Categories
Personal Publishing

More about the onlineshop.us.com comment spamming debacle…

Another response has come through to me via Cory from the people at Amazon Associates about the comment spam problem I was having a while back. It’s actually fairly interesting how little response I’ve personally had from Amazon (ie. none), and how much response Cory’s e-mail to Jeff Bezos has engendered (ie. lots). Anyway – I can’t fault how helpful they’re trying to be. An excerpt from today’s e-mail reads as follows:

We have contacted the Associate with the Website mentioned in your email. After further investigation, it appears the spam you received may not have come from the owner of this site. Unfortunately, there is no way to confirm the origin of this spam based on the information provided in your email.

In order to identify the culprit and attempt to put an end to this type of activity, we are asking for your assistance in identifying the origin of this spam. If you have any further information you can provide, such as the IP address listed in your log files etc., we ask that you please forward this information to us.

So anyway, I sent them a list from my MT-Blacklist logs of about a third of the 370-ish comment spams that I’ve received from onlineshop.us.com, but I’ve unfortunately deleted the original comments. So here’s an appeal to you guys out there – if any of you have been comment-spammed by the onlineshop.us.com people could you send an e-mail about it (and a copy of any logs or comment-alert e-mails or whatever other evidence you might have that might help pin down the culprits) to associates [at] amazon [dot] com. There’s still a good chance we could nail these bastards and stop them making money at our expense…

Categories
Personal Publishing

Let's help Amazon shut-down comment-spammers…

From an e-mail I sent to Amazon today:

I don’t know if this is the right e-mail address to contact you on, but I just thought I should mention that onlineshop.us.com – a site that is using the Amazon affiliates scheme – has started comment-spamming thousands of weblogs.

Today I received no fewer than fifty automated comments on my site from them – each containing dozens of URLs they want to get higher in Google – each one a site that uses Amazon affiliate links to get money. I imagine I’m one of thousands of webloggers in a similar situation. As I’m sure you can imagine, comment spammers piss off a hell of a lot of people, and bring Amazon’s good name into disrepute by association. From looking through your terms and conditions I notice that you demand that associates obey laws regarding marketing spam, and as a result I imagine that you would consider the unsolicited and automated posting of marketing materials without any way to ‘unsubscribe’ whatsoever as (at least) highly inappropriate. The people these individuals are targeting are also highly web-savvy individuals who are more likely than most to be regular Amazon customers as well. I imagine this gives you even more reason to be concerned.

If you could ban the person concerned from your programme for violation of terms I would be extremely grateful – as I’m sure would hundreds of other people who have sites suffering abuse from this individual/organisation. I’m assuming that there’s probably a way that you could refuse to pay accumulated revenues as well, and I would ask you to seriously consider this as a way of directly hurting people who try to abuse their relationship with Amazon and with the general public. Perhaps if they realise that there’s no financial incentive any more for behaving like the bottom-feeding scum that they are, they might change their ways and consider getting proper jobs.

Yours,
Tom Coates

Have you had comment spam from an Amazon affiliate? Help get rid of it by sending Amazon an e-mail today. If they refuse to do anything about it, then there’s always the possibility of a boycott of affiliate links or a refusal to buy or promote anything from them. Hopefully it won’t come to that though – I’m sure Amazon will see this as a problem…

Categories
Personal Publishing

Off the top of my head: linklog refactoring required…

So Paul Hammond created webkit2png which is a lovely little command-line script for a Mac that goes and grabs a full screenshot of a web-page – full length on the page. It can also do a variety of other whatsits and hoojis which are really cool. So what I want someone to do now is to make a little app that sits your Mac which you can stick your remaindered linkloggery into – a little app that:

  1. Is templatable;
  2. Posts the links to del.icio.us and any other link aggregation place (damned if I’m going to leave all my lovely posts on someone else’s system without hooking into mine);
  3. Grabs a screenshot of the page concerned (can be overwritten if you’re linking to something random);
  4. Posts the whole she-bang to your linklog (complete with lovely little screencap) via the various weblog APIs;
  5. If someone could make it some kind of plug-in for my browser or make it triggerable via an AppleScript or something, that would be nice too.

