HISTORY OF BLOG
WHAT IS BLOG.
AND ITS HISTORY?
A blog (a truncation of "weblog")[1] is an informational website consisting of discrete, often informal diary-style text entries
(posts). Posts are typically displayed in reverse
chronological order so
that the most recent post appears first, at the top of the web page. In the 2000s, blogs were often the work of a single individual,
occasionally of a small group, and often covered a single subject or topic. In
the 2010s, "multi-author blogs" (MABs) emerged, featuring the writing
of multiple authors and sometimes professionally edited. MABs from newspapers, other media outlets, universities, think tanks, advocacy groups, and similar institutions account for an
increasing quantity of blog traffic. The rise of Twitter and other "microblogging" systems helps integrate MABs and
single-author blogs into the news media. Blog can also be used as a
verb, meaning to maintain or add content to a blog.
The emergence and
growth of blogs in the late 1990s coincided with the advent of web publishing
tools that facilitated the posting of content by non-technical users who did
not have much experience with HTML or computer
programming. Previously,
knowledge of such technologies as HTML and File
Transfer Protocol had
been required to publish content on the Web, and early Web users therefore
tended to be hackers and computer enthusiasts. As of the
2010s, the majority are interactive Web 2.0 websites, allowing visitors to leave online comments, and it is this
interactivity that distinguishes them from other static websites.[2] In that sense, blogging can be seen as a
form of social
networking service.
Indeed, bloggers not only produce content to post on their blogs but also often
build social relations with their readers and other bloggers.[3] Blog owners or authors often moderate and filter online comments to remove hate speech or other offensive content. There are also
high-readership blogs which do not allow comments.
Many blogs
provide commentary on a particular subject or topic, ranging from philosophy, religion, and arts to science, politics, and sports. Others function as more personal online diaries or online
brand advertising of
a particular individual or company. A typical blog combines text, digital images, and links to other blogs, web pages, and other media related to its topic. Most
blogs are primarily textual, although some focus on art (art blogs), photographs (photoblogs), videos (video blogs or vlogs), music (MP3 blogs), and audio (podcasts). In education, blogs can be used as
instructional resources; these are referred to as edublogs. Microblogging is another type of blogging, featuring very
short posts.
Blog and blogging are
now loosely used for content creation and sharing on social media, especially when the content is long-form and one
creates and shares content on regular basis, so one could be maintaining a blog
on Facebook or blogging on Instagram. A 2022 estimate suggested that there were over
600 million public blogs out of more than 1.9 billion websites.[4]
History
Main
articles: History
of blogging and online diary
The history of blogging is long and winding, with many
independent efforts contributing to its development. Here are some key
milestones in the history of blogging:
- 1993: Justin
Hall, a student at Swarthmore College, begins documenting his life online,
which is considered the first recorded instance of blogging.
- 1994: Hall
creates the first blog on Links.net, using it as a personal diary and to
share his thoughts on current events.
- 1997: The
term "weblog" is coined.
- 1998: Bruce
Ableson launches Open Diary, the first blogging platform, which allows
readers to comment on other writers' blog entries.
- 1999: Blogger
and LiveJournal launch, and Xanga follows soon after.
- 2003: WordPress
and TypePad are created, and Google buys Blogger and launches
AdSense.
- 2004: "Blog"
becomes the Dictionary Word of the Year.
- 2005: Vlogging
(video blogging) emerges with the launch of YouTube.
- 2006: HuffPo
and Buzzfeed combine news and blogging, and Twitter launches, which leads
to the trend of "microblogging".
- 2007: Microblogging
becomes a trend.
- 2012: Medium is founded as a free
blogging platform.
- 2016: WordPress
launches the .blog domain extension.
An early example of a "diary" style blog
consisting of text and images transmitted wirelessly in real-time from a wearable computer with head-up display, February 22, 1995
The term
"weblog" was coined by Jorn Barger[5] on December 17, 1997. The short form
"blog" was coined by Peter Merholz, who
jokingly broke the word weblog into the phrase we blog in
the sidebar of his blog Peterme.com in May 1999.[6][7][8] Shortly thereafter, Evan Williams at Pyra Labs used "blog" as both a noun and
verb ("to blog", meaning "to edit one's weblog or to post to
one's weblog") and devised the term "blogger" in connection with
Pyra Labs' Blogger product, leading to the
popularization of the terms.[9]
Origins
Before blogging
became popular, digital communities took many forms, including Usenet, commercial online services such as GEnie, Byte
Information Exchange (BIX)
and the early CompuServe, e-mail
lists,[10] and Bulletin
Board Systems (BBS).
