Mapping Communities of Interest
Crowdsourcing information through collaborative maps
John Eischeid interviews Di-Ann Eisnor from Platial
Di-Ann Eisnor is founder and CEO of Platial, her third start-up. The mapping site allows users to upload their own information and tag it to a specific location. She and her husband Jason trace the genesis of the idea to the time they spent living in Amsterdam and needed to help their guests find their way around. "We made them maps, like everyone does, of the basic neighborhood amenities," Platial says on its about page "We ended up with a kitchen drawer stuffed full of these notes. It was our collection of Places, plus menus for take out, magazine articles listing kid friendly museums, schedules of parades, and a few brochures and tour books for attractions that seemed interesting enough. A few maps got lost, loaned out or recombined, others got photocopied or emailed or taped to front doors as invitations. Then we moved back to the United States, and that drawer of Places lost its context, it became useless in Portland. We wanted a way to preserve all that knowledge in a powerful, useful, contextual way."
.
John Eischeid: Where does the word Platial come from?
Di-Ann Esinor: It was originally going to be the private entrance, but all of the normal sounding domain names were taken.
Q: Do you have plans to enable the layering of data, rather than limiting it to points?
A: Our current infrastructure supports data input by anyone in the form of feeds, CSV or manual place adding (lat/long, business listings, address). Our primary focus is on enabling people to put whatever they want on a map. Have you played with the slider? It displays geographically relevant information from the Platial community, Yahoo! Local, Flickr and others. It collects and serves relevant geographic content across many sources onto maps.
Q: Do you edit or otherwise police the entries?
A: We don't edit them at all, but users can flag entries. We've scaled so much that it's getting harder to keep track of them. Out of millions of entries, we only pulled two things off of the site.
Q: Has there been any vandalism of public maps, such as the problems Wikipedia has had?
A: Not to our knowledge. Nothing like that has been flagged by the community. There are 20,000+ sites using the Platial platform. Each of those Mapmakers can choose the level of the openness for their own maps with built-in functionality that allows people to approve postings, comments and redistribution.
Q: How easy has it been to work with Google (both the Maps and the Earth applications)? There are a lot of variations on their maps, and people are even working on rendering portions of Berlin in 3D with select interiors. Have you considered enabling something similar?
A: Base maps are not the main thing for us. The main thing is the information people are putting on top of it and how that facilitates community and discovery of the world. Communities of interest have formed around sailing, architecture, parenting and so much more. Working with Google has been great -- we could easily start on the aspects of the product we thought were important because of their offering. We also have a partnership with Friendster using Yahoo Maps and have an application running on (Microsoft's) Virtual Earth. As long as our information can be viewed across the board, that's ideal.
Q: What's next? People can add text, but do you see something like a YouTube hybrid that allows people to upload movies and then tag them to a point on the map?
A: There is actually a site which launched recently just for video -- its neat. Many of our existing points have video integrated through embed tags etc. Video upload is not something we've built into the code.
Q: There was a huge spread in the New York press last week about how all the good neighborhoods are gone, disappearing under tides of gentrification and revelers in from out-of-town. Have you gotten any complaints from people who think that some information should not be shared?
A: There hasn't been a lot a noise about this on Platial. People here have wanted to share and discover. We don't have privacy yet, but we've been thinking about if from the beginning. Neighborhoods, like people, are in flux- constantly evolving and changing shape. Hopefully services like our will help expose some of this so people can navigate around the world in ways that are personally relevant. < a href="http://www.dangillmor.com/">Dan Gillmor from Berkeley is doing wonderful work related to this topic.
(Edited by John Abell)







