Getting Gillmor’s attention
I like how Steve calls me the “attention bunny” in response to my post last night. Here’s just a small tease of his lengthy reply: “Could it be that Microsoft is paying attention? On Tuesday, Bill Gates and Ray Ozzie will likely shake up the industry with details of their rapid move toward the attention economy.”
I still don’t think I totally understand Steve’s vision, but that’s OK. It took me two years to understand Dave Winer’s vision of RSS. I have a 486 brain in a 64-bit world. Here’s a little more — I totally get his point that link-based relevancy is now commoditized at best and is going down in value because of splogs:
“As splogs destroy the perception of page rank legitimacy, which is based not on the actual metrics of linking but the accrued reputational value of a site’s authority, the number of false positives will undermine confidence and dilute the economics of the system. It’s not so much that links are dead, Doc, as that trust in link rank is undermined. As in the bond market, weakened trust lowers ratings and shifts the market in other directions. This is Microsoft’s opportunity.”
Do you grok this? I do. It’s a key part of what I’ve been talking and thinking about, particularly when it comes to search (although Steve has gotten me to see bigger than that). Attention data is gonna be what brings us a new kind of Web — one that doesn’t look like what we know of the Web today.

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October 29th, 2005 at 12:48 pm
Did you pull an all-nighter Robert?
October 29th, 2005 at 2:03 pm
Nice to know you’re on board with attention, Robert :) BTW, I blogged on this same topic yesterday:
http://nick.typepad.com/blog/2005/10/are_you_paying_.html
October 29th, 2005 at 3:36 pm
Colin: almost.
Nick: thanks!
October 29th, 2005 at 6:02 pm
I still don’t 100% understand, what exactly is attention data. The formal definition, please.
October 29th, 2005 at 6:21 pm
Stefan, “attention data” is simply data about what you’re paying attention to. On the web, that might be a list of URLs you visit, RSS feeds you’re subscribed to, searches you perform, ads you click, etc.
October 29th, 2005 at 6:37 pm
[...] There’s some interesting stuff by Steve Gillmor on the degradation of link relevancy. I’ve taken it from Scobleizer : “I totally get his point that link-based relevancy is now commoditized at best and is going down in value because of splogs: As splogs [spam blogs] destroy the perception of page rank legitimacy, which is based not on the actual metrics of linking but the accrued reputational value of a site’s authority, the number of false positives will undermine confidence and dilute the economics of the system. It’s not so much that links are dead, Doc [Searls], as that trust in link rank is undermined. As in the bond market, weakened trust lowers ratings and shifts the market in other directions. This is Microsoft’s opportunity. [...]
October 29th, 2005 at 6:43 pm
I agree that link authority will weaken over time, but I think that even today there is a lot of valuable web content that link authority totally fails to register. I think this is yet another new opportunity.
October 29th, 2005 at 7:42 pm
i just stumbled across this page.. i would give my left nut to work at microsoft. your a lucky guy.
October 29th, 2005 at 8:44 pm
Just passing through, cool blog by the way.
October 29th, 2005 at 8:53 pm
Thanks for clearing up the definition Nick.
October 29th, 2005 at 10:41 pm
In my mind, that’s a very very scary system. It definately makes me fear for the future. I’m not sure that everyone, myself included, wants such a commercialized, consumer-centric future such as the one Steve Gillmor portrays.
October 30th, 2005 at 2:39 am
[...] Robert Scoble writes about attention information. WordPress.com is one step ahead of you there, Robert. The rankings you see on the home page and in your WP dashboard are computed from attention information. How do we get it? We’re the host. We can aggregate more attention information than you might think, while maintaining a very friendly privacy policy because we anonymize the data. Why scrape when you can host? [...]