In the 1990s, Internet
forum software
created running conversations with "threads". Threads are topical
connections between messages on a virtual "corkboard".[further explanation needed]
Berners-Lee also
created what is considered by Encyclopedia
Britannica to be
"the first 'blog'" in 1992 to discuss the progress made on creating
the World Wide Web and software used for it.[11]
From June 14,
1993, Mosaic Communications Corporation maintained their "What's New"[12] list of new websites, updated daily and
archived monthly. The page was accessible by a special "What's New"
button in the Mosaic web browser.
In November
1993 Ranjit Bhatnagar started
writing about interesting sites, pages and discussion groups he found on the
internet, as well as some personal information, on his website Moonmilk,
arranging them chronologically in a special section called Ranjit's HTTP
Playground.[13] Other early pioneers of blogging, such
as Justin Hall, credit him with being an inspiration.[14]
The earliest
instance of a commercial blog was on the first business
to consumer Web site
created in 1995 by Ty, Inc., which featured a blog in a section
called "Online Diary". The entries were maintained by featured Beanie Babies that were voted for monthly by Web site
visitors.[15]
The modern blog
evolved from the online diary where people would keep a running account of
the events in their personal lives. Most such writers called themselves
diarists, journalists, or journalers. Justin Hall, who began personal blogging in 1994 while a
student at Swarthmore
College, is generally
recognized as one of the earlier bloggers,[16] as is Jerry Pournelle.[17] Dave Winer's Scripting News is also credited with being one
of the older and longer running weblogs.[18][19] The Australian Netguide magazine maintained
the Daily Net News[20] on their web site from 1996. Daily Net News
ran links and daily reviews of new websites, mostly in Australia.
Another early
blog was Wearable Wireless Webcam, an online shared diary of a person's
personal life combining text, digital video, and digital pictures transmitted
live from a wearable computer and EyeTap device
to a web site in 1994. This practice of semi-automated blogging with live video
together with text was referred to as sousveillance, and such journals were also used as evidence in
legal matters. Some early bloggers, such as The Misanthropic Bitch, who began
in 1997, referred to their online presence as a zine, before the term blog entered common usage.
The first
research paper about blogging was Torill Mortensen and Jill
Walker Rettberg's paper
"Blogging Thoughts",[21] which analysed how blogs were being used to
foster research communities and the exchange of ideas and scholarship, and how
this new means of networking overturns traditional power structures.
Technology
Early blogs were
simply manually updated components of common Websites. In 1995, the
"Online Diary" on the Ty, Inc. Web site was produced and updated manually before any blogging
programs were available. Posts were made to appear in reverse chronological
order by manually updating text-based HTML code using FTP software in real time several times
a day. To users, this offered the appearance of a live diary that contained
multiple new entries per day. At the beginning of each new day, new diary
entries were manually coded into a new HTML file, and at the start of each
month, diary entries were archived into their own folder, which contained a
separate HTML page for every day of the month. Then, menus that contained links
to the most recent diary entry were updated manually throughout the site. This
text-based method of organizing thousands of files served as a springboard to
define future blogging styles that were captured by blogging software developed
years later.[15]
The evolution of
electronic and software tools to facilitate the production and maintenance of
Web articles posted in reverse chronological order made the publishing process
feasible for a much larger and less technically-inclined population.
Ultimately, this resulted in the distinct class of online publishing that
produces blogs we recognize today. For instance, the use of some sort of
browser-based software is now a typical aspect of "blogging". Blogs
can be hosted by dedicated blog
hosting services, on
regular web
hosting services, or run
using blog software.
Rise in
popularity
After a slow
start, blogging rapidly gained in popularity. Blog usage spread during 1999 and
the years following, being further popularized by the near-simultaneous arrival
of the first hosted blog tools:
- Bruce Ableson launched Open Diary in October 1998, which soon grew to
thousands of online diaries. Open Diary innovated the reader comment,
becoming the first blog community where readers could add comments to
other writers' blog entries.
