Read his post and some followup comments to find out more.
categories: fireweaver
2:35:40 PM
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This made me realize two things:
categories: metablog
12:36:28 PM
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categories: metablog
12:14:02 PM
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Something like this was probably inevitable as the trend of journalists-with-weblogs has continued, branching into edited, sanctioned weblogs at publication sites and independent weblogs of working journalists. If you blog for your employer there may be guidelines to follow but at least the boss won't consider it moonlighting or a diversion of your energy away from your work.
In the case of Steve Olafson, the Houston Chronicle reporter, he did the blog on his own time but he used a pseudonym and commented on the subjects of his daytime beat:
Steve Olafson, who covers Brazoria County, Texas, has been asked to stop publishing his weblog (written on his own time), in which he comments on county politics and personalities while hiding under the cover of the pseudonym "Banjo Jones." It seems that someone whom he skewered in his spicy political weblog "outed" him to The Facts newspaper in Brazoria County — and when Chronicle editors found out they told him to kill the blog. Apparently, he still has a job, but he's lost some credibility with his sources, no doubt.
categories: memewatch metablog
11:47:30 AM
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categories: metablog
10:15:34 AM
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This idea will continue to come up. Just because a publishing revolution permits a lot more crap to be published doesn't make it a bad thing. Or, as plasticbag.org puts it:
Dreamweaver and Blogger don't bore people. People bore people.
categories: fireweaver memewatch metablog
10:11:17 AM
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It doesn't take a genius to gather what is happening in corporate world at the moment - weblogs are 'in' - they've finally stopped being fashionable, and so are suddenly now becoming acceptable to the mainstream. Your executive at BigPublisher.com suddenly thinks that weblogging is the heart of the internet - the web finally fulfilling its promise. And of course they're right... But does understanding the importance of weblogs and weblogging correspond to understanding how an information publisher should relate to weblogs and weblogging? I would say no....
[via Blogpopuli]
metacomment: I have to make sure I don't just turn this site into a crib of blogroots! I'll do my best to send them some info they don't have when possible.
categories: salonika memewatch metablog
10:03:28 AM
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categories: metablog
9:45:49 AM
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This means I may have to reassign categories to some of the past posts. A blogger's work is never done.
categories: metablog
8:40:37 AM
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