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January 26, 2006

Blawg, blawg, blawg

Mark Liberman doesn’t like the word “blawg.” Denise Howell, who coined it, responds charmingly, and even manages to work in her phrase “doorknob spam.”

Meanwhile, in the Arrested Development we watched last night, there was a reference to Bob Loblaw’s law blog. (Bob Loblaw is just such a good name, but only if you say it aloud.) [Tags: blawg deniseHowell arrestedDevelopment bobLoblaw markLiberman law blogs language doorknob spam]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: blogs Date: January 26th, 2006 dw

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January 18, 2006

Rebecca Blood interviews me

Rebecca has posted an email interview with me. The topic is blogging. [Tags: rebeccaBlood blogging]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: blogs Date: January 18th, 2006 dw

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January 9, 2006

Blogalito

Planned Parenthood is blogging the Alito hearings, although it’s almost 3 pm, the hearings started at noon, and so far they haven’t posted anything. I want my instant blogratification! Plus they’re moderating comments.

Loosen up Planned Parenthood! [Tags: alito blogs plannedParenthood]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: blogs • politics Date: January 9th, 2006 dw

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January 5, 2006

Conferenza goes bloggily free

Conferenza has been a subscription-based newsletter that tells you what you missed at the conferences you wanted to go to but couldn’t. It’s been well-written and fiercely frank.

Now it’s become a free blog, supporting itself by ads. For readers, this is good news because now everyone can read it. And I hope it works out wonderfully for Conferenza. [Tags: conferenza blogs]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: blogs Date: January 5th, 2006 dw

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December 27, 2005

Summarily dooced

Lisa Williams points to a friend who was fired from DeVry University in Westminster, Colorado, for what she had written in her blog. They didn’t warn her, nor did they tell her what they found so offensive. That sucks. [Tags: blogs dooce]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: blogs Date: December 27th, 2005 dw

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December 20, 2005

A thought for my Christian friends as Christmas approaches

Jesus was God’s blog. Discuss amongst yourselves.

Hmm, then I suppose the Talmud would be God’s blog for the Jews.

Anyway, I know I’m off base and off track here. Nevertheless: A Merry Christmas to you and your families. [Tags: blogging christianity judaism]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: blogs Date: December 20th, 2005 dw

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December 19, 2005

Structured blogging

The new structured blogging initiative is interesting and could be important. It establishes simple data standards for some typical types of things blogger blog about: Reviews, events, media, etc.

These types of metadata effort have the same basic dynamics: If they were widely adopted, there would be tremendous system-wide benefits — e.g., computers would be able to find, aggregate and normalize reviews of local restaurants because the phone number fields and ratings fields would be identifiable, etc. But, people don’t adopt metadata standards all that readily, despite the potential benefits. So, the success of structured blogging depends on how easy it is for bloggers and how appealing the benefits are.

Right now, the plug-ins are in beta Do not attempt installing them unless you are unalarmed by instructions such as “mkdir -m 777 ../sbimages” and “You will also want to edit your RSS 2.0 Index and change the<$MTEntryBody encode_xml="1"$> .” It’s pretty straightforward but, at this point (in beta), definitely for early adopters.

The success of structured blogging depends on the blogging software providers making it one-click easy to use the structures. Then we’ll see what happens… [Tags: StructuredBlogging metadata EverythingIsMiscellaneous blogging]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: blogs Date: December 19th, 2005 dw

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December 15, 2005

Boston media on blogging

The Boston Globe reports on local citizen journalism, including Lisa Williams‘ H20Town. Says Lisa: “I have two small kids — you have to put off youthful fantasies of taking off for India. H2otown let me travel deeper rather than farther.”

The Boston Phoenix reports on video blogging. Steve Garfield says: “There are stories to be told. And there are a lot of stories out there.”

[Tags: blogging media LisaWilliams SteveGarfield]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: blogs • media Date: December 15th, 2005 dw

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December 13, 2005

Fictitious character blogs

Nip and Tuck’s serial rapist has his own blog at MySpace. This is not the first time fictitious characters have been given their own blogs, but this one seems to be extraordinarily popular. Grant McCracken points out that “the narrative signal is less predictable, less scrutable, and less controllable. This, in turn, may increase the character’s, and the show’s, powers of engagement.”

It’d be very cool if the character blog survived the show. [Tags: blogs NipAndTuck]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: blogs Date: December 13th, 2005 dw

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December 9, 2005

Hoder & Canadian blogs

After Hoder’s blog was held against him by American Immigration, Canadian Brent Ashley holds it against him in a “Canada: Blog it or leave it!” sort of way.

Michael O’Connor Clarke blogs a paper by Howard Levitt on how Canadian employment law applies to blogging. For example:

Whereas internet use and email use from a personal email account which is done after work hours on a personal computer may not form the basis of a harassment claim because of the reasonable expectation of privacy that exists, because a blog is in the public domain, harassing blog entries made on a person computer, outside of company time, and not using company resources, may still have the potential to result in disciplinary action because they have the potential to create a hostile work environment as there is greater potential that co-workers and management will encounter the harassing material.

Howard isn’t necessarily recommending this; he’s trying to anticipate how court decisions might go. His recommended (and generally quite reasonable) corporate policy on blogging, however, seems to apply also to blogs created or viewed at home, on one’s own time, and includes a prohibition on viewing blogs that contain “inappropriate or offensive material.” Does he really think that that’s a reasonable or enforceable proposal? Or am I misunderstanding him? [Tags: hoder canada MichaelOConnorClarke BrentAshley]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: blogs Date: December 9th, 2005 dw

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