- Brad
Fitzpatrick started LiveJournal in March 1999.
- Andrew Smales created Pitas.com in
July 1999 as an easier alternative to maintaining a "news page"
on a Web site, followed by DiaryLand in September 1999, focusing more on a
personal diary community.[22]
- Blogger (blogspot.com) was launched in
1999[23]
Political
impact
On December 6, 2002, Josh Marshall's
talkingpointsmemo.com blog called attention to U.S. Senator Lott's comments regarding Senator Thurmond. Senator
Lott was eventually to resign his Senate leadership position over the matter.
An early
milestone in the rise in importance of blogs came in 2002, when many bloggers
focused on comments by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott.[24] Senator Lott, at a party honoring U.S.
Senator Strom Thurmond, praised Senator Thurmond by suggesting that the
United States would have been better off had Thurmond been elected president.
Lott's critics saw these comments as tacit approval of racial
segregation, a policy
advocated by Thurmond's 1948 presidential campaign. This view was reinforced by documents
and recorded interviews dug up by bloggers. (See Josh Marshall's Talking
Points Memo.) Though
Lott's comments were made at a public event attended by the media, no major
media organizations reported on his controversial comments until after blogs
broke the story. Blogging helped to create a political crisis that forced Lott
to step down as majority leader.
Similarly, blogs
were among the driving forces behind the "Rathergate"
scandal. Television journalist Dan Rather presented documents on the CBS show 60 Minutes that conflicted with accepted accounts of
President Bush's military service record. Bloggers declared the documents to
be forgeries and presented evidence and arguments in
support of that view. Consequently, CBS apologized for what it said were
inadequate reporting techniques (see: Little
Green Footballs). The
impact of these stories gave greater credibility to blogs as a medium of news
dissemination.
In Russia, some
political bloggers have started to challenge the dominance of official,
overwhelmingly pro-government media. Bloggers such as Rustem Adagamov and Alexei Navalny have many followers, and the latter's
nickname for the ruling United Russia party as the "party of crooks and
thieves" has been adopted by anti-regime protesters.[25] This led to The
Wall Street Journal calling
Navalny "the man Vladimir Putin fears most" in March 2012.[26]
Mainstream
popularity
By 2004, the role
of blogs became increasingly mainstream, as political
consultants, news
services, and candidates began using them as tools for outreach and opinion
forming. Blogging was established by politicians and political candidates to
express opinions on war and other issues and cemented blogs' role as a news
source. (See Howard Dean and Wesley Clark.) Even politicians not actively campaigning, such
as the UK's
Labour Party's Member of Parliament (MP) Tom Watson, began to
blog to bond with constituents. In January 2005, Fortune magazine listed eight bloggers whom
business people "could not ignore": Peter Rojas, Xeni Jardin, Ben Trott, Mena Trott, Jonathan
Schwartz, Jason
Goldman, Robert Scoble, and Jason Calacanis.[27]
Israel was among
the first national governments to set up an official blog.[28] Under David Saranga, the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs became active in adopting Web 2.0 initiatives, including an official video blog[28] and a political blog.[29] The Foreign Ministry also held a microblogging press conference via Twitter about its war with Hamas, with
Saranga answering questions from the public in common text-messaging
abbreviations during a live worldwide press conference.[30] The questions and answers were later posted
on IsraelPolitik, the country's official political blog.[31]
The impact of
blogging on the mainstream media has also been acknowledged by governments. In
2009, the presence of the American journalism industry had declined to the
point that several newspaper corporations were filing for bankruptcy, resulting
in less direct competition between newspapers within the same circulation area.
Discussion emerged as to whether the newspaper industry would benefit from a
stimulus package by the federal government. U.S. President Barack Obama acknowledged the emerging influence of
blogging upon society by saying, "if the direction of the news is all
blogosphere, all opinions, with no serious fact-checking, no serious attempts
to put stories in context, then what you will end up getting is people shouting
at each other across the void, but not a lot of mutual understanding".[32] Between 2009 and 2012, an Orwell Prize for blogging was awarded.
In the late 2000s, blogs were often used on business websites and for grassroots political
activism.[33]
Types
A screenshot from the BlogActive website
There are many
different types of blogs, differing not only in the type of content, but also
in the way that content is delivered or written.
