy a C&D letter for using the term "Web 2.0 Conference" in that those companies are using it as a trademark.

Tim O'Reilly's response indicates that he overall agrees with the action, and honestly I do see his point and agree that defending a trademark is the right thing to do.

However, there's an underlying tone in his words, and one that I sensed at Mix06, that stinks of self-pleasuring "look-what-we-came-up-with" posturing that really gets under my skin.

Let's start with the obvious: The term "Web 2.0" is stupid. I don't know or care who coined the term (O'Reilly insists that "no one was using it before they did a conference on it), but it has been so over-used in feel good journalism in magazines and by people like O'Reilly that it doesn't mean anything. The Web is iterative in nature and constantly evolving. It isn't having a second coming or all at once doing new things or spawning a new economy, or whatever the hell people say it's doing.

I respected O'Reilly for building a publishing empire, and articles I read about him seemed to indicate to me that he was the real deal. But when I saw him speak, he seemed kind of arrogant, especially when he brought up his company. I'll put it this way: Book publishing is a noble business that helps people, but it's rarely a source of innovation. Books help people explain and use the innovation. It's rare that it goes the other way. I think I'm fully qualified to say that since I am an author with a published book. My book isn't the result of my own greatness, it's the result of wanting to teach people about something innovative that Microsoft made.

I realize that they're not claiming "Web 2.0" is all theirs, but the difference is too subtle to matter, in my opinion. I guess it's the notion that the term is important, in any context, that bothers me.

I have to get back to writing software for Web 10.5.6, or some other such nonsense.


Comments

CPLady

June 1, 2006, 6:11 PM #

This reminds me of Kleenex and several other instances where a "brand" became so popular it became generalized. How many people say "do you have a kleenex?" instead of "do you have a tissue?"
I believe that is why Kleenex now specifically says "kleenex tissues" in their advertising.

Back in the 70's, everyone went "skidooing", referring to the personal watercraft which was the most popular.

freeze

June 2, 2006, 4:48 PM #

Post-it to the board

Rollerblade down the street

Zerox a copy

Google it!

and argubly, using your Ipod


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