To be honest, I’m not sure this is quite what I want, but it’s becoming clear to me that the area of the linklog is in enormous need of some refactoring and rationalisation work. I don’t really think it’ll sort itself out until one or more of the weblog companies actually puts in some templates and structures designed to support it directly, but I’m not sure how likely that is to happen…

Categories
Personal Publishing Social Software

Sharing multiple digests could be kinja's killer app…

So I looked at Kinja and I was pretty impressed. I looked at it and saw something clean and simple that would hopefully appeal to people who find the morass of weblogs out there to be overwhelming. I thought it would appeal to those who didn’t know where to start. It wasn’t perfect, of course – not by any stretch of the imagination. For a start, the first beta didn’t really make a clear distinction between the digests that you could make and the digests that were editorially chosen by the kinja team. It didn’t seem to know what it was there to do for you. But after some fiddling an essence started to emerge and I started to see it for what I thought it was – a nice little simple application that would appeal to the newbies…

So basically, I thought it was polished and useful but I didn’t think it was interesting. But the funny thing is that I think I’ve changed my mind. And the reason I’ve changed my mind is because of the tiniest feature that I didn’t even notice the first few times I used it – it’s not the fact that I can create my own little version of Haddock Blogs that’s interesting, it’s the fact that I can chuck it around to all my friends. I can link to it like this and – if I wanted to – I could stick it at the end of my blogroll so that other people could play with it too. I could e-mail it to someone, or IM it or even just tell someone my user name and have them go and find it.

This is the feature that I think we were supposed to catch on right from the beginning – or was somewhere in people’s minds in the earliest iterations of the concept – but has kind of been hidden by accretion, simplification and implementational problems. The message has become lost – because Kinja’s not about making the collections, it’s about making collections that we can do things with, collections with handles that can be picked up and thrown around and shown to people to explain or illustrate things.

Nearly a year ago I started writing a little post about RSS aggregators that went a little off the rails. It was supposed to be a tiny little post that spiralled and spiralled until it became impossible to finish. It kind of sat in my drafts bin, where it remains, even though I’m basically going to rip it off wholeheartedly for the rest of this enormous rant.

The draft post was written shortly after voidblogs launched – a site kind of based around the Haddock Blogs model of pulling out a time-stamp and a summary each time a post is made and then stringing them together in a webloggish format to generate a perpetually updating metaloggy thing. Around that time the new design of the the UK weblogs aggregator relaunched. I found all of these things really interesting and came to the conclusion that they were interesting not only because people liked the specific weblogs in the list and wanted to keep track of them, but more importantly because they were a way to mirror in nearly-real-time the mental life of a group to members of that group. They could reflect both ways – they revealed the compiler and they could reveal the group to itself as well.

Which made me think. A lot of people were talking then (and are still talking now) about how to use weblogs in business and education. They’ve all been working on the principle that a weblog is first and foremost a piece of social software that allows and facilitates collboration. But while it’s certainly true that weblog culture in the wild has evolved these groups, it’s less obvious that this is necessarily the fundamental structuring principle of what a weblog ‘is’. In fact I’m going to go further and state something that should probably be obvious to everyone by now: Giving a group of people weblogs does not mean that they’ll necessarily start connecting with each other through them.

First and foremost, at the smallest possible scale, a weblog is not social software. Instead it is a point in cyberspace from which to speak – it’s a representation of our very self – our voice. At the most very basic of levels, a weblog isn’t just part of a commmunity that shares and interacts, it’s an individual voice as yet unconnected. It takes time for the second-order properties to emerge – and when they do so it’s not as a rapid consolidation or phase-shift between stable states of ‘singular publishing’ and ‘many-to-many communication’. Instead familiarity is gradually gained, recurrently interesting and communicative webloggers become friends, people gradually find their communicative voices.

So the question becomes – when we talk about weblogging around educational projects or work-related schemes – given that a weblog won’t automatically make them part of a creative collaborative community – how do we get people to think in terms of their engagement with others. And how do we get them to that stage quickly? How do we help them use the weblog to express themeselves and create notes and write thoughts while simultaneously ramping up the speed at which they start interacting with each other around these issues.

Which brings us right back to where we started. In my opinion – rather than setting up a central weblog for a course or a project in which people can post their thoughts only as comments, the simplest and most effective way would be to have something like haddock blogs or the uk weblog aggregator or a kinja group digest sitting in the middle in between all the participants. Let that be the one stop shop for zeitgeist measuring and interest following and in-public annotation or discussion. Let that be the place for representing the community at a glance, to see the range of interests people have (even serendipitously the interests they have outside the specifics of the course / working environment that you’re trying to represent). Let that be the place to see what they’re getting excited by…

And hence to kinja… Please, please, please Mr Denton – don’t try and sell me weblog-management. Don’t try to make it easy to replicate the functionality of my RSS aggregator. No – your killer app is this sharing of digests, this creation of really user-friendly throw-aroundable clumps of groupness. That’s the the core of the enterprise. That’s where the fun is, that’s the playlist-making, that’s the mix-tape, that’s the place where self-defining groups can make their home and that’s where I think the future development should move (and the marketing effort). Let people make more than one digest – let them make dozens – let it represent their church group or their anthropology class or their social software circle. Let them share them – even badge them prominently so that they seem co-owned. If you do all that, then Kinja might not just be a simple app for the newbies in the audience but a project with surprising and long-lasting power. There could be something really interesting here after all, just in a slightly unexpected direction…

Categories
Personal Publishing

Why do bloggers kill kittens?

