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    Send in the Blogs

    From: Gary Lawrence Murphy 
    Subject: Send in the Blogs
    To: info@plesman.com
    Cc: dwebb@itbusiness.ca
    Date: 19 Mar 2002 22:00:34 -0500
    Organization: TCI Business Innovation through Open Source Computing

    Dear Editor,

    Dave Webb's article "Blogging a dead horse" is very interesting for
    two reasons. First, it is posted on a news website that is anything
    but interactive (after a hunt for a "to the Editor" link, I gave up
    and wrote to the main page "Help" link) Second, the article which sets
    out to criticize blog culture summarizes itself by demonstrating why
    blogging is suddenly so very popular:

    "By the way, The Ellison quote? Lifted from the ineffable Ethel the
    Blog (stommel.tamu.edu/~baum/ethel/blogger.html), one of your
    better quality blogs."

    "Better quality blogs" --- Dave Webb has become what we call a
    "recommender", and Ethel has just moved up a point in the recommender
    ratings for all those readers who know and trust Dave's judgement. I
    could rest my case at just that point. But I won't because I enjoy
    flogging the horse.

    Blogging taken as isolated instances, nay anything online taken as
    isolated cases, misses both the point and the value. What is a web
    page? Diary, Biography, Links, Forum. What is Usenet? DBLF. Email
    mailing lists? DBLF ... you probably detect the pattern.

    What is a Blog? What's different here? David Weinberger's term
    "Small pieces loosely joined" (www.evident.org) comes to mind. The
    average blog is just one node in a great network of blogs, each
    feeding the other, each monitoring, sifting, evaluating and
    reproducing the other. Blogs are the Internet grapevine.

    How are these blogs connected? Two ways, one explicit, one implicit
    in the modern web. The implicit method is known to everyone: It's
    called Google.

    The explicit method is more reliable and far faster, and most often
    built into the blogging software and is known in the trade as RDF. Our
    company blog at www.teledyn.com, a very conservative but nonetheless
    self-published 'zine-let on "open source and internet" exports a tiny
    (XML) file containing our news headlines
    . This file is picked up
    12,000 times a day; we don't know by who, but we do know that a recent
    blog article about a Linux virus-writing (and defense) guide caused an
    international fury on the author's website within hours of our
    posting.

    What the virus-guide author's webhost experienced, and what Dave Webb
    betrays in his confession on the Harlan quote, is what blog culture
    calls "recommenders". Yes, each source blog itself is typically a
    very low signal-to-noise ratio, but when filtered through the network
    of recommenders feeding recommenders feeding recommenders, the signal
    is very quickly refined; I just don't have the time to wade through
    SlashDot (slashdot.org) but nary a day goes by when I don't learn of
    some big news that broke first on its pages. What we have in blogging
    is a human-intelligence controlled, highly efficient and massively
    parallel content evaluation and distribution network.

    Many blogs (our own included) are "meta-blogs", recommender
    recommenders which distill the mash by personally selecting from many
    sources, commenting on the value of the content of a few (adding
    meta-data). Other people select their favourite meta-blogs and
    summarize those, and then republish on their own blog, extending the
    recommender process, adding meta-data.

    There are also tools to assist this recommender process. For example,
    here at TCI, in addition to mailing lists and personal contacts, we
    use Rael Dornfest's highly experimental and (ahem) less than robust
    Peerkat (www.oreillynet.com/~rael/lang/python/peerkat/) to merge over
    200 blog and news-service channels. We coallate, summarize and
    re-distribute these feeds over our intranet in about a dozen different
    topical categories.

    Other tools include Dave Winer's Radio Userland, OpenPrivacy's Reptile
    (a similar project which is building recommender-rating into the feed
    process), OpenCola who apply the blog-recommender
    model to content discovery, the left-wing network of www.indymedia.com
    makes the global local and vice versa, and the most ambitious of all,
    the Columbia Newsblaster
    combines blog-recommender methods with advanced semantic processing to
    provide hot tips for journalists.

    Does it work? Yes and very well. IT insiders (and not just the kids
    but even us more "chronologically endowed") know that other insiders
    will get the news long before any ITBusiness journalist. We know that
    our collegues will get the news straight the first time, and we know
    the blog network ensures that what some lone insider might publish
    before their workday begins might reach ten thousand desktops before
    lunch.

    [ "chronologically endowed" is a term that appears in
    this month's print edition of Plesmans' Computing Canada, in an article
    claiming us old-guard are somehow resistant to innovative technologies
    (to which I say "we just know a bad idea when we see one") and no,
    I'm not forgetting the utter irony that this lowly weblog posting
    will probably result in more eyeballs on Dave Webb's article than it's
    being posted as a front-page item on itbusiness.ca -- gm ]

    posted 03/22/2002 - 14:28


    Tags » blogging journalism new media technology
    • 22 March 2002
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