Personal blogs
The personal blog
is an ongoing online diary or commentary written by an individual, rather than
a corporation or organization. While the vast majority of personal blogs
attract very few readers, other than the blogger's immediate family and
friends, a small number of personal blogs have become popular, to the point
that they have attracted lucrative advertising sponsorship. A tiny number of
personal bloggers have become famous, both in the online community and in the
real world.
Collaborative
blogs or group blogs
A type of weblog
in which posts are written and published by more than one author. The majority
of high-profile collaborative blogs are organised according to a single uniting
theme, such as politics, technology or advocacy. In recent years, the blogosphere has seen the emergence and growing
popularity of more collaborative efforts, often set up by already established
bloggers wishing to pool time and resources, both to reduce the pressure of
maintaining a popular website and to attract a larger readership.
Microblogging is
the practice of posting small pieces of digital content—which could be text,
pictures, links, short videos, or other media—on the internet. Microblogging
offers a portable communication mode that feels organic and spontaneous to many
users. It has captured the public imagination, in part because the short posts
are easy to read on the go or when waiting. Friends use it to keep in touch,
business associates use it to coordinate meetings or share useful resources,
and celebrities and politicians (or their publicists) microblog about concert
dates, lectures, book releases, or tour schedules. A wide and growing range of
add-on tools enables sophisticated updates and interaction with other
applications. The resulting profusion of functionality is helping to define new
possibilities for this type of communication.[34] Examples of these include Twitter,
Facebook, Tumblr and, by far the largest, Weibo.
Corporate and
organizational blogs
A blog can be
private, as in most cases, or it can be for business or not-for-profit organization or government purposes. Blogs used internally and only available to
employees via an Intranet are called corporate blogs. Companies use internal corporate blogs to
enhance the communication, culture and employee
engagement in a
corporation. Internal corporate blogs can be used to communicate news about
company policies or procedures, build employee esprit de corps and improve morale. Companies and other organizations also use external, publicly accessible
blogs for marketing, branding, or public relations purposes. Some organizations have a blog
authored by their executive; in practice, many of these executive blog posts
are penned by a ghostwriter who makes posts in the style of the
credited author. Similar blogs for clubs and societies are called club blogs,
group blogs, or by similar names; typical use is to inform members and other
interested parties of club and member activities.
Aggregated
blogs
Individuals or
organization may aggregate selected feeds on a specific topic, product or
service and provide a combined view for its readers. This allows readers to
concentrate on reading instead of searching for quality on-topic content and
managing subscriptions. Many such aggregations called planets from name
of Planet
(software) that
perform such aggregation, hosting sites usually have planet. subdomain in domain name (like http://planet.gnome.org/).
By genre
Some blogs focus
on a particular subject, such as political blogs, journalism blogs, health blogs, travel blogs (also known as travelogs),
gardening blogs, house blogs, Book Blogs,[35][36] fashion blogs, beauty blogs, lifestyle blogs, party blogs,
wedding blogs, photography blogs, project blogs, psychology blogs, sociology
blogs, education blogs, niche blogs, classical
music blogs, quizzing
blogs, legal blogs (often referred to as a blawgs),
or dreamlogs.
How-to/Tutorial blogs are becoming increasing popular.[37] Two common types of genre blogs are art blogs and music blogs. A blog featuring discussions, especially
about home and family is not uncommonly called
a mom blog. While not a
legitimate type of blog, one used for the sole purpose of spamming is known as
a splog.
By media type
A blog comprising
videos is called a vlog, one comprising links is called a linklog, a site
containing a portfolio of sketches is called a sketchblog or
one comprising photos is called a photoblog. Blogs with shorter posts and mixed media types
are called tumblelogs. Blogs that are written on typewriters
and then scanned are called typecast or typecast blogs. A rare type of blog
hosted on the Gopher Protocol is known as a phlog.