A couple of days ago I posted a rather aggressive link through to 2lmc the other day complaining about their post Most read blogs least original which cited an article from Wired News called Warning: Blogs Can Be Infectious (itself quoting HP’s Blog Epidemic Analyzer – I could go on). My link read: “I’ve noticed that people are much less intellectually rigorous when they read articles that they agree with. Case in point: Most read blogs least original, says blech 2lmc”.

Since posting that, Paul and I have been having an extremely civilised discussion behind the scenes about some of the issues surrounding that article and our individual responses to it. I won’t post his e-mail to me for obvious reasons, but I wrote such a lot in response (and I think there’s enough stuff in it worthy or argument if not agreement) that I thought I’d post it up here to see how far out on a limb I was. I’ve added in some hyperlinks, edited a little for clarity and extended a couple of sentences here and there to make it readable in a larger context. Comments welcome as ever.

Dear Paul,

Firstly I should apologise for the link-text – I was halfway through writing a longer post addressing your post when I got distracted by work. When I came back to it, with the initial enthusiasm gone, I couldn’t motivate myself to finish it. I had another seventy tabs open in Safari that were squealing for attention, so I thought I’d linklog my response instead. It came out a little more snipey than I’d intended, and for that I apologise.

You say in your response that with regards to my site, you enjoy some of my larger posts but find my linklog slow on the uptake. I can’t say that I’m surprised at the latter – my linklog is exceptionally slow on the uptake. It’s that slow because I stockpile things that I’d like to write about in greater detail and then – when I realise that I’m not going to have time – I end up posting them on the linklog. I have some links stashed away in a bookmarks folder called “Backlog” that are at least four or five months old that will probably end up on the linklog at some point once I’ve finally accepted they’re not going to have the fuller treatment they deserve.

First things first, let me admit that I’d like to be the first one to post all of those links (or at least up in the first few). Certainly as an aspiration, to be first in the flow of sexy fat links would be glorious. But I want to make it clear that even if I can’t get them out that quickly, I still see considerable value in getting them out way after the fact.

My reasons are manifold. Firstly, we get straightaway down to the distinction between weblog as written for an audience versus weblog as written for me. Now clearly it’s not just for me – I’ve have to change what I write on occasion because there are people out there reading (my mother, my brother, some potential employers) who I have to be aware of. I don’t write in the same way as I did when I started. Then I could bitch about people I didn’t like and talk about my life without feeling particularly exposed. I was talking to strangers with no impact on my life. Now I’m not. But while my weblog isn’t any longer ‘just’ for me, it’s definitely not just for an audience either. I use my weblog as a searchable archive – a repository of things that I’ve seen and read and that I thought were interesting, I use it to record thoughts that I think might be useful and that otherwise I’ll forget. I use it as a notepad, as a chronicle, as a place to store my photographs. There’s an interplay between trying to be fresh for other people and not really giving a damn about other people. I think this comes back to my understanding of a weblog as a representation of a person online – an avatar with a voice. A self-representation is about being both true to yourself and knowing how to self-edit in different circumstances. That’s what a weblog is to me.

Secondly I operate with an understanding of my links as a kind of microcontent vote (also here and here). It’s the idea that by linking to something I say, “Yes – this deserves some of your attention – this is a good thing”, and that the more sites that do that the more attention something will get. So by voting for something I like (alongside dozens of other people) that thing becomes incrementally more visible in Google, Blogdex, Technorati, daypop. Also, in turn, those people who don’t read a lot of other weblogs but read mine also get exposed to it. And those other people who have weblogs may choose to pick up that link and post it to, thus exposing more people to it in turn – putting their votes behind it too. Massive link propogation (as far as I’m concerned) is not a bad thing at all – it’s how the web determines what’s worth reading.

Now the other question posed in your piece is why people would come to a site like plasticbag.org or kottke.org or BoingBoing when most of the links on those sites come from other places. Well firstly, I’d like to state up front that I can’t comment on where Jason or the BoingBoing crew get their links from. In my case, yes, it’s certainly true that the links I publish have often been posted somewhere else first (either because I’m slow to publish or because I found those links elsewhere), but I want to make it clear that even in these circumstances there’s you can characterise that behaviour in very different ways: is it mining for links as content on the one hand or is it collating the good things you’ve read on the other? I’d say it was more of the latter.

With regards to why people read our sites, I imagine to an extent it’s just because of the time we’ve been around and carrying readers with us since we started. (At this stage I should probably state out loud that I’m nowhere near in the same league as Jason and BoingBoing by the way – they’re a full order of magnitude ‘larger’ than plasticbag.org). I would also imagine that they read us because on occasion our commentary or original work is valuable enough that people are prepared to read all the other guff we write or link to as well.

