URL Shortener tr.im To Go Community-Owned, Open Source 145
Death Metal sends word that the owners of URL-shortening service tr.im are in the process of releasing the project's source code and moving it into the public domain. This comes after reports that the service may shut down and that they were entertaining offers from prospective buyers. From a post on the site's blog: "It is our hope that tr.im, being an excellent URL shortener in its own right, can now begin to stand in contrast to the closed twitter/bit.ly walled garden: it will become a completely open solution owned and operated by the community for the benefit of the entire community." They plan to complete the transition by September 15th, and the code will be released under the MIT license. In addition, "tr.im will offer all link-map data associated with tr.im URLs to anyone that wants it in real-time. This will involve a variety of time-based snapshots of aggregated destination URLs, the number of tr.im URLs created for any given destination URL, and aggregate click data."
Slow news day? (Score:3, Funny)
Death Metal sends word that the owners of URL-shortening service tr.im are in the process of releasing the project's source code and moving it into the public domain.
So?
Re:URL Shortners Are Bad (Score:1, Funny)
http://th.is/
Re:Step 1 (Score:4, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
There are some who call me... (Score:5, Funny)
t.im
?
so cute (Score:3, Funny)
Re:URL Shortners Are Bad (Score:2, Funny)
Initially, URL shorteners were a solution to a problem nobody had. Fortunately, Twitter came along and created a problem!