Archive for the 'Boards' Category

Interview about boards.ie in PC Live! magazine

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I was interviewed by Rory Gannon of PC Live! magazine for an article in this month’s issue about boards.ie. The article includes a nice summary of a slightly longer set of interview questions, which I am including here for your interest.

Where did the idea for boards.ie come from?

Initially, it started off life as a single message board about a computer game called Quake on the Irish Games Network. There was an associated community of Irish gamers, and I set up the board in February 1998 (so we’re nearing a historic 10 years since our first post) to discuss events, games, etc. The board was very busy, so much so that I had to customise it fairly quickly to allow archiving and avoid overloading people and browsers with content. Then, based on community feedback and their needs, we added some new areas to talk about other topics like TV, computers, and after hours stuff in 1999. One of my fellow gamers and a big user of the boards, Tom Murphy, put it to me that we should jointly set up a new site that could be a hub for Irish communities of all types, and he suggested that we call this site boards.ie. At the time, it was prohibitively difficult to get .ie domain names, so he had to change the name of his own company for a day, register the domain, and change the name back again. Together with Tom and three other directors, boards.ie Ltd. was founded in 2000 and we’ve been on the go since. Our managing director is Gerry Shanahan, and we are now looking for our second employee.

How does the site work?

The main component of the site is a message board discussion area. People post discussion “threads”, starting off with a starter topic on which they receive replies from other people (which may consist of answers to questions, differences of opinion, useful related resources, etc.) When you go to www.boards.ie, you see an entry page that shows the latest 25 discussion threads from our entire site. This gives you an idea of what people are talking about right now. There’s a navigation menu up top (tip: which offers a lot more functionality when you actually login to the site) that shows the main categories (ranging from Arts to Tech) under which there are tens of sub-boards in each category. If you click on a category, you’ll see the appropriate forums contained in there: e.g., Arts contains Literature, TV, Radio, etc. We have around 700 active boards, with diverse topic areas including Politics, Motors, Poker, and even Wanderley Wagon!

Do you regulate the site? Are there restrictions on content and “etiquette” (what rules, regulations and user criteria are observed)?

Each of the boards is moderated, which means that there are two or three voluntary moderators on each board who will try and keep conversations on topic, will report offensive content, and will also (normally) be a recognised expert on the corresponding topic area. We also have what are called “Super Moderators”, each of whom is able to patrol and moderate any public board on the site. Serious problems can be attended to be the administrators (at the moment, that’s us, the owners of the boards.ie Ltd.). We have a public feedback forum for site suggestions, a feature for reporting problematic posts, and an area where moderators can discuss potential issues or contribute to our “Zen and the Art of Moderation” guide for new moderators.

What problems you have encountered with the site?

From time to time, we have encountered requests for the removal of defamatory material about individuals or companies. We comply with all legitimate requests as quickly as possible. Also, increased usage of boards.ie has meant that we’ve had a stream of hardware upgrade over the past few years. We started off with one machine, then had to separate the web and database components onto different servers, and now we have 14 machines in operation (including those for our various spin-off sites).

Has the site developed as you expected?

I would say much more than we could have imagined. I would never have guessed that the growth would have progressed in such a continuous and almost “nature-like” fashion. When I drew some graphs last year showing our user and discussion post growth, I was suprised at how smooth the curves were (see here) - I was really expecting lots of dips and surges. We get over 750,000 unique visitors a month, with over two-thirds coming from Ireland. Arguably, that’s possibly 1 in 10 of our population that visits the site each month.

What potential does the site have in your opinion - what direction do you see it going in the future?

The site has been hugely successful in being the place to find information or get answers about anything related to Ireland, a community-oriented alternative to static information and other media sites. When I’m looking for something via search engines, I often end up back at boards.ie. Through word-of-mouth primarily, we’re now ranked somewhere in the top 10,000 sites worldwide (Netcraft estimates that there are at least 100 million websites), and I’d hope that we will continue to improve in terms of coverage both at a micro (localised communities in Ireland) and macro level (i.e., internationally).

We’ve tried to identify the areas where boards.ie services could be enhanced in order to continue to offer competitive functionality that users would want from our site (rather than going somewhere else) - a lot of players have entered this market since 1998. The first main example of this was adverts.ie, a classified ads subsite we launched when we realised that the popularity of our boards.ie “For Sale” forums was something that could be expanded and improved upon by moving it to a separate site. We’ve also been playing with a social networking spin-off (social.ie) - this is a little more complex as the social interaction aspects of boards.ie are quite tied into the site, and it’s more difficult to separate. It may be that social.ie will serve as a portal to embedded social networking functionality within boards.ie itself, rather than existing on its own. For now though, I believe that we should concentrate on strengthening what we have, rather than diversifying in too many directions.

