Word's hit that it's launching September 15th.While it's nice that someone's taking on Facebook (I was hoping it'd be Google, though their behavior of late with Verizon regarding net neutrality has me rather pissed off at them), the biggest pitfall is, of course, building the community. A social network lives and dies by its usercount.
Everyone uses Facebook. Remember when
everyone used MySpace? I still have a MySpace account, I think, despite my hatred of them. Why?
Because everyone used them. Diaspora is going to have an uphill battle trying to fight the entrenched Facebook users, particularly as Diaspora is, let's face it, more geek-oriented than Facebook. The strength of Facebook is its ubiquity and relative ease of use. It didn't get that way overnight, of course, but more and more and more people have signed up for it. Even completely tech-stupid relatives have a Facebook account. Diaspora is going to have to
seriously downplay the tech jargon, and they really need to posit it as a friendly alternative to Facebook. Hire a PR firm and let's see what can happen.