Scott Rosenberg's Links & Comment

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Wednesday, July 24, 2002 PERMALINK

Blogology

Blogs have become an Internet trend story -- probably because there are so few other Internet trends right now, and most of those are too depressing to dwell on. Trend stories work best when reporters can drum up some conflict. Thus we have the War between the Bloggers and the Journalists.

It's not much of a fight.  Proponents of blogging every now and then display some of the old "We will conquer the world" spirit that drove so many Internet visionaries. That presses some journalists' buttons, and they respond with reflexive dismissal and disdain. It's like old times!

But aside from the occasional outburst of overheated rhetoric, there is no sensible reason for bloggers and journalists to have any particular animosity towards each other. The two enterprises are complementary.

I don't believe blogging will kill off old-fashioned journalism any more than the continued success of Time and the New York Times will stop anyone from blogging. A reporter can (under the right circumstances) do things a blogger can't -- like spend months investigating a single story exposing, say, how big media companies got in bed with a bogus anti-drug ad campaign. (There's nothing to stop a blogger from doing this, but I have yet to see it happen, and it's unlikely to happen a lot, since most of us need to pay the rent somehow, and long-form investigative journalism takes too much time to do as an on-the-side thing.)

Conversely, bloggers can do things most reporters can't -- like updating at whim around the clock, or sitting in a conference hall posting comments directly to the Web. (Some professional journalists can do that, too.)

Bloggers can be journalists any time they practice journalism by actually trying to find out the truth about a story. A journalist can be a blogger by installing some blogging software and beginning to post. These words should be labels for activities, not badges of tribal fealty.


comment [] 5:33:36 PM | permalink

Tonight in Salon: our newest columnist debuts: Keith Olbermann.
comment [] 5:10:59 PM | permalink

Bull run: Dow closes up 488 (6.3%), Nasdaq up 60 (5%)... It will take a lot of days like that to put a dent in the last couple month's losses, of course. But maybe we hit bottom.
comment [] 1:16:08 PM | permalink


Doc Searls is blogging live from the O'Reilly Open Source conference. Speeches by Larry Lessig and Richard Stallman. (Footnote: the earlier Doc post commenting on Sun, "Scott vs. Scott," attributes a Salon article to me that was actually by Michael Thomas.)
comment [] 1:04:20 PM | permalink

By popular demand (well, all right, JD Lasica and a couple of other readers asked) I've removed the lines from this page's style sheet that dictate the body type size. So now the posts should appear, the way Salon's articles do, at whatever font size you've set  in your browser.
comment [] 12:38:53 PM | permalink

Andrew Bayer is dreaming of China and blogging away in memoriam of Red Sox announcer Ned Martin and Leo McKern.
comment [] 11:52:17 AM | permalink

Two years ago I wrote that Microsoft's .NET scheme was vaporware. Today Rebecca Buckman in the Wall Street Journal reports that, basically, it still is.
comment [] 11:30:28 AM | permalink

Leave it to country-rocker Steve Earle to write the first song about John Walker Lindh, American outlaw: John Walker's Blues. I haven't heard the song yet, but Earle is a smart musician who's earned his compassionate streak the hard way. And I'l bet that what he has to say on the subject is more valuable than a hundred op-ed thumbsuckers.
comment [] 10:04:17 AM | permalink

RIP: Chaim Potok ("The Chosen"); Leo McKern (who played Rumpole of the Bailey). Also passed away, though I cannot imagine he is resting in peace, nor can I wish him such: William Pierce, the neo-Nazi and white supremacist who wrote "The Turner Diaries."
comment [] 9:40:40 AM | permalink

James Scheinblum  and others are raising the perfectly good question: Shouldn't Salon Premium subscribers get a discount on their annual blog fee?

Short answer is, we want to do something like this and are considering it.  But both Salon Premium ($30 a year) and Salon blogs ($39.95 a year for hosting and software updates) are annual services that have been priced at the low end to cover costs and provide modest profit margins for the companies involved (Salon for Salon Premium, Salon and UserLand for Salon blogs). We think both services are reasonable deals. We'd still like to show our Premium subscribers some thanks, though. But we have one whole set of software pieces sitting at www.salon.com that manages Premium subscriptions, and another at blogs.salon.com  that plugs into UserLand, and its storefront for software sales. We could have spent weeks or months trying to tie these together before launching this project. Instead, we wanted to get the doors open now.
comment [] 9:31:14 AM | permalink


Rogers Cadenhead has started a category (sub grouping of posts by topic) on his blog offering technical support and tips for Salon Bloggers.
comment [] 9:17:19 AM | permalink

Dave Winer's Davenet post on the Salon Blogs/UserLand deal. Press release here.


comment [] 9:08:45 AM | permalink



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