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Yahoo announced this week it has opened its doors to innovation
in general, and developers who want to build applications in particular. For the
first time ever, and six months after joining Google’s OpenSocial program,
Yahoo made an official invitation: “We’re open. Have it.”
In spring this year, Yahoo agreed to join Google’s
OpenSocial platform, which aims at building an infrastructure for the social
web. This enables developers to create applications for social-networking
sites.
MySpace welcomed Yahoo! as an important addition to the
OpenSocial network, stating that this alliance will provide developers with the
necessary tools to make the Internet faster and “foster more innovation and
creativity.”
At the time, Yahoo said it expected OpenSocial to become a
tool that fuels innovation and makes the web more relevant and more enjoyable
for millions of users. The decision to join the open platform was driven by the
willingness to open up their network to innovation, embrace and enhance the
social relationships between users, and ultimately offers users “the best of
the web.”
Developers are invited to join the initiative and start
using the data Yahoo has put at their disposal to create web sites or new applications
into Yahoo.
“Reaching this step in our Yahoo Open Strategy has been a
significant effort, requiring hundreds of developers in offices around the
world,” Jay Rossiter wrote in the blog announcement. “We’ve even worked hand-in-hand
with Google, MySpace, and many other of our traditional competitors as partners
in this effort. We mean it when we say we’re open!”
With the help of OpenSocial, developers will be able to
create applications to access social networks and update feeds, and with the
help of a common API, they will also be able to make them available to users.
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