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Salon Blog watch

September 3, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

On Fitznseizures, Pat Christensen offers a keenly observed saga of a doomed unionization drive at a small outlying newspaper bureau.
In Playing With My Food And Other Things, Paul Hinrichs is chronicling culinary exploits, including roast tomatoes, fresh pasta, and sauvignon blanc for breakfast(!).
Maxine: Talking mannequin heads. A new art form?
Unrelated Disney asks, “Are Republicans and Democrats living in different universes?” Interesting poll numbers. Widely divergent.
Radio Free Blogistan links to a site that lets you test whether any particular Web site is being filtered in China. (Salon apparently is not.)

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Get your news here

September 3, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

John Robb posted this incredibly useful list (for users of Radio Userland) of news feeds from professional news organizations that you can subscribe to in one click with Radio.

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Syndication perturbation

August 30, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

Salon blogger J.H. Farr was upset to find that the entire current contents of his blog were mirrored on another site that picked up the RSS syndication feed from Radio and reposted the contents.

I understand where he’s coming from: He’s a writer trying to build a career, trying to get people to pay for his stuff some of the time, and I think he feels like he’s being ripped off. (We contacted that other site — I’m not linking to them because I don’t particularly like their approach either — and they’ve removed Farr’s stuff.)

RSS syndication of blog postings is mostly used by Radio and other blogging software tools as an alternate distribution of your material — Radio collects these in its “news aggregator,” and that’s what lets you grab a post from another blogger and, with one click, repost it with your own comments. It’s one of the backbones of this new Web publishing model and in general, I think, it’s a great thing. (Here’s Dave Winer’s explanation of how it works and why it’s a good thing.)

I also think that, legally and morally, it falls in the category of “fair use” — which means that it becomes increasingly more problematic when others take and reuse more and more material. In the case of Farr and other blogs that are reposted on this other site, the postings are resupplied by a third party without any value added — there are no new comments from the site’s proprietor — and in fact with value subtracted, since many of the features of the original blogger’s site (layout, comments, whatever else the blogger has done to personalize the page) are gone.

Radio lets you turn this syndication on and off, so it’s ultimately up to each blogger how to deal with this issue. (I’m also pretty sure that you can reduce the amount of content in your syndication feed under “Prefs: RSS Configuration.) I tend to feel that the Net is pretty good at self-correcting these kinds of problems. The site in question is, in truth, not a particularly great one. I doubt it gets a lot of traffic and I don’t think it will have much impact on anyone’s life.

PS If you want to keep your RSS feed going with Radio but want to truncate the posts (providing only the first sentence) there’s some instructions here.

Filed Under: Blogging, Salon Blogs

Salon Blog watch

August 21, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

Andrew Bayer has some interesting thoughts about blogs in response to Steven Levy’s Newsweek piece: Since most blogs aren’t anonmyous, the ideal that you can be totally honest and open runs into the inevitable wall when people start to criticize their own companies. In the utopian scenario, even the CEOs become bloggers, everyone’s in the same boat, and the blog-space becomes an open forum for companies to work out their problems. Today, though, there are very few companies that are willing to do so in full public view. And the legal issues for public companies become pretty gnarly.
Kat Donohue has a passel of uses for a pashmina shawl.
Toby’s Political Diary imagines the scene at Dubya’s ranch as news of the Iraqi embassy takeover in Berlin gets a little garbled in transmission.
Recently on Ken Schellenberg’s book blog: Reviews of a Miles Davis reader and “The Secret Life of Bees.”

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Salon Blog watch

August 11, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

Family Circus gives “cute” a bad name, says David of No Code – Comfort Care Only (the blog’s title is explained here). I used to feel that way too, but Bill Griffith (who creates Zippy the Pinhead) opened my eyes. Check out the classic Bill Griffith/Bil Keane collaborations.
Toby Sackton reminds us that the U.S. imprisons more citizens than any other nation in the world. The Economist says the U.S. “is beginning to look a little like early Australia.”

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Salon Blog watch

August 9, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

Interesting things are happening in the paranoia-laden office lanscape of Plan B. I’m still trying to figure out whether this “blognovel” is more Kafka or Kornbluth, but I’m enjoying it.
Mike Pence (Dances With Cactus) has a touching imaginary dialogue with his childhood self.
David Harris commemorates the centenary of the birth of physicist Paul Dirac with links to these very cool posters.
Kat Donohue (She’s Actual Size) provides a perspective on the “hacker hag.”
John Farr celebrates his birthday

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Salon Blog watch

August 8, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

David Harris has details of today’s report that the old “eight glasses of water a day” standard is scientifically unsupported. I heard the scientist behind this interviewed on NPR this morning. It’s just a myth, a bit of common knowledge that got repeated so many times everyone assumed it was solid science.
Unrelated Disney is offering Critiques of Editorials, along with an interesting look at how big recent revisions to the GDP numbers have been.
Adam Lasnik has taken my enthusiasm for They Might Be Giants lyrics as a cue and pushed it over the edge of absurdity!
Christian says his blogging time is cutting into his time to read Salon. There’s always cutting back on your sleep…

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Salon Blog watch

August 7, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

Ken Dow recommends a free anti-spam tool, PostArmor.
Sam Bristol (Your Mileage May Vary) thinks “Let’s roll” is a dumb slogan.
Charly Z (Driver 8) comments on the ironies of corporate synergy.

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Salon Blog watch

August 5, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

James Robinson (Bangpathology) blames Al Gore’s policies for the privatization of the Internet and suggests that only government can be trusted to do a decent job at building reliable infrastructure.
On filchyboy: a journal of madness and survival, “John the Maiden” is writing deeply personal letters to his daughter — about his breakup with her mother, his anger at his father-in-law, and other family conflicts — in public. “I am intensely private yet believe the only way to be honestly responsible is through a sacrifice of the private.” Is it true confessions, or a literary game? No way I could say for sure, but it’s more proof that blogging’s not just about arguing over Iraq.
Miguel Octavio is blogging from Venezuela with thoughts on the phrase “Banana Republic” and on Argentina’s economic woes.
Andrew Bayer reviews David Bowie, on tour again.

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Salon Blog watch

August 4, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

On Radio Free Blogistan, Christian Crumlish writes of MSNBC’s new blog initiative, “I suppose Salon Blogs are to Table Talk as this new MSNBC blogspace will be to their bulletin boards.” Big differences: (1) MSNBC is shutting down their bulletin boards, whereas Salon has kept Table Talk open; (2) As far as I can tell, all MSNBC plans to do is start a big index of blogs run by its own pundits (there are a half dozen of these) and other people across the Web. If they are planning a “start your own blog” hosting scheme as Salon has, that hasn’t been in any of the accounts to date. We’ll see soon enough.
Chris McMahon offers a punk-rock aesthetic, and some good advice, for newbie bloggers: It is indeed all about “doing it ourselves.”
Douglas Anders (The Agora) likes Robert Reich’s new book, “I’ll Be Short.”

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

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