We also need to look at how new users can move to and from boards.ie with ease, e.g., through portable profiles or single sign-on efforts like OpenID (there will be a workshop on this topic in Cork next March). Adding an OpenSocial layer (Google’s API for application portability across social networking platforms) may also be of interest, allowing us to integrate interesting widgets from third parties. We also hope to run a competition in conjunction with DERI, NUI Galway (my employer) sometime in Q1 2008, with a prize for the most innovative use of “SIOC” community metadata from the boards.ie site.

Interviewed on Morning Ireland last week

Along with Joe Zefran of rté.ie, John Waters from the Irish Times, former DCU student Deirdre Reynolds, Gráinne Barry of anotherfriend.com, and Dr. Siobhan Barry from Cluan Mhuire, I took part in a panel hosted by Richard Downes on RTÉ Radio 1’s “Morning Ireland” show last week to discuss the phenomenon of online social networking.

You can listen to the show using the RTÉ site’s real audio archive or via my MP3 recording from digital satellite (I’m on at 17m30s and 26m30s).

It was a very good year…

…during which I created and taught a new course on Emerging Web Media (twice!); spoke on Today FM’s “The Last Word” about cyberstalking; hosted the first Drupal Ireland meetup; gave a short opening presentation at the first ExpertFinder workshop; guest blogged on the IIA blog; was nominated in the blog category of the Digital Media Awards; sold the Boards Group of sites; launched the UK boards site; spoke at MIT and met Tim Berners-Lee; organised the first WebCamp event on social networks; made the first SIOC exporter for phpBB; took part in the TalkTourism.ie launch; participated in a documentary about Bebo made by the Multime group; got a comment from Patrick Tilley on my blog; met Enya; went to BarCamp Belfast; co-edited the SIOC W3C Member Submission; spoke at the Digital Hub about social networks and gaming; was interviewed by Silicon Republic; launched SocialMedia.net; organised BarCamp Galway; was nominated for a Net Visionary award; gave a presentation on social networking for enterprise at a Fidelity / ITAG conference; wrote an article about the future of social networks with Stefan for Internet Computing; recorded some muppet extra voices for an Irish-language Sesame Street spinoff; went to ISWC 2007 and chaired the second ExpertFinder workshop there; attended Web 2.0 Expo Tokyo and met Tim O’Reilly; went to the blognation Japan launch; had a SIOC tutorial accepted for WWW2008; and spoke on RTÉ Radio 1’s “Morning Ireland” about social networks.

I am looking forward to the year ahead - between organising BlogTalk 2008 / WebCamp SNP, and giving tutorials and invited presentations at the World Wide Web Conference, the Semantic Technologies Conference and the Reasoning Web Summer School - it’s going to be an exciting 2008!

boards.ie latest: hires and hiring; doubling visits since 2005

I’m happy to announce that Gerry Shanahan has recently been appointed as Managing Director of boards.ie Ltd. We are also now looking for a full-time tech developer with LAMP expertise.

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boards.ie has increased its daily visits from 30k per day in November 2005 to around 60k per day at present. Thanks to all our readers, posters and moderators for your continued support.

Major boards.ie hardware and software upgrade complete

What a stressful but productive afternoon / evening. We migrated boards.ie’s MySQL databases to our new database server, and took the opportunity to upgrade the site to the latest version of vBulletin.

Our new server is a bit of a beast - it has two 1.86GHz quad-core Xeons (eight processor cores), 16GB of RAM, and six 146GB SAS 15k rpm hard drives in RAID 1+0.

Thanks to regi and all at boards.ie for their support and patience today.

social.ie events: now with Google Maps and sign-up lists / Net Visionary Awards

Vote in the IIA Net Visionary Awards 2007 Firstly, thank you to all our social.ie beta testers to date. The site has been nominated in the IIA Net Visionary Awards 2007 for “Web Developer Excellence”! Voting is now open if you want to support us…

Secondly, I am happy to announce that social.ie’s event creation now incorporates Google Maps and sign-up functionality. You can view the screenshots below for examples of each.

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social.ie aims to be a social networking service for Irish communities. On the site, you can create your own group around your community of interest, and you can then attach events, images and also blog entries to whatever group you form. If you need help with the site (since it is still quite new), please use our support forum or put issues, bugs and feature requests on our wiki. We are currently working on other features including the promised advanced social network browsing functionality and other custom user profile fields such as external RSS feeds.

boards.ie on front page of Irish Times: “Security flaw leaves Eircom customers open to hackers”

From http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/frontpage/2007/1002/1191223002351.html:

Security flaw leaves Eircom customers open to hackers

John Collins

Up to a quarter of a million Eircom customers could be inadvertently sharing their broadband connections with strangers due to a security flaw in products supplied by the telecoms company.

