john gru­ber:

Back in Oc­to­ber I as­ked why web­sites are pu­bli­shing AMP pa­ges. The lock-in aspect makes no sen­se to me. Why would I want to cede con­trol over my pa­ges to Goog­le?

i pu­blish AMP pa­ges be­cau­se my main con­cern of pu­bli­shing on the web is to make it as easy as pos­si­ble to rea­ders to see my wri­tin­gs.

sin­ce i star­ted wri­ting on the web 15 ye­ars ago, i pu­blish every sin­gle word i wri­te in a RSS feed, be­cau­se it makes it easy for rea­ders to fol­low my wri­tin­gs. RSS makes it easy to read my ar­tic­les as an­yo­ne li­kes. si­mi­lar to AMP, i cede some con­trol over my con­tent, when i pu­blish RSS. RSS-feeds can be read in an app or on many con­tent ag­gre­ga­ting sites like feed­ly.com or form­er­ly on rea­der.goog­le.com. tho­se sites dis­play my con­tent on their do­main, or to put it in john gru­bers words: with RSS, „from the per­spec­ti­ve of ty­pi­cal users, the ca­no­ni­cal URL is“ feed­ly.com or wha­te­ver ag­gre­ga­tor one uses to read RSS.

the same hap­pens with fac­book in­stant ar­tic­les. my ca­no­ni­cal url might be in­tern­al­ly used by face­book, but on a pho­ne „a ty­pi­cal user“ has no clue of what the ac­tu­al ca­no­ni­cal URL re­al­ly is. from the user per­spec­ti­ve my con­tent is on face­book and even in­ter­nal links on my site will get dis­play­ed as in­stant ar­tic­le wi­thin the face­book app, if i click on one. the­re is no way a ty­pi­cal user can get to my site from an in­stant ar­tic­le from wi­thin the face­book app. in­stant ar­tic­les mean com­ple­te mo­bi­le lock-in, once i choo­se to pu­blish in that for­mat. (cor­rec­tion: the­re is a two-click way out of an in­stant ar­tic­le.)

but just as AMP or RSS, in­stant ar­tic­les get the job done: they make my con­tent ea­si­ly ac­ces­si­ble and of­fer a per­fect usa­bi­li­ty and con­sis­ten­cy.

most im­portant­ly, i re­tain con­trol over the con­tent if i use AMP or in­stant ar­tic­les. every ch­an­ge i make to an ar­tic­le gets re­flec­ted soon af­ter i make it. that never re­al­ly work­ed with most RSS ag­gre­ga­tors by the way. even if my RSS feed ch­an­ges that doesn’t show up on feed­ly. not even self­hos­ted RSS-apps like fe­ver or mi­ni­flux care en­ough to im­le­ment that fea­ture.

i de­si­gned my AMP pa­ges so that a click on the ar­tic­le title links to my ca­no­ni­cal url, on my do­main. if i cared en­ough, i could place pro­mi­nent share but­tons or links, that make it easy to share the ori­gi­nal, ca­no­ni­cal url of my ar­tic­le into so­cial me­dia. i think thats pret­ty much con­trol. if i copy the url of an AMP page, or use iOS’ built in sha­ring fea­ture on my pho­ne, this is the url i get:

https://www.goog­le.de/amp/s/wir­res.net/ar­tic­le/amp/10489/1/6/?cli­ent=sa­fa­ri

if i click that link on iOS, sa­fa­ri ac­tual­ly brings me back to the AMP page. on a desk­top brow­ser ho­we­ver, goog­le re­di­rects the link to my ca­no­ni­cal url.

even if i save the page with my pin­board app wid­get to pin­board.in, pin­board — or the pin­board app — fol­low the re­di­rect, be­fo­re ac­tual­ly sa­ving it. it’s not pret­ty, but it works:


i have an­o­ther ques­ti­on: why would an­yo­ne who can build a web­site post images on a site like twit­ter and cede con­trol over tho­se images? why not pu­blish tho­se images on one’s own site and then ag­gre­ga­te them to twit­ter or whe­ree­ver it’s sui­ta­ble? why do peo­p­le pu­blish to in­sta­gram, wi­t­hout re­tai­ning a copy of tho­se images or clips on their own site? why post a vi­deo on you­tube, when the­re are per­fect­ly working play­ers (me­dia­ele­ment, pro­jekk­tor) an­yo­ne can use on their own site?

i would ans­wer that just as i ans­we­red the ques­ti­on why i’d use AMP: to make my musings ea­si­ly ac­ces­se­bi­le. for nost­al­gic re­asons i ac­tual­ly keep co­pies of every in­sta­gram (or in­sta­gram vi­deo) i post on my site. i also keep a copy of many of my tweets (or li­kes) on my site, but it’s not so much about con­trol: it makes it ea­sier for me, to find old stuff that i pos­ted. but most im­portant­ly: i don’t care whe­re peo­p­le look at my stuff, whe­re, on which do­main they read my wri­tin­gs. all i care about is to make it all ea­si­ly ac­ces­si­ble and re­tain some con­trol.