It’s
a Blogs World
I
have decided to do my last blog on blogs. Considering we studied blogs 3rd
week and we are now official bloggers, it feels appropriate.

Blogging first started with basic diary entries from Bruce
Ableson in 1998. Others then joined and wrote their own journal entries whilst
commenting on others journal entries. 5 million people have done this in “Open
Diary” to this day. 9 years later David Karp brought us Tumblr.
Users are able to easily upload photos, text,
images, video and conversation to the site for short, quick posts or lengthier
ones. The site emphasizes its ease of use and encourages sharing by allowing
users to "re-blog" posts they loved. With more than 6 million blogs,
The
New York Times (strangely)
called it, "
Facebook
and
Twitter's new rival."(Marcus, S, 2010).

It was surprising to discover that when Technorati, (the
blogosphere ranking website), did a survey in 2009, it showed that 67% of
bloggers were male. I assumed women would have an equal share, especially for
the fact that”
one of the most popular categories of blogs is the
“mommy blog,” dishing out advice and empathy on raising children” (Cross, M,
2011, pg. 38). I believed this because I have always felt women are
better communicators, especially from an emotional and personal stand point.
Technorati has Huffington Post as the most
successful blog at number one.
The Huffington Post was launched in 2005
as a liberal/left commentary outlet and alternative to news aggregators. The
site offers news, blogs, and original content and covers politics, business,
entertainment, environment, technology, popular media, lifestyle, culture,
comedy,
healthy living,
women's interests and local news. It has come under some scrutiny over the
years for its liberal and anti-republican views. I find it interesting that the
website now wants to become an online newspaper. Will this mean it will go full
circle and then become a fourth estate?
There are various legal things to consider when
starting and writing a blog. Like any form of art or literature, the creator
has a personal responsibili
ty and social and legal obligation to act within
certain boundaries. Some of the main legal issues are firstly Copyright
- if you want to use copyright protected works on your blog, you must obtain
the copyright owners permission if you cannot rely on a fair dealing exception.
You do not necessarily need a written agreement with every contributor to your
blog – verbal permission is fine.
Moral Rights - A creator of a work has moral
rights which recognise the creator's ongoing connection with the work.
Moral
rights entitle a creator to the right of attribution (naming), the right
against false attribution and the right of integrity against derogatory
treatment of the work in a way that prejudices the reputation or honour of the
creator. Trade marks - a trade mark is a
sign used in business to indicate that goods or services come from a particular
trader or service provider. It can be a letter, name, signature, word, numeral,
device, brand, heading, label, and aspect of packaging or shape, colour and
even a scent or sound. A trade mark can consist of either words or images or a
combination of both. There are two types of trademarks: registered trademarks
and common law trademarks. Defamation - While you are venting your views on
your blog you should consider whether what you are writing is defamatory.
Defamation is a communication to at least one person that lowers the reputation
of an identifiable third person, where the communicator has no legal defence.
More than 250 years ago a British writer called Henry
Fielding introduced the idea of a fourth estate. This was the theory that
writers could keep business, government and the social elite accountable for
their actions. However the fourth estate has become owned by the social elite
that in turn have strong ties to government and business. This is where
bloggers and jBloggers can apply a fifth estate though ‘citizen journalism.’
But citizen journalism can share the same bias and hidden agendas that the
fourth estate has too.
In Mary Cross’s book, Bloggerati, Twitterati: how blogs and twitter are
transforming popular culture,
she details how Blogs are more mainstream than any other media format. The new
blogs that seem to be creeping up the Technorati charts are ones like TMZ,
Gawker and Boing Boing. “The best way to get people to read your blog is to
stir up some controversy, drawing in people from all sides of an argument, as
Bill Wasik documents in his book, And Then There’s This.” (Cross, M, 2011, pg.
45). To me blogs give the general public a voice again. Our voices have been
muffled over the years; even voters are finding it hard to trust their
politicians and readers their local newspapers. Andrew Keen comes up with an
interesting point when he says” What’s being blurred, he says, is the line “between
fact and opinion, informed expertise and amateurish speculation.” Celebrating
the amateur over the expert, online discussions are full of misinformation and rumour.
Anonymity complicates the picture, and issues of ownership and copyright are
rife” (Cross, M, pg. 50).
The technology that makes virtual communities
possible has the potential to bring enormous leverage to ordinary citizens at
relatively little cost--intellectual leverage, social leverage, commercial
leverage, and most important, political leverage. But the technology will not
in itself fulfil that potential; this latent technical power must be used
intelligently and deliberately by an informed population. More people must
learn about that leverage and learn to use it, while we still have the freedom
to do so, if it is to live up to its potential. The odds are always good that
big power and big money will find a way to control access to virtual
communities; big power and big money always found ways to control new
communications media when they emerged in the past. The Net is still out of
control in fundamental ways, but it might not stay that way for long. What we
know and do know is important because it is still possible for people around
the world to make sure this new sphere of vital human discourse remains open to
the citizens of the planet before the political and economic big boys seize it,
censor it, meter it, and sell it back to us.
References
Cross,
M. 2011. ‘Got Blog’ in Bloggerati, Twitterati: How Blogs and Twitter are
Transforming Popular Culture, Greenwood Publishing Group, EBL eBook
Library, viewed in March 2013
Legal Issues for Bloggers, viewed in March 2013,
http://www.artslaw.com.au/info-sheets/info-sheet/legal-issues-for-bloggers/
The Virtual Community, viewed in
March 2013, http://www.rheingold.com/vc/book/intro.html
Images
1. http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_4S6buKKlhfQ/TOwEWQe6UwI/AAAAAAAAAEE/iuiMOhZfJYM/s1600/app_sphere_blogger.png
2. http://www.problogger.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/huffington-post-blogging.jpg
3. https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcT87DYP6XeVGIpyOZa_GIRo-dMQ3lJn18LAVHz9ePRSwvB-WFhU
4. https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRAH2v5xpUmcyDkp39y5EMWzAMECj152SX50U3h7djZpQSrMjgdKw
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