By device
A blog can also
be defined by which type of device is used to compose it. A blog written by
a mobile device like a mobile phone or PDA could be called a moblog.[38] One early blog was Wearable Wireless Webcam,
an online shared diary of a person's personal life combining text, video, and
pictures transmitted live from a wearable computer and EyeTap device
to a web site. This practice of semi-automated blogging with live video
together with text was referred to as sousveillance. Such journals have been used as evidence in
legal matters.[citation needed]
A reverse blog is
composed by its users rather than a single blogger. This system has the
characteristics of a blog and the writing of several authors. These can be
written by several contributing authors on a topic or opened up for anyone to
write. There is typically some limit to the number of entries to keep it from
operating like a web forum.[citation needed]
Community and
cataloging
An artist's depiction of the interconnections
between blogs and blog authors in the "blogosphere" in 2007
The collective
community of all blogs and blog authors, particularly notable and widely read
blogs, is known as the blogosphere. Since all blogs are on the
internet by definition, they may be seen as interconnected and socially
networked, through blogrolls, comments, linkbacks (refbacks, trackbacks or pingbacks), and
backlinks. Discussions "in the blogosphere" were occasionally used by
the media as a gauge of public opinion on various issues. Because new, untapped
communities of bloggers and their readers can emerge in the space of a few
years, Internet
marketers pay close
attention to "trends in the blogosphere".[39]
Several blog
search engines have been used to search blog contents, such as Bloglines (defunct), BlogScope (defunct),
and Technorati (defunct).
Blogging
communities and directories
Several online
communities exist
that connect people to blogs and bloggers to other bloggers. Interest-specific
blogging platforms are also available. For instance, Blogster has a sizable
community of political bloggers among its members. Global
Voices aggregates
international bloggers, "with emphasis on voices that are not ordinarily
heard in international mainstream media."[40]
Blogging and
advertising
It is common for
blogs to feature banner
advertisements or
promotional content, either to financially benefit the blogger, support website
hosting costs, or to promote the blogger's favourite causes or products. The
popularity of blogs has also given rise to "fake blogs" in which a company will create a fictional
blog as a marketing tool to promote a product.[41]
As the popularity
of blogging continued to rise (as of 2006), the commercialisation of blogging
is rapidly increasing. Many corporations and companies collaborate with
bloggers to increase advertising and engage online communities with their
products. In the book Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers, Henry Jenkins
stated that "Bloggers take knowledge into their own hands, enabling
successful navigation within and between these emerging knowledge cultures. One
can see such behaviour as co-optation into commodity culture insofar as it
sometimes collaborates with corporate interests, but one can also see it as
increasing the diversity of media culture, providing opportunities for greater
inclusiveness, and making more responsive to consumers."[42]
Early
popularity
- Before 2006: The blogdex project
was launched by researchers in the MIT Media Lab to crawl the Web and gather
data from thousands of blogs to investigate their social properties.
Information was gathered by the tool for over four years, during which it
autonomously tracked the most contagious information spreading in the blog
community, ranking it by recency and popularity. It can, therefore,[original research?] be considered the first instantiation
of a memetracker. The project was replaced by tailrank.com, which in turn has been replaced by
spinn3r.com.
- 2006: Blogs are given rankings by Alexa Internet (web hits of Alexa Toolbar
users), and formerly by blog search engine Technorati based on the number of incoming links
(Technorati stopped doing this in 2014). In August 2006, Technorati found
that the most linked-to blog on the internet was that of Chinese
actress Xu Jinglei.[43] Chinese media Xinhua reported that this blog received more
than 50 million page views, claiming it to be the most popular blog in the
world at the time.[44][better source needed] Technorati rated Boing Boing to be the most-read group-written blog.[43]
- 2008: As of 2008, blogging had "become
such a mania that a new blog was created every second of every minute of
every hour of every day."[45] Researchers have actively analyzed the
dynamics of how blogs become popular. There are essentially two measures
of this: popularity through citations, as well as popularity through
affiliation (i.e., blogroll). The basic conclusion from studies of the
structure of blogs is that while it takes time for a blog to become
popular through blogrolls, permalinks can boost popularity more quickly and
are perhaps more indicative of popularity and authority than blogrolls
