Should Diaspora apply to Y Combinator? At present Diaspora has over $175K pledged on Kikcstarter so, clearly, they don't need the money. That said, I believe they would benefit significantly from the advice and community that Y Combinator has to offer.<p>I'd like to see Diaspora succeed, but I worry that the guys doing it seem smart but also a little green. Would Y Combinator help them find more mature developers, and, in particular, security and cryptography experts to help round out the team?
We could introduce them to people, certainly. In fact Rtm knows a bit about security and cryptography. But our top priority if they applied to YC would be to encourage them to figure out what to build first, and build it.<p>They are in a dangerous position. They have a large number of people who like them in a vague way-- who like not what they've built, but the general idea of what they plan to build. In a startup you want the exact opposite: you want a small number of people who like you a lot, not a large number who like you slightly.
Can we please give these guys some credit already?!<p>Thus far, they are doing great. They had an idea, published it and built a community. Whatever they build, thousands of people are going to test it, allowing them to make it even better.<p>What if all this was a legit ploy to edge their way into the startup scene? Mission accomplished!<p>And talent-wise it's too early to know but they do seem to have a good feel for community, design and architecture. They have a great mentor, too. Let's just wait and see.<p>In the meantime we can congratulate them for their success so far. If anything, they helped publicize Facebook's privacy problems.<p>Gee, cynicism and skepticism are NOT the same guys!
I've never seen so much unsolicited advice before. Why is everyone telling Diaspora what to do? Because they are young? Because everyone else knows better? This doesn't seem like the typical reaction to a startup's announcement.<p>A lot of these people just want Diaspora to succeed because they want someone to keep Facebook honest. The real solution is not to all cross our fingers for Diaspora and hope. Instead maybe this is a sign several startups need to take Facebook head on. A lot of them will fail, but something will succeed. Sure Facebook has a massive network advantage - but so did MySpace. People will adapt.<p>The unwillingness of people to tackle head on competition is understandable. At first glance it would appear to make it more likely to fail. With a social network, maybe because of the network effects that is true. In general having competitors is a good sign that the market has money in it, and finding the market is at least as hard as making a product and selling it.