Archive for the 'The Art of Blogging' Category



17
Nov

2006 Canadian Blog Awards

It’s that time of year again - time to vote for the best blogs of 2006. The voting timetable is as follows -

Round 1 Voting Closes: Tuesday November 21, 2006
Round 1 Results: Thursday November 23, 2006
Round 2 Voting Opens: Saturday November 25, 2006
Round 2 Voting Closes: Friday December 1, 2006
Round 2 Results: Sunday December 3, 2006 9pm EST

Will Accordian Guy retain the top spot as Canada’s best blog or surrender the title to one of the other high profile blogs like SDA or Warren Kinsella’s page?

It would be nice to see a category for News Aggregating blogs. As a host donor for one such blog, I know they can generate a lot of traffic and gain cult status. Being nominated in even one category would have also been nice, although at least one cynic made the list.

Steve Janke’s blog is even more conspicuous by its absence. It could be an “oversight” … but is more likely attributable to Janke’s ongoing feud with Robert McClelland (owner of the blog awards).

12
Nov

Site Move

Changes coming up within the next 24 hours:

  1. The site is being moved to a new server with a fresh installation of Wordpress. There may be some minor disruptions to service within the next 24 hours
  2. A new template will be chosen. Jack was kind enough to point out that the current template with installed plugins renders garbage under Internet Explorer 7, which an unfortunately high number of people will be using within the coming months
  3. New content will actually appear. It’s election time in Toronto - I would like to be one of the first Toronto bloggers to rap the knuckles of fellow Torontonians for re-electing “his blondness” (acknowledgment to Lorrie Goldstein), David Miller.

CUonIE7.jpg
Cynics Unlimited on IE7. Lovely.

Apologies in advance for any inconvenience, though I don’t expect much since the routine of changing servers is becoming rather … routine.

Update: Finally got the permalinks working and I’m back in business. The template still looks a bit ugly in IE7 … so use Firefox! IE doesn’t play by the rules anyway.

19
Aug

A Dark Note from Dr. Dawg

I’m a bit late to discover this (on vacation), but tragedy has struck the household of one of Canada’s most prominent and most thoughtful bloggers -

From Dawg’s Blawg -

I shall be taking my leave from the blogosphere for a period, and may return only sporadically for the foreseeable future. My dear partner Marianne has just been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, which is not one of the better ones to have. Every moment with her has become infinitely precious, while the world outside now seems both monstrous and trivial at once.

Dr. Dawg distinguished himself in the Canadian blogosphere by providing measured and intelligent rebuttal to present NeoConservative dogma. While heavily combative in the comments sections of prominent right-leaning sites like Small Dead Animals and Steve Janke, he nonetheless earned the respect of his peers/foes. Dawg’s Blog is often a first stop for those looking for an intelligent “progressive” opinion on current events.

Condolences to Dawg and his partner.

25
Jul

Technorati: New Face, Old Challenges

Famed weblog ping service Technorati recently revealed a new and cleaner interface. Most noteworthy is the emphasis on categorization and [what appears to be] hand-picked content, making Technorati look more like a traditional news portal. Perhaps these changes were in response to the constant grumbling among some bloggers about the aggregator’s declining usefulness.

Dave Lucas at Capital Region people described the immediate problem in a recent post:

I associated this weblog with Technorati VERY EARLY in the game and there was a time when hundreds of hits a day came my way from blogders searching Technorati, but those days are gone. The most hits I got recently came within 15 minutes of the posting of an artcile on the World Cup. After 15 minutes my entry was lost way down on page 5 of T’rati. In my webstats for the last two days, I have NO TRAFFIC incoming via Technorati, and I believe users of the service, like myself, are now taking advantage of OTHER services and tools Technorati provides.

As Lucas stated, Technorati was originally an invaluable source of web traffic to weblogs – both new and established. However, the primary aggregator service has become less effective for two reasons:

1. Too Much Content

Technorati is tracking just short of 50 million weblogs. To join the service all you have to do is sign up and add some javascript code to your web page. It is also possible to be tracked simply by pinging the RPC service (no signup required). As a general purpose aggregator, Technorati originally sorted its content into categories (Business, Tech, Sports, etc) but even within those categories there hundreds of thousands of weblogs postings. New weblogs or weblogs without previously established reputations can easily get lost in the shuffle.