since they denote that people are reading the blog's content and deem it
valuable or noteworthy in specific cases.[46]
Blurring with
the mass media
Many bloggers,
particularly those engaged in participatory
journalism, are amateur
journalists, and thus they differentiate themselves from the professional
reporters and editors who work in mainstream media organizations. Other bloggers are media
professionals who are publishing online, rather than via a TV station or
newspaper, either as an add-on to a traditional media presence (e.g., hosting a
radio show or writing a column in a paper newspaper), or as their sole
journalistic output. Some institutions and organizations see blogging as a
means of "getting around the filter" of media "gatekeepers" and pushing their messages directly to the
public. Many mainstream journalists, meanwhile, write their own blogs—well over
300, according to CyberJournalist.net's J-blog list.[citation needed] The first
known use of a blog on a news site was in August 1998, when Jonathan Dube of The
Charlotte Observer published
one chronicling Hurricane
Bonnie.[47]
Some bloggers
have moved over to other media. The following bloggers (and others) have
appeared on radio and television: Duncan Black (known widely by his pseudonym,
Atrios), Glenn
Reynolds (Instapundit), Markos
Moulitsas Zúniga (Daily Kos), Alex Steffen (Worldchanging), Ana Marie Cox (Wonkette), Nate Silver (FiveThirtyEight.com), and Ezra Klein (Ezra Klein blog in The
American Prospect, now in The
Washington Post). In
counterpoint, Hugh Hewitt exemplifies a mass media personality
who has moved in the other direction, adding to his reach in "old
media" by being an influential blogger. Similarly, it was Emergency
Preparedness and Safety Tips On Air and Online blog articles that
captured Surgeon General of the United States Richard Carmona's attention and earned his kudos for the
associated broadcasts by talk show host Lisa Tolliver and Westchester Emergency Volunteer
Reserves-Medical
Reserve Corps Director
Marianne Partridge.[48][49]
Blogs have also
had an influence on minority languages, bringing together scattered speakers and
learners; this is particularly so with blogs in Gaelic languages. Minority language publishing (which may lack
economic feasibility) can find its audience through inexpensive blogging. There
are examples of bloggers who have published books based on their blogs,
e.g., Salam Pax, Ellen Simonetti, Jessica Cutler, and ScrappleFace.
Blog-based books have been given the name blook. A prize for the best blog-based book was initiated in 2005,[50] the Lulu
Blooker Prize.[51] However, success has been elusive offline,
with many of these books not selling as well as their blogs. The book based
on Julie Powell's blog "The Julie/Julia
Project" was made into the film Julie & Julia, apparently the first to do so.
Consumer-generated
advertising
Consumer-generated advertising is a relatively new and controversial development, and it has created
a new model of marketing communication from businesses to consumers. Among the
various forms of advertising on blog, the most controversial are the sponsored posts.[52] These are blog entries or posts and may be
in the form of feedback, reviews, opinion, videos, etc. and usually contain a
link back to the desired site using a keyword or several keywords. Blogs have
led to some disintermediation and a breakdown of the traditional
advertising model, where companies can skip over the advertising agencies
(previously the only interface with the customer) and contact the customers
directly via social media websites. On the other hand, new companies
specialised in blog advertising have been established to take advantage of this
new development as well. However, there are many people who look negatively on
this new development. Some believe that any form of commercial activity on
blogs will destroy the blogosphere's credibility.[53]
Legal and
social consequences
Blogging can
result in a range of legal liabilities and other unforeseen
consequences.[54]
Defamation or
liability
Several cases
have been brought before the national courts against bloggers concerning issues
of defamation
or liability. U.S.
payouts related to blogging totalled $17.4 million by 2009; in some cases
these have been covered by umbrella
insurance.[55] The courts have returned with mixed
verdicts. Internet
Service Providers (ISPs),
in general, are immune from liability for information that originates with
third parties (U.S. Communications
Decency Act and the
EU Directive 2000/31/EC). In Doe v. Cahill, the Delaware
Supreme Court held
that stringent standards had to be met to unmask the anonymous
bloggers and also
took the unusual step of dismissing the libel case itself (as unfounded under
American libel law) rather than referring it back to the trial court for reconsideration.[56] In a bizarre twist, the Cahills were able to
obtain the identity of John Doe, who turned out to be the person they
suspected: the town's mayor, Councilman Cahill's political rival. The Cahills
amended their original complaint, and the mayor settled the case rather than
going to trial.
