dirge for a file format

Paddy Johnson emailed Google for its input on why it uses one form of web animation over another on its main search page. Predictably they sent her some public relations blather about employing the tools to best serve their users.
How should one frame the question? If they consider animated GIFs an outmoded filetype, which seems to be the consensus among leading edge web developers, they would never say "we chose method X over a GIF because..."
This leading edge consensus seems to have made strong inroads into Johnson's thinking about GIFs. The increasingly nasty discussions we've been having in her blog's comments came in the wake of a show she curated called "Graphics Interchange Format." What started out as a celebration of a plucky file format enjoying a renaissance among creatives (or so it seemed to me as an artist in the show) has become a funeral, with Johnson equating GIF makers to Polaroid film photographers who, sadly, must accept a changing technological landscape.*
Not too long ago Johnson was describing the GIF-heavy site dump.fm as a new and interesting star in the media firmament but after a few weeks of comments about the "shaky position" of the GIF from her editorial assistant and tepid remarks from an artist in the show about creativity surviving in the face of obsolescence (creativity will always survive, we know this), dump comes to resemble a camera club, association of ham radio operators, or other group of vanishing media fetishists. These are not good reasons for including it in a show, or for organizing a show.
But is the leading edge developer consensus that has become so vocal on Johnson's site, chipping away at the case for GIFs, all that much more palatable? This mindset unquestionably accepts HTML5 as an improved standard over previous HTMLs, despite strong disagreements that still exist about it, such as what type of graphic elements it should employ (SVG vs the Apple-initiated "canvas"; the Ogg Theora video spec vs the Apple-endorsed h.264).
Dump is interesting because it created a new kind of social space online, for display and exchange of web-friendly media. The preference for GIFs there is noteworthy but to the leading edge developer mentality, GIF makers are some strange "tribe" whose motives are mysterious and ultimately a bit suspect. Reason after reason was given for why GIFs are preferred, only to have them rudely swatted aside (of course company X didn't allow GIFs, what, they should look like MySpace?) leaving us with the slightly pathetic rationales of nostalgia and resistance to change.

*Update: Glum as this sounds, it raises an interesting point, addressed in a follow-up post.

netiquette, what a concept

Years ago I used to write letters to the newspapers criticizing their art coverage and critics; they were certainly as mean as anything Paddy Johnson's commenters have thrown my way lately. (A few were published!) The difference between my salvos and those of the Johnson posse was the context: I was complaining about actual gatekeepers with the power to decide what hundreds of thousands of people read and saw. Questioning the legitimacy of their opinions had the potential to change the dialogue.

What is at stake in telling a blogger not to link to another blogger? I suppose it's flattering that people think I need to be sidelined through non-linkage but this seems like a vestige of the print era.

Surely a better solution to the problem of a voice you don't like is to offer an alternative. The power differential between yourself and "a net guy with too much cred" is nowhere near as great as it was twenty years ago between a reader and a journalist. If you (or your commenters of choice) have something to say, readers will be drawn in those directions (via the buzz cloud!).

I am an "indie." I don't work for an institution, and have mostly ducked mainstream writing gigs the past 10 years. Since I have no gatekeeper position, it's just petty to opine whether my ideas are better or worse now than they were. If you don't like what I write, don't read it, but trying to convince other bloggers not to link to me is just being stinky for no reason.

I appreciate the frequent linkage from Paddy's blog but lately it's coming with a price. Her comments are blossoming into hatefests where any n00bie with a chip is allowed, even encouraged to vent loud and long on my shortcomings. I think of the scene in Time Bandits where Robin Hood redistributes trinkets and goblets to the poor, accompanied by a hard punch in the face from one of the Merrie Men.

I will continue to link to Paddy, and assure her that if I had commenters I would ban or castigate the first one that attacked her as a person.