The recent addition of MySpace weblogs also presents a quality issue. As a realtime news tracker, Technorati uses a combination of keywords and age to index posts - if, for example, you put the word “rhombicosidodecahedron” in your weblog then it will be placed at the top of the search results so long as it was the most recent weblog containing that term. Observations so far suggest that MySpace users rarely write focused or meaningful material – after all it is a social networking site more famous for underage voyeurism than thoughtful commentary. The meaningless content that often emanates from MySpace blogs can quickly put a well-reasoned post on page 5 of Technorati’s search engine.

2. Gaming the System

As you’ve probably guessed by now, the trick to getting maximum traffic from Technorati is getting to the top of the search results for the most popular terms. The website solves ½ of the problem for you by giving you the top search items and tags at any given moment, naturally encouraging some bloggers to check the Technorati front page when deciding on a topic. However, as implied in the previous section, one’s post only needs to contain the popular keyword to get chronologically listed. Thus, gong back to our example, your thoughtful 500 word post on Archimedean solids (which includes rhombicosidodecahedrons) could be quickly bumped by a nonsensical post containing the phrase “I really like the word rhombicosidodecahedron. It makes me laugh”. More often than not, the blogger generating nonsensical posts is gaming the system in hopes of getting more webtraffic.

Subtler forms of gaming include auto-posting newswire feeds, frequently commenting on technorati’s top search keywords or participating in the New York Times Op-Ed reprinting ritual (the latter seems to be a self-feeding game that puts the full title of the column within the top 10 search items every Sunday).

rhombi.jpg
In case you were wondering, this is what a rhombicosidodecahedron looks like. Don’t waste your time “gaming” on this term.

The aforementioned factors contribute heavily to the 15 minute decline Lucas and many other veteran bloggers now lament. Technorati is still far from useless – a trackback from the right reader can generate a lot of traffic and perhaps a few new industry friends. However, the window of exposure is now considerably smaller and bloggers can no longer rely solely on Technorati for marketing.

13
Jul

Typepad Got you Down? Consider this Alternative (Limited Time)

Typepad had a service hiccup yesterday that resulted in lost posts and/or comments. Any hosted service like Typepad is susceptible to this problem but that is little comfort to users who have to re-approve or repost content.

If you are a serious blogger who has been plagued by service disruptions or would like to have more control over your own content, consider this limited time offer.

Offer:

  • Self-contained Wordpress-based blog, attached to your own URL (see setup steps below)
  • Select your own wordpress theme
  • “Editor” status – you control your content (within legal limits)
  • 100MB DB space; a “large” (undefined) amount of disk space
  • Email redirect related to your URL (eg yourname@yourURL.com)
  • Installation of various plugins to make your life easy (statistics, anti-spam, etc)
  • Daily database backup via email. Store your posts and comments safely in case the unthinkable happens.
  • … and of course support

Perquisites:

  • English language only
  • Good quality writing with enough original content. I am going to use the SmartAgent URL for verification (must score > 65%)
  • Demonstrate directly or indirectly that your blog draws 100 or more visitors per day

Payment:

  • No money involved!
  • An ad column will be placed in the sidebar of your blog. See Psychopolitik for an example

Setup Steps:
If your blog is selected then you will have to do the following:

  1. Register a standalone domain name (www.yourURL.com)
  2. Select a Wordpress theme
  3. Setup for the (partial) movement of your existing data
  4. Of course you will be guided for through all of these steps.

Sites currently hosted:

That is all. I’m looking for 2 (two) good blogs to host. Leave a comment here if you’re interested and/or want more information.

Update: Thanks for Jack’s Newswatch for the link. Those wishing to contact me privately can do so via admin-at-cynicsunlimited.com

30
Jun

MapStats - Track Your Visitors Visually

Admit it – as a blogger, one of your favourite activities is pouring over your webstats. It’s fun to see who is visiting your site, how many times they visit, who sent them and where they reside. If you lack a good web stats tool or prefer a highly visual overview of your recent traffic, MapStats may be the answer. Combining traditional webstat summaries with Google Maps, BlogFlux MapStats allows you to see exactly where in the world your web traffic is coming from - unique visits are marked on a scalable world map with an orange marker and details about the visitor (time, browser, page visited, operating system, etc).