But to be honest, I think the question is a bit of a red herring. First and foremost weblogs started off as carefully-selected links (maybe with commentary) to a whole range of other sites. There is an element to weblogs which is nothing but aggregatory and filtery in nature. Pretty much all weblogs (including 2lmc) find their links either from mainstream news sources, or their daily searches, or from some mailing list somewhere or from another weblog that they read regularly. That’s absolutely normal behaviour. I suspect, then, that the main reason that people read our sites is because we’re relatively consistent in the selection of links that the people who read our sites find interesting, wherever those links originally emerged from (and – in fact – however old they might be). To an extent (and this may seem tautologous), popularity has got to be to some degree correlating with how interested people are in what you produce.

Which brings me to the question of originality. My weblog grew up online with ‘via’ links on weblogs. That was the way we did things. In fact I vaguely remember us starting to use them because at the time the commodity of a good link seemed the most valuable that any weblog had. As time has passed, I think the culture has changed a bit – and there are all kinds of reasons for that. Personally, I no longer often know where I found a link. I’ll open up dozens of tabs from a cursory reading of my NetNewsWire subscriptions and then close down the windows that aren’t particularly interesting to me. Then I’ll store the pages that are interesting until such a point that I’m able to give them the attention I think they deserve. In that process I often simply lose track of where I found them. Moreover, the most practical structure of a linklog in my opinion is – well – a link. Nothing more. That seems to be the simplest and clearest way of referencing something, and as a result there’s not even always a space for adding in a via link or a reference to the originating source.

In fact as time has gone by, I’ve increasingly come to the opinion that links are everywhere and that referencing where you found the link alone is no longer quite as necessary or as useful as it once was. When I know the source and when I have the ability to link to it, I’ll still make that reference, but nowadays I’m more interested in useful links to useful material rather than just a reference to the person who told me about it. I look for commentary – something I can actually cite that had a useful contribution to make on those links concerned (however short a line that might be). A lot of other people may disagree with this as a strategy – and god knows it’s not something that I’m entirely unconflicted about myself. But I think if you consider that (as is most often the case) the originating sites are linked to anyway – “blog-rolled” in my sidebar – then I’m not sure it’s as big as anxiety-producer as it might be.

[Quick sideline: Andrew Orlowski gives webloggers hell for what he considers ‘circle-jerk’ or ‘meaningless self-promoting cliquey’ inter-linking or whatever, while other people who are not fans of weblogs and weblog-culture take us to task for not doing those things because then it’s an elitist culture within webloggery.]

With regard to the article at Wired and my slightly barbed comment that “I’ve noticed that people are much less intellectually rigorous when they read articles that they agree with”, what I think is interesting about the Wired article (and quite a lot of the stuff that’s written on the HP site) is that it’s far from immediately obvious how many ‘stolen’ links exist, how accurate their linguistic analysis is (versus what the proportion of links use headlines or site-names and reference material that comes into the public arena at specific times, like – for example – a news story), or whether this kind of behaviour is limited to specific groups or cultures online or is rife without weblogs as a whole. Nor is it clear whether or not the originating sites are linked elsewhere on the weblogger’s page. This is not to say that I dispute the results, but that I wait to be convinced that these questions have answers that could support the kind of headline, “Most read blogs least original”, which really does appear to be almost Daily Mail-like in its bluntness and lack of any qualification. I have a feeling that the originating study will eventually demonstrate a rather more nuanced and qualified version of the picture – one with fewer value judgments imposed up on it. Because at the moment (Why do bloggers kill kittens), I suspect that they’ve been taken rather out of context…

Yours, Tom Coates

Addendum: Danah Boyd on Blog Attribution

Categories
Personal Publishing

On DowningStreetSays.com…

So here’s a useful and interesting application of weblog-style publishing using Movable Type: downingstreetsays.org – yet again demonstrating how useful it is to have a relatively standard format for publishing date-organised sites. The site contains transcripts of the daily briefings that Downing Street give to journalists – in itself profoundly useful – but also opens them up for further debate around webloggia by giving them a fixed reliable and stable URL, having built-in comments and even building in trackbacks.

So far – apart from the beautiful and conceptually appropriate logo – the design is pretty sparse. But it’s also highly functional – in fact the only UI/IA/interface things I can see that I’m not totally convinced about are the URLs and the implementation of trackback – both of which look like MT defaults. The URL structure at the moment uses basic MT post-numbers (rather than title or date) as the basis for the file name, which works relatively well if nothing goes wrong, but don’t work terribly brilliantly if you’re forced to reimport entries at a later date. If that happens, you end up having to purge your MT installation’s database completely, as otherwise it’ll number all the reimported posts sequentially up from the last post added (ie. post one of 300 ends up being reimported as entry 301, with a URL to match). There are any number of articles on sorting out MT URL structures so I won’t go into any more detail at this pointl.