In January 2007,
two prominent Malaysian political bloggers, Jeff Ooi and Ahirudin Attan, were sued by a pro-government
newspaper, The New Straits Times Press (Malaysia) Berhad, Kalimullah bin
Masheerul Hassan, Hishamuddin bin Aun and Brenden John a/l John Pereira over alleged
defamation. The plaintiff was supported by the Malaysian government.[57] Following the suit, the Malaysian government
proposed to "register" all bloggers in Malaysia to better control
parties against their interests.[58] This is the first such legal case against
bloggers in the country. In the United States, blogger Aaron Wall was sued by
Traffic Power for defamation and publication of trade secrets in 2005.[59] According to Wired magazine,
Traffic Power had been "banned from Google for allegedly rigging search
engine results."[60] Wall and other "white hat" search
engine optimization consultants
had exposed Traffic Power in what they claim was an effort to protect the
public. The case was dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction, and Traffic
Power failed to appeal within the allowed time.[61]
In 2009, NDTV issued a legal notice to Indian blogger Kunte for a blog post
criticizing their coverage of the Mumbai attacks.[62] The blogger unconditionally withdrew his
post, which resulted in several Indian bloggers criticizing NDTV for trying to
silence critics.[63]
Employment
Employees who
blog about elements of their place of employment can begin to affect the
reputation of their employer, either in a positive way, if the employee is praising
the employer and its workplaces, or in a negative way, if the blogger is making
negative comments about the company or its practices.
In general,
attempts by employee bloggers to protect themselves by maintaining anonymity
have proved ineffective.[64] In 2009, a controversial and landmark
decision by The Hon. Mr
Justice Eady refused
to grant an order to protect the anonymity of Richard
Horton. Horton was a
police officer in the United Kingdom who blogged about his job under the name
"NightJack".[65]
Delta Air
Lines fired flight attendant Ellen Simonetti because she posted photographs of herself in
uniform on an aeroplane and because of comments posted on her blog "Queen
of Sky: Diary of a Flight Attendant" which the employer deemed
inappropriate.[66][67] This case highlighted the issue of personal
blogging and freedom of expression versus employer rights and responsibilities,
and so it received wide media attention. Simonetti took legal action against
the airline for "wrongful termination, defamation of character and lost
future wages".[68] The suit was postponed while Delta was in
bankruptcy proceedings.[69]
In early 2006,
Erik Ringmar, a senior lecturer at the London
School of Economics, was
ordered by the convenor of his department to "take down and destroy"
his blog in which he discussed the quality of education at the school.[70]
Mark Jen was
terminated in 2005 after 10 days of employment as an assistant product manager
at Google for discussing corporate secrets on his personal blog, then called
99zeros and hosted on the Google-owned Blogger service.[71] He blogged about unreleased products and
company finances a week before the company's earnings announcement. He was
fired two days after he complied with his employer's request to remove the
sensitive material from his blog.[72]
In India, blogger
Gaurav Sabnis resigned from IBM after his posts questioned the claims made by a management school.[73] Jessica Cutler, aka "The Washingtonienne", blogged
about her sex life while employed as a congressional assistant. After the blog
was discovered and she was fired,[74] she wrote a novel based on her experiences
and blog: The Washingtonienne: A Novel. As of 2006, Cutler is being
sued by one of her former lovers in a case that could establish the extent to
which bloggers are obligated to protect the privacy of their real life
associates.[75]
Catherine
Sanderson, a.k.a. Petite Anglaise, lost her job in Paris at a British accountancy
firm because of blogging.[76] Although given in the blog in a fairly
anonymous manner, some of the descriptions of the firm and some of its people
were less than flattering. Sanderson later won a compensation claim case
against the British firm, however.[77]
On the other
hand, Penelope
Trunk wrote an
upbeat article in The Boston Globe in 2006, entitled "Blogs
'essential' to a good career".[78] She was one of the first journalists to
point out that a large portion of bloggers are professionals and that a
well-written blog can help attract employers.
Business
owners
Business owners
who blog about their business can also run into legal consequences. Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks, was fined during the 2006 NBA playoffs for
criticizing NBA officials on the court and in his blog.[79]
Political
dangers
See
also: Political repression of cyber-dissidents
Blogging can
sometimes have unforeseen consequences in politically sensitive areas. In some
countries, Internet
police or secret police may monitor blogs and arrest blog authors or
commentators. Blogs can be much harder to control than broadcast or print media
because a person can create a blog whose authorship is hard to trace by using
anonymity technology such as Tor. As a result, totalitarian and authoritarian regimes often seek to suppress blogs and
punish those who maintain them.
