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The New York Times

April 8, 2004 by Michael Boyle

The New York Times

is providing internet access to Condoleezza Rice’s public testimony before the Sept 11 Commission.

It’s amazing though – she lies as easily as she breathes, as far as I can tell. She just now was talking about the Department of Homeland Security and how important it is to US security. Trouble is, the Bush Administration blocked the formation of such a department, which was proposed long before Sept 11 by the Hart-Rudman Commission.

Later…I can’t believe this – now she’s straight out blaming Clinton. “We were in office for 238 days” she said, “Why didn’t the previous adminstration address these structural issues…” etc etc. Clue: they DID. They got the ball rolling, but for purely ideological reasons the Bush Administration shelved everything they did and tried to start again. They threw out the baby with the bathwater and then turned around and used their utter failure on terrorism to justify an illegal war on an unrelated state. Simply amazing.

Tags: NYTimes, US Politics

I’ll admit it,

April 6, 2004 by Michael Boyle

I’ll admit it,

I like the “X Idol” shows. I’m not a fanatic, but I watch when I remember and keep track of who I like and don’t like. For the most part it’s fluff: a karaoke contest on steroids, masquerading as a something we should take seriously (but not that seriously).

This season, though, one of the rejects on American Idol has somehow become a phenomenon. A phenomenon that makes me very uncomfortable. They have taken this radically bad singer and seemingly convinced him he has potential, to the guffaws of accepting crowds everywhere.

Emil Guillermo of the SFGate has more: William Hung – Racism, Or Magic?.

Tags: Media

Powazek:

April 6, 2004 by Michael Boyle

Powazek:

The “Kostroversy” Context.

Tags: Blogging

Coates on Kinja:

April 6, 2004 by Michael Boyle

Coates on Kinja:

Sharing multiple digests could be kinja’s killer app. “…it’s not the fact that I can create my own little version of Haddock Blogs [digests] that’s interesting, it’s the fact that I can chuck it around to all my friends. I can link to it like this and – if I wanted to – I could stick it at the end of my blogroll so that other people could play with it too. I could e-mail it to someone, or IM it or even just tell someone my user name and have them go and find it.”

It’s too bad that so far Kinja has not very well communicated just what it is. Their communication to date has been based primarily around an issue that they have not in any way proven – that weblogs pose some sort of technical problem for non-technical users. But as Coates suggests, that whole issue is secondary and not particularly interesting.

What’s interesting about Kinja is not having a digest you can read yourself; it’s having a digest – and hopefully many digests – you can share with others. This is why its non-aggregator status is critical – to successfully share content in digest form, the applicatation can’t discriminate between sites that do or do not use any particular flavour of syndication.

Other things flow from this as well, in particular in terms of copyright. If I don’t syndicate my site (implicitly giving permission to copy that text for reading in another context), anyone scraping my site is guilty of a breach of my copyright. By providing excerpts and links to the original in the context of a digest, however, Kinja is likely in the clear in that the choice of digest items is itself a critique or commentary, and so the excerpts clearly become fair use.

In terms of the communications/marketing around Kinja – which has been vague and seems to miss the point – it looks like Kinja might have fallen into a classic trap of web development. It seems that the interesting and difficult technical problem they solved in building the site was mistaken or substituted for its raison d’être.

Tags: Startup, Tom Coates

Mark Frauenfelder

April 5, 2004