My issue with the implementation of Trackbacks is – I think – more rooted in aesthetics than usability. I’m probably alone in thinking that having a separate page for the Trackbacks is an error and that the URL to ping to shouldn’t be made visible (but instead reached only via autodiscovery). Personally I consider the overt description of Trackback jargony and confusing, a bit of usability no-no and basically unnecessary, but (from what I see on other people’s sites) I may be alone in believing that. Again, I don’t think I need to go too far into my reasons in this post. I’ve written a lot about this stuff before: A microcampaign to turn on autodiscovery).

Otherwise, I have to confess that I think this is a bit of a first-stage triumph for the mysociety crew and is exactly the kind of thing they should be doing – simple, clear sites using mostly off-the-shelf technology to do valuable and constructive things that add to the value and utility of the web (particularly with regard to public service matters) but which probably wouldn’t be natural projects for individuals in their bedrooms. Well done to all involved.

Categories
Journalism Personal Publishing Politics

ETech Adjunct: Weblogs and Journalism…

I’m watching the panel on the role of journalism as part of the Digital Democracy and it’s the first teach-in of the day that feels like a teach-in. Nonetheless, I’m not sure that I’m finding it terribly useful – probably because I’ve thinking about the issues from a slightly different perspective at the moment. Which reminded me that a few weeks ago I got an e-mail from Kabir Chhibber asking about my views of journalism and weblogs generally, which I responded to with a whole range of thoughts. I was thinking about neatening it up and presenting it online in a more clearly worked-through form, but perhaps this is as good a time as any… So what follows is a rather rough and badly-written assemblage of replies to a series of question. Take from it what you will:

First of all, could you reflect on the following two quotes by Salam Pax? Do you think they are acurate? How do have any experiences which demonstrate or contradict his statements?

‘I think that I can tell after this experience what, for me, is the difference between a journalist and a blogger is. A journalist has to actively run after things, a blogger just watches (and lives his life) and takes things as they come.’

Salam Pax is an insightful and courageous writer, but I think (as he says himself) he’s talking more about his own experience of being a weblogger rather than anything intrinsic to weblogging in general. Certainly it’s my belief that the vast majority of weblogs are a representation of a person’s voice and that-as such-what they write about will be about their opinions, experiences and the events that occur around them, but I don’t agree that it’s necessarily quite such a passive experience. There are webloggers – many webloggers – who at one or more points in their online lives have decided to investigate something in more depth and have become for a short period of time amateur (by which I mean ‘for the love’) journalists – seeking out information, researching material and running after things. In a sense, then, some are born journalists (Dan Gilmore, perhaps), some achieve the status of journalists, and many others have journalism thrust upon them.

“The point about blogging is that it has to be very personal. Bloggers, you always have to remember when you are reading them, do not act like journalists. You’re just talking about your life and your opinions. You’re not writing something for a big newspaper where someone is going to take it as fact. Always be suspicious.”

Again I can see what he means – and it’s representative of the vast majority of weblogs out there-but I don’t think it tells the whole story. Again I think it comes down to weblogs being representations of people. If you met someone in the street for the first time, you wouldn’t believe their opinions. But if you had built up a relationship with someone over time, you would evaluate how trustworthy they were, how much you believed them, what you thought of their opinions generally. It’s almost exactly the same thing that happens with the press – journalists get themselves associated with brands that say ‘we fact-check’ and ‘we have a reputation to protect’ because individuals have come to have a relationship with those brands ‘they have come to trust them over time. And yet how many of us would still take the word of a close friend who had seen the events first hand over the reportage in a newspaper?

I think it’s clear that there are differences between journalists and webloggers. The first main difference is that webloggers aren’t associated with a brand and with a support structure that is designed to communicate the idea that facts have been checked, that the journalist is trustworthy and that the news they are reporting is of legitimate interest. That’s the first function of professional organisation and it’s based on the fact that we can’t know the reputation, skill-set or expertise of every journalist that we might encounter in the world. To an extent of course, this is changing-knowing webloggers means that you can start to evaluate their expertise-but I think it’s unlikely that there’s any real threat of all professional journalists being deposed from their positions of authority by this tendency alone.

The second difference is a nice easy one. Organisations with money that can support a number of journalists can afford to provide access to a variety of different research tools that individuals don’t have at their disposal. At the moment of course individuals have more access to more information than ever before (via the internet) but there remain feeds of data that are simply outside the scope of individuals to get access to. This includes photo libraries, research databases and detailed archives. This may change in time too.

The third function of professional journalism that can’t be met by the weblogsphere is that it’s designed to deal with a massive scale differential between the number of SUBJECTS of news (small) and the number of people who could possibly want to ask them questions (enormous). By this I mean that not every journalist or weblogger in the land can go to a preview screening of a film, or be in the White House press room or talk to the police at a crime scene or be invited to product launches. These things have limited space available – they are journalistic bottlenecks. And these bottlenecks are resolved by selection – the most established and trustworthy journalists are invited to participate in these events because they can communicate to the largest amount of people. And that’s never going to change. We might see a few webloggers transition into celebrity – there’s no doubt that if this happens then they’ll end up invited into these kinds of gathering, but for the most part there’s always going to be a distinction between the masses and the few when it comes to one-on-one access to certain primary sources.