MapStats.jpg

The free version of MapStats shows visitors for the current day along with graphs and statistical summaries for visitors over daily/weekly/monthly/yearly periods . The commercial version of the service allows the selection of custom date ranges. To use the free version, sign up at BlogFlux (which has a number of useful blog-related tools) and place the specified Javascript on your site.

While MapStats does not offer the detailed statistical dissections available in Mint or Slimstat, it does provide a very good overview of potential target markets and allows you to be just a little creepy in your research. As a free service, MapStats is highly recommended.

19
Jun

Scapegoating and Hate Crimes

Kate at Small Dead Animals brought attention to an article on a proposal by Bernie Farber of the Canadian Jewish Congress allowing ISP’s to immediately shut down pornographic and hate websites.

Most service providers are unable to remove objectionable content from their servers unless it has been found illegal through a lengthy court process, Farber said in his speech.

Farber proposed that major Canadian Internet providers devise a protocol based on existing laws that would allow them to remove hateful or pornographic material at their own discretion.

“It doesn’t take a lot to discern what is pornographic and what is hate,” Farber said. “As long as the context is there … they have some expertise to make those decisions.”

Kate is correct about one thing – it is rather surprising that bloggers haven’t latched onto this story to raise a huge fuss about a policy that could be legally devastating to their freedom. Visit nearly any particularly popular political blog and you will find a slight variation of the tried-and-true scapegoat formula:

  1. Write about some hardship or fear being faced by the target audience in hopes that they become a client audience.
  2. Suggest how much better life would be if {insert philosophy here} were implemented. The morality behind the philosophy is narrowly defined and in absolute terms of right and wrong.
  3. Find distinctly different groups (demographic / philosophical / class / occupational) that either benefit from the current system or have registered a moral objection to a complete implementation of the favoured philosophy. Portray target groups as being inherently evil and singularly dedicated to suppressing virtuous people like the client audience.
  4. Completely ignore any philosophical variations within the target groups, keeping them as monolithic as possible - hence easier to dismiss en masse. Political victory is measured almost exclusively in terms of destroying “the other side”, regardless of long term consequences or outstanding issues within the client audience

Politicians, preachers and journalists (MSM or blogger) have been thriving on oversimplification and scapegoating for thousands of years, and that model is unlikely to change in the near future. So what makes hate crimes legislation so threatening? Most hate crimes legislation indirectly makes two assertions:

  1. The scapegoating of some groups constitutes a criminal offense, while scapegoating other groups does not.
  2. The line between criticism and hate (as marked by terms like “libel” and “defamation”) are ultimately decided by the self-appointed activists who make a career of fighting discrimination … as they define it

Removing the legal burden of proof (i.e. the “legislation”) will make the censorship of hate and pornography even more arbitrary. Bloggers, who thrive on scapegoating and rabble-rousing, must contemplate – who can be targeted and to what extent? For example, the recent standoff between natives and police prompted a flurry of angry blogs against all those involved. The blog entries harshly critical of police generally would not qualify as hate because police are not a racial or religious minority – however some criticisms of the native protesters, which quickly became critiques of native people in general, might qualify as hate speech.

I say “might” because a hate crime prosecution generally proceeds via civilian complaint. ISP’s are profit-driven and may similarly wait for bad publicity before physically terminating down a customer’s website –without the burden of proving criminal guilt. Under such malleable conditions, native activists could decide to press hate crimes charges against a prominent blogger for the anti-native rhetoric in the reader comment section of an article - even if the article itself may have just targeted a specific group of protesters rather than an entire racial group.

Thus, bloggers could be charged not only for their own statements, but for statements by readers. Short of turning off the comments section entirely, most bloggers have only marginal control over the content posted by readers and also risk criticism by deleting controversial comments. Activists with strong political agendas may choose to target only those sites they oppose on philosophical grounds. Similarly, demographic groups with weak political representation could still be skewered without recourse.

Society as a whole will not be served by arbitrary definition and application of hate laws. Rather than fighting an un-winnable war against the proliferation of unpopular opinions, groups like the Canadian Jewish Congress would be far better served to counter the negative information found in hate sites with positive information. Most bigoted commentaries are disprovable (otherwise it wouldn’t be bigotry) so why not concentrate on disproving them in the same public arenas? Bernie Farber’s proposal will only benefit political activists who can use the “hate crime” label to suppress opposing opinions – bigoted and otherwise.




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