The security problem could allow hackers to access wireless connections in buildings up to 30m (100 feet) away, without the knowledge of the Eircom account-holder.

As well as allowing free access to the internet, the flaw could in theory permit a hacker to engage in illegal activity that could then be traced back to the Eircom customer.

The problem relates to broadband routers, supplied to Eircom by Motorola subsidiary Netopia, which can connect computers to the internet via Wi-Fi, a wireless technology commonly available on the average PC.

Due to the way security has been implemented on these products, hackers and anybody with a reasonable computer knowledge can freely use them to access the internet.

The wireless routers use a security protocol called Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP). This protocol requires anybody accessing the wireless network to enter a 16-digit password.

This code is generated from the serial number of the router as well as some text which is converted to numerical values.

The text used includes eight snippets of lyrics from guitar legend Jimi Hendrix.

The security problem occurs because the unique eight digit number that is broadcast as the name of the network is also derived from the serial number.

As a result hackers simply have to look at the name of the Eircom network to get access to it. Both downloadable tools and websites have emerged which automatically create the 16-digit key when the network name is keyed in.

Eircom issued a statement yesterday saying it is aware of the issue and is contacting all affected broadband customers.

The Netopia routers in question are the 3300 and 2247 series.

Users who have changed the default set up are unaffected by the problem.

All new modems sold by Eircom will have instructions on how to change the default WEP key while existing customers are advised to visit www.broadbandsupport.eircom.net for instructions.

Eircom pointed out that accessing wireless networks without permission is a criminal offence under the Criminal Damage Act 1991 and the Criminal Justice (Theft and Fraud Offences) Act 2001.

The problem was first revealed on a post to the popular Boards.ie discussion website over the weekend.

“This raises a number of issues, not least that my neighbour could use my broadband connection,” said Brian Honan, a director of security specialists BH Consulting.

Mr Honan said unauthorised users could use a wireless network to download illegal content or even to access other computers in the premises or home.

Motorola, whose subsidiary supplies the routers, declined to comment on the matter.

(Aside: As you can expect, we had a busy day on boards.ie today, necessitating a database server restart at one stage when our web node requests became too much for our database to handle. But you may have seen in my recent presentation about boards.ie that we are purchasing a new database server to help resolve this limitation. The story also made it onto The Register via ENN.)

Silicon Republic: “Online networking for the Social.ie challenged”

Meant to quote this interview with Marie Boran that was published last week about our forthcoming social.ie site…

Online networking for the Social.ie challenged

27.08.2007 - Social networking fans in Ireland can look forward to a site catering especially for them, as John Breslin, creator of the popular Boards.ie portal is currently working on a platform that will combine all the spin-off functions including blogs, ‘friends’ lists, events and photo albums.

“There are a huge amount of social networks, maybe even an overabundance of them, but at the same time there isn’t any dedicated one where you know you will find things of an Irish interest,” said Breslin.

Breslin, who is also a researcher with the Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI) in NUI Galway, talked about how his team is developing social.ie while looking at how online communities connect – namely, through shared objects, not people.

“If you look at sites like Flickr and del.icio.us and so on, people are connected through photos and bookmarks and events,” he said.

In parallel with that Breslin started working at DERI three and a half years ago and was introduced to various elements of social networking by his boss Stefan Decker and began thinking about how he could apply this functionality to boards.ie.

He introduced a ‘friends’ function to the boards site three years ago which has led to over 15,000 links between users. With this success his team is now working on bringing this to social.ie, planning to plug the social networking site it into the existing boards user base.

A part of the design which is unique to social.ie is an interactive graph visualisation model, with the user shown at the centre and a graphical display of the offshoots of friends they are linked to.

Boards.ie, said Breslin, has been a part-time project for the five main directors of the company, himself included, but this year for the first time due to its growth and revenue the team is now actively looking for full-time staff.

There is no exact timeframe, however, for the launch of social.ie, although it is in development right now.

By Marie Boran

GAME :ON “Talk Digital” Seminar on “Social Networking in Games”

20070903b.png As mentioned previously, I will be taking part in the “Talk Digital” panel discussion on “Social Networking in Games” on Monday at 1 PM, which is part of the GAME :ON Cyber Games Festival in the Digital Hub, Dublin next week. The panelists are:

The event will be chaired by John Collins from the The Irish Times, and the where and when details are:

  • Date: Monday, 10 September 2007
  • Time: 13:00
  • Venue: Presentation Room in the Digital Depot, Roe Lane, The Digital Hub, Dublin 8 (map)

Top Irish websites? Any resources?

Does anyone have a good resource for listing the top Irish websites? All I have to go on at the moment are Alexa’s Ireland listings (which has boards.ie at #9) and the Top 100 Irish Sites (boards.ie is at #6).