Your blog started off quite personal and has become more political as it (and you) developed. I have seen this in other blogs too. Why do you think this is?

Basically I think it’s a question of scale. Things you feel comfortable talking about to a small number of people feel more and more awkward when more people start reading your site – particularly when they start being people you know in a professional context. At a certain point you end up moving from writing about personal stuff into writing about things you care about. In my case that’s ended up being a mix of films, politics, social software and technology stuff. It’s still my voice, it’s just not talking about who I have or haven’t been dating.

What do you think about the current high-profile of weblogs? What kind of quality is out there – do you think it matches the NY Times or The Guardian?

I love the fact that weblogs have been getting such a lot of attention – and more particularly I like the fact that the bubble hasn’t burst yet despite frequent assurances by some nay-sayers that it would at any minute. People genuinely enjoy the ability to make their voice heard whatever the medium and even if they’re only talking to a few people with similar interests or aspirations.

I’m slightly nervous of the way the press treats weblogging, though. When journalists write pieces – particularly feature pieces – they’re not only trying to write something honest, they’re also trying to write something that people and editors will think is interesting. It’s a necessary flaw in mainstream journalism that means that writers are continually looking for the next big thing, or something enormous and surprising and transformative that they can present to their editors. And when they write the pieces they have to justify all that initial enthusiasm by producing a piece that explains why the thing they’re talking about is so very terribly interesting and important. I think weblogs have suffered from this a bit, as those journalists who like weblogs have written inflated and melodramatic pieces that then other journalists have then spent 400 words dismissing as rubbish. In the background-of course-webloggers just get on with it like normal, neither directly saving the world nor destroying it

When you have discussed big issues, like gay marriage and war with Iraq, what kind of responses have you gotten?

Very very mixed ones. Both of those have generally received responses that are measured and intelligent – whether they directly agreed with me or not. But a whole range of other people have responded very differently. When I said that a proportion of warbloggers seemed almost blood-thirsty in their need for war, dozens and dozens of sites started a competition called the Tom Coates Most Blood-Thirsty Warblogger Award in which they’d compete for the right to be the most vicious, and writing large tracts about what an ‘idiotarian’ I was and how stupid and weak my views and opinions were. It got down to the level of shouting abuse from them to the extent that I started to not write about politics at all. Considering that all the way through the Iraq war my main objective was to talk about the complexities of the issues rather than to back any side, I found that quite difficult to deal with. Some people take to that like a duck to water and find value in it, but just as often these little self-reinforcing circles of fury get completely out of hand.

Do you feel any need to be a journalist when talking about these things – be fair or objective? Or to discover the truth?

Personally I feel a great deal of pressure not to lie and a certain amount of responsibility to correct myself and apologise when I’ve made a mistake. I’m not sure I think it’s necessarily the responsibility of an individual weblogger to spend a lot of time researching their statements-sometimes it’s best to get initial impressions and throwaway thoughts-but I think that has to be left to the individual conscience of the individual. Again-it’s about establishing a relationship between weblogger and weblog-readers (who may be other webloggers)-and as such, unlike journalism where often the individual commentator is kind of effaced, it pays to put your cards on the table and be as open as possible. Let people understand where you’re coming from.

Do you write for an audience? As your audience grew, did you begin to feel any obligation to take their interests into account?

I am certainly aware of the fact that there are eyeballs out there that read what I write-sometimes it’s a lovely feeling, sometimes it’s a terrible thing. At times I feel a pressure to ‘perform’ that can be quite debilitating. And yes-I will scout around some issues rather than talk about them because I’m not prepared to get engaged in a long-term battle around them. But with regard to writing things because people want to hear about them, no-not really. I avoid some controversial areas that I don’t consider myself qualified to comment upon or wish to take considerable heat for, but otherwise I say what I want when I want. I don’t really think of them as an audience-they’re more like peers. I imagine most of the people who read my site have sites of their own, and that I’ll read many of theirs as well.

What role do you see for bloggers and journalists in the future? Will things like Insta-Pundit means journalists will be competing with their own audiences…?

As I’ve said, I think there are a few major differences between professional journalists and webloggers and what they’re able to accomplish. Certainly it seems that hard news material is unlikely to be replicable by the weblogging culture, and to be honest I’m more comfortable with that material being generated by these established organisations anyway. I see the role of webloggers being more of second-order journalism-the journalism that results in newspapers full of comment pieces and editorials, features and opinions. And those places are likely to be either heavily cannibalised by webloggery or to experience a renaissance of voices (because people will expect more varied opinions to be represented). That’s the area that webloggers excel in and where I think they act alongside news journalism-contextualising, correcting, editorialising and adding interpretation to it.

