So, once upon a time
matt convinced me to sign up for LiveJournal. This was back in '99 and I've had that account ever since (albeit with one name change). Strictly speaking, I don't post to my LiveJournal; I post to my blog and LJ's excellent XML-RPC interface allows me to mirror my posts from here to there. This interface is free; any user can take advantage of it, and people do, mostly thanks to the neat plug-ins written for 3rd party logware like WordPress. The fact of this interface is why I use LJ and not other, similar services like Vox that don't offer it. I like my domain more than I like any of those third party sites but of course that begs the question…
Why bother to do it at all?
And the answer is simply that I make friends on LiveJournal; there's something about the community that… I dunno, encourages interactivity in a way that free-standing blogs often don't. Maybe it's the enforced egalitarianism of default templates; I dunno. But whatever it is, the fact remains that no matter how gently I try and encourage people to comment here rather than there, they don't; most of my comments (and discussions) come from LJ. Which is vexing but, alas, the truth. And the flip side of that coin is that I comment on LiveJournal; a lot. I comment more on people's journals than I do on the blogs that I read. Because, at the end of the day, it's a community.
This is why I have a permanent account. Yeah, I shelled out the US$150 in the last sales round to buy one. Not for the features. I honestly don't give a crap that I get some ridiculous number of userpics. I don't post by phone or email (because of the XML-RPC thing). Strictly speaking there's not much more that I can do as a Permanent Account that I couldn't do as an Early Adopter, but after eight years of use I figured it was time to give something back to the site.
The reason I'm thinking about this right now, incidentally, is because of something LJ creator Brad Fitzpatrick said in his post about the recent account type changes SUP has made at LJ:
In any case, SUP apparently sees no value in freeloaders not looking at ads, not paying, and oh wait… producing most the content for other members to read, other members who are looking at ads and paying for their accounts.
Quoted From: Brad Fitzpatrick
And that's… interesting because that's what LJ is to me and maybe I never really consciously realised it before. LJ is not its features – technically, it's back in the Web 1.0 stone age – but rather its people. The reason I don't care much about places like JournalFen1 is purely because I don't have an active friends list there. I can shout out into the silence well enough from v-s.net; I don't need a third party site to do that for me, no matter how many bells and whistles they claim to have.
So… I dunno. Maybe SUP doesn't get this. Maybe. Maybe we all got blinded by chrome and the potential for revenue and forgot that LiveJournal is the longest running, consistently successful social networking site on the internet. MySpaces and Friendsters come and go but LiveJournal stays eternal by… what, exactly?
Not money, that's for sure.
Reading through the comments I've gotten on this post has made me think about the features that I think make LiveJournal 'work' for me, as opposed to every other social networking site I've abandoned. It seems everyone's answers are fairly similar, but here are mine:
So, there you go. Those are the features that I think help build the community that makes me keep coming back to LJ. Note that in an of themselves they're not the incentive, but rather they're the tools that I think LiveJournal does well that other social networking/blogging tools are lacking. If you build it, and all that.
So, while we're here; what keeps you coming back?
Mirrored from v-s.net. Comments are preferred on the original.