In Singapore, two
ethnic Chinese individuals were imprisoned under the country's anti-sedition
law for
posting anti-Muslim remarks in their blogs.[80] Egyptian blogger Kareem Amer was charged with insulting the Egyptian
president Hosni Mubarak and an Islamic institution through his blog. It is the first
time in the history of Egypt that a blogger was prosecuted. After a brief trial
session that took place in Alexandria, the blogger was found guilty and sentenced to
prison terms of three years for insulting Islam and inciting sedition and one year for insulting Mubarak.[81] Egyptian blogger Abdel Monem Mahmoud was
arrested in April 2007 for anti-government writings in his blog. Monem is a
member of the then banned Muslim
Brotherhood. After
the 2011
Egyptian revolution, the
Egyptian blogger Maikel
Nabil Sanad was
charged with insulting the military for an article he wrote on his personal
blog and sentenced to three years.[82]
After expressing
opinions in his personal blog about the state of the Sudanese armed
forces, Jan Pronk, United Nations Special Representative
for Sudan, was given three days notice to leave Sudan. The
Sudanese army had demanded his deportation.[83][84] In Myanmar, Nay Phone Latt, a blogger, was sentenced to 20 years in jail for posting
a cartoon critical of head of state Than Shwe.[85]
Personal
safety
See
also: Cyberstalking and Internet homicide
One consequence
of blogging is the possibility of online or in-person attacks or threats
against the blogger, sometimes without apparent reason. In some cases, bloggers
have faced cyberbullying. Kathy Sierra, author of the blog "Creating Passionate
Users",[86] was the target of threats and misogynistic insults to the point that she cancelled her
keynote speech at a technology conference in San Diego, fearing for her safety.[87] While a blogger's anonymity is often
tenuous, Internet
trolls who would
attack a blogger with threats or insults can be emboldened by the anonymity of
the online environment, where some users are known only by a pseudonymous
"username" (e.g., "Hacker1984"). Sierra and supporters
initiated an online discussion aimed at countering abusive online behaviour[88] and
developed a Blogger's
Code of Conduct, which
set out a rules for
behaviour in the
online space.
See also
- Blog award
- BROG
- Chat room
- Citizen
journalism
- Collaborative
blog
- Comparison of free blog hosting services
- Customer
engagement
- Glossary
of blogging
- Interactive journalism
- Internet
think tank
- Israblog
- List of blogs
- List of family-and-homemaking blogs
- Mass
collaboration
- Perzine
- Sideblog
- Social blogging
- Think
aloud protocol
- Webmaster
- Web
template system
- Web traffic
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Further
reading
- Alavi, Nasrin. We Are Iran:
The Persian Blogs, Soft Skull Press, New York, 2005. ISBN 1-933368-05-5.
- Bruns, Axel, and Joanne Jacobs,
eds. Uses of Blogs, Peter Lang, New York, 2006. ISBN 0-8204-8124-6.
- Blood, Rebecca. "Weblogs: A History and
Perspective" Archived May 30, 2015, at the Wayback
Machine.
"Rebecca's Pocket".
- Mercado-Kierkegaard,
Sylvia (2006).
"Blogs, lies and the doocing: The next hotbed of
litigation?". Computer Law & Security Review. 22 (2):
127–136. doi:10.1016/j.clsr.2006.01.002.
- Kline, David; Burstein, Dan. Blog!:
How the Newest Media Revolution is Changing Politics, Business, and
Culture, Squibnocket Partners, L.L.C., 2005. ISBN 1-59315-141-1.
- Gorman, Michael. "Revenge of the Blog
People!". Library
Journal.
- Heriot, Gail, Are Modern Bloggers Following in the
Footsteps of Publius (and Other Musings on Blogging by Legal Scholars...), 8 Wash. U. L. Rev. 1113 (2006).
- Ringmar, Erik. A Blogger's Manifesto: Free Speech
and Censorship in the Age of the Internet (London: Anthem Press, 2007).
- Rosenberg, Scott, Say Everything: how blogging Began,
what it's becoming, and why it matters, New York : Crown Publishers,
2009. ISBN 978-0-307-45136-1
- Weinberger,
David (August
31, 2015), "Why blogging still
matters", The
Boston Globe
External links
Look up blog in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Wikiquote has quotations related to Blogging.
Wikimedia Commons
has media related to Blogs.
- Legal Guide for bloggers by the Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Law Library Legal Blawgs Web Archive from the U.S. Library
of Congress
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