Categories
Business Journalism Personal Publishing

On Wonkette and the rest of Gawker media…

So Nick Denton’s Gawker media has released its latest offspring into the world, and so far (particularly after the enormous success of fleshbot) it doesn’t look like much of a contender. Wonkette has been described as Gawker for DC (by Glenn Reynolds, no less), but so far she’s evidenced little of the ready wit and weblog-savvy of that rather superior organ’s array of editorial talent. Wonkette’s Ana Marie Cox writes like a weblog-naif – she’s overly fascinated by the speed of the publishing and the novelty of not having an editor (and too involved in the immediacy of her voice over the quality of the material she’s referencing) to make the site a really compelling read. I’ve no doubt all this will change of course – the novelty of writing for a weblog can fade over time. But in the meantime: For God’s sake, calm down before you do yourself a mischief!

Gawker media is in my mind a lot at the moment, for a whole range of reasons. First and foremost, I’ve got a paper that I should be writing for an upcoming conference on e-publishing at the London Book Fair. Specifically, I’ve been thinking about writing about Nick’s model of nanopublishing and the way in which these small ventures can create grass-roots, highly-targetted brands – brands which could be floated off into larger ventures, used as branded chunks (syndicated columns perhaps) within larger publications or simply used to colonise the brain-space of people who feel disenfranchised by the large and inhuman face of large-scale media. In particular I want to talk about that alternative model of online publishing – in which large teams of individuals are brought in to run online presences / support sites for commercial magazines or other large media presences at tremendous expense – expense which evidently might simply not be necessary.

But of course the problem with Nick’s nano-publishing model (and he problem with my proposed paean to it) is that it doesn’t really seem to make anyone that much money and that perhaps as a direct consequence, no one else seems to want to do it. I mean, short of business ignorance (which we shouldn’t dismiss as a likely proposition) what other reasons could there be for the lack of competition to Gawker Media? I mean, it’s established a model that’s far from hard to replicate if you have a little money lying around and a certain amount of savvy. And it’s even generated a core concept (local savvy correspondents filtering and condensing the regional media down to thick paste that is as much about myth-making the place as it is purporting to give back-stage access into what’s really going on) that’s eminently replicable to every decent-sized on the planet. I mean, we can all imagine a London equivalent, a Tokyo equivalent or a Sydney equivalent – we can all see the possibilities in a version of this model for Rome, Paris, Edinburgh and Barcelona. Which leads me to wonder – where are they?

I have my theories, of course. Do you have any?

Categories
Design Personal Publishing Technology

Using Wikis for content management…

So here’s a thought partly inspired by an e-mail from a work colleague and partly by Haughey.com. Creating and editing wiki pages is extremely simple and elegant once you get past the first 30 minute learning curve. And essentially you end up with a page that’s got an incredibly simple template, pretty well marked-up code (or at least could do if you used the right Wiki system) and can be edited incredibly quickly. Now, imagine for a moment that the Wiki page itself is nothing but a content management interface and that the Wiki has a separate templating and publishing engine that grabs what you’ve written on the page, turns it into a nicely designed fully-functioning (uneditable) web-page and publishes it to the world. It could make the creation of small information rich sites enormously quick – particularly if you built in FTP stuff.

Now one of the problems with using Wikis generally is that they don’t lend themselves to the creation of clear sectionalised navigation. Nor do they do naturally find it easy to use graphic design, colour or layout differently on separate pages to communicate either your context or the your location in the site. That’s not to say that Wikis are broken, of course, just that the particularly networked rather than hierarchical model of navigation that they lend themselves towards isn’t suitable for all kinds of public-facing sites (the same could be said of the one-size-fits-all design of the pages). This would clearly be a problem. Wikis sacrifice that kind of functionality on the whole in order to gain advantages in other areas (ie. collaborative site generation and maintainance). Without those advantages, you’d simply be left with an inferior product.

So how to integrate design and architecture into the production of a wiki-CMSed website? Well, it’s not a particularly new question with regard to wikis generally – loads of suggestions about how some kinds of hierarchy could be built in have been made and some of them implemented. On the whole they’ve not been terribly successful as they present a higher level of user-level complexity, and with a lot of potential naive users, publically editable wikis can’t really afford complexity. But that’s not true if only one person or a small group were to be updating the site. The complexity level could increase a bit and the learing curve would have to be just a little steeper initially.

