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Twitter just rolled lists out, give them some time.
Why should people be allowed to remove themselves from other people's lists?
Perhaps they shouldn't, but those lists shouldn't be immediately visible from their profile. I don't think anyone wants to have "Giant Douchebags" listed on their lists page.
The author seems to think that lists should be their own accounts (with multiple owners), but the purpose of lists is different: they allow a user to organize their (too busy to make sense of) feed into subfeeds that are more manageable.

My main problem with the current implementation is that I can't view all my lists at the same time, side by side (so I still use my own quick-and-dirty Python app to do that).

The author's point about being put in lists named "big fat hairy men" is quite valid though, I think the lists should be private (or at least not visible on the listed user's info page).

I think that if you block a user and then unblock them you will be removed from their list, but they can still follow you. And if you really get annoyed by being on their "big fait hairy men" list, then you can always block them.

I wonder what will happen when someone starts listing people as "Criminals"? Is it libel to brand someone with a list? :)

Is it libel to brand someone with a list?

I should think so. Not sure how it works with more or less anonymous accounts though, I guess it's not libel unless it can be linked to a specific person by those reading the list.

I'm guessing that most people check which lists they're in. I do. (I'm only in 11 lists so it was easy for me.) If so, the point about the viral loop doesn't stand.
I agree with some of the statements of the blog. However it misses one important point in how people use lists. For example I follow around 300 people, some of them are very noisy some times but eventually they post something interesting, so I feel that the noisy is an acceptable price to pay. Nevertheless, because of the overflow of information, many times I miss posts of quiet people that generally have something important to say. Then, lists come to the rescue. I just put those very interesting people in a list that I can check for time to time. If people follow my list(s), they give the authority that I created it(them)or whatever I do not really care. For me that is just marketing trying to convince of the value of twitter. For me, the value is finding good content with less effort; and I think the lists are helping on it.

Note: I use also tweetdeck that has a similar concept, which I found very useful. Perhaps that is why I liked the lists concept.