See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persistent_Uniform_Resource_Loc... also, this is a "protocol"
purly -> tinyurl -> baconized purly
I cannot add a URL that does not have "http" I cannot type a URL that has "https"
Would be nice to be able to add https adresses and add them in any form.
Also an idea, make it as a web browser plugin so I can change the url in the brower and add it to my link library. Then it's even better. I don't like detours.
Question, what happen if I prul.ly a Url once then the content changes and I want to save the new content as well (Different content, same url)?
Anyway, I really like the concept, keep going!
Annelie @detectify
Perhaps Libya is as reliable as anywhere else in the world - it's all a matter of perspective. Ask The Pirate Bay guys how confident they would be using a .com. Still, the idea of putting a service that offers 'permanence' on a domain so far out of reach seems like a bad idea to me.
http://arstechnica.com/business/2010/10/libya-beginning-to-p...
It might be better packaged as something blogs and forums can automagically implement for a fee instead of trying to make money off ads.
The original idea was just to provide a consistent link which would fallback to a cache when necessary and back to the original content for reddit/hn type traffic. Then it made sense to do some paywall busting and readability functionality on top of it and those features overshadowed the original concerns.
I did some research ahead of time and did come across purl.org, but had no idea about WebCite and a couple of the others. Yes, my project is basically the same as those.
Does this work as a single point of failure company? Who knows, but it's been fun.
I'll get around to caching the full content of the destinations at time of purl.ly creation next, and serve that if google is missing it.
eg make a purl for http://www.reddit.com/top/?sort=top&t=hour which generates http://purl.ly/www.reddit.com/top/?sort=top&t=hour which gives a 404