Here’s an example of how you could create hierarchy and utilise different templates at the level of the individual page. First, imagine a templating interface that allowed you to create an outline hierarchy of the various sections of a site (just like you’d produce in the outline view of Word or using something like OmniOutliner). Now, each section of that site-map could have a distinct template attached to it, or inherit a template from the section above. Then all you’d need on the Wiki-page (as content-management interface) would be a drop-down box on the right that allowed you to choose which section the page you’d created would sit under. Given that, you could use the mechanics behind the templating engine automatically generate a variety of different models of hierarchical navigation and breadcrumb trails which you could embed into your templates (you could use a templating mechanism very much like the one used to move content chunks around weblogs using Typepad). And the same part of the Wiki page that you use to decide which section the wiki page should be contained within could also house a .gif thumbnail of the template for that page. And the assigned section of a new page could even default to that of the page from which you created it – forward-link from a page about Troubleshooting (in the section “Help”) to create a page about Error Messages, and Error Messages is automatically created inside the “Help” section initially. And all of this could then be ‘published’, pushing everything out in a lovely stylish elegant and visually rich format to the rest of the world at the push of a button.

Wouldn’t that be cool? Blogger-style management for all kinds of other sites… The only things that don’t seem obvious to me at the moment is how you make the intra-wiki links not look like Wiki links to the general public while preserving the ease of use that they engender for the person creating the pages… Any thoughts?

Categories
Personal Publishing

On the Guardian weblog competition…

I promised myself I wouldn’t comment on the Guardian’s Weblog Award this year, as my opinions last year caused a good few fights and didn’t really seem to do that much good in the end. Some people entered and didn’t have a problem with it, others did have a problem with it and didn’t enter. This year they’d made more of an effort I thought, and although I still didn’t really agree with it, I thought it churlish to comment. But really, they’ve been so ungracious about the whole thing!

Firstly the (in person) absolutely charming Simon Waldman wrote of the – fairly reasonable difference of opinion that we had last year:

“Within hours, the blogging community was talking about it – good and bad, but mostly bad. There was outrage that anyone, let alone a newspaper, should sit in judgment on blogs. There were conspiracies that it was just a devious plan to get traffic on Guardian Unlimited (as if we needed it). We thought we were simply launching a competition: at times, it felt more like we were dropping a hand grenade into a hornet’s nest.”

But rather than accepting that the people who protested might have had a good point (particularly given that they actually wrote to UKBloggers saying that they’d taken many of the previous year’s comments into account) instead he decided to declare any dissent to be the product of a hardcore bunch of grumblers (the line is:”The original hardcore blogging community is still there, and still vociferous”) while suggesting that while that’s happening, alongside “every month, thousands of others are trying their hand at this unique publishing form”. The latter group – of course – being prime candidates for a little pat on the head from the nation’s favourite (and indeed, my favourite) left-wing newspaper.

It’s a shame, then, that the evidence from the ground is less rosy – and that even some of the people who liked the Guardian competition last year are coming to feel at least slightly less comfortable with it a year later (cf. Naked Blog). But that’s not the end of it. First we had the rather self-congratulatory, but not particularly annoying assumption that all webloggers at this weekend’s Christmas party would be all of a fluster about the competition which Meg then entertainingly lampooned, followed by another snipey post on the Guardian’s weblog about the whole thing.

Now look – the whole thing’s pretty trivial, but let’s make one thing clear. It is not an obvious fact that weblog competitions like this are good things, and it’s certainly not an obvious fact that belittling the opinions of people who disagree with you – when you’re supposed to be a national paper and rather above that kind of thing – is that brilliant an idea either. So I’ve felt compelled to write this rather stuffy e-mail to the Guardian about it (after a rather muffled grump directed at Mr Waldman earlier didn’t do much good) – just to kind of make it clear that the whole point of the exercise is to encourage people to express their opinions, not throw the Guardian’s 800lb Gorilla at anyone who doesn’t hold the same views!

Jane! Really! The thing about the competition that people get cross about is that it feels like colonisation rather than reward! We’re actually going to meet our friends and our peers and stuff and we arranged it and we’re mostly pretty much looking forward to it. A good proportion of us resent the implication that we’re all going to spend the time giggling like twelve-year-olds and puzzling about who’ll win the prize in a competition that we don’t really think gets the point of the whole things in the first place.

I mean, you’re talking as if the people who have weblogs are all desperate fame-starved teenagers publishing magazine-like columns to try and get acclaim and publicity. Even the people who have entered – and I mean no offense to them because if you don’t have a problem with it, then you may as well go after the cash – probably aren’t seriously thinking about gossiping at length, getting hysterical and fainting at the merest thought of the thing. There are many professional people who are using them to connect with their industries or their peers, families who are talking to their relatives abroad – it’s not like the press, bits of it are like hanging out with friends or peers!
For many of us the Guardian competition is a well-intentioned but clumsy stab at trying to do something that promotes weblogs, but actually isn’t really that relevant /or/ exciting.And if you’re really trying to support and promote them, then making sarcastic comments about the kind of things they post about probably isn’t the best way!

Tom

See also: Mo Morgan’s “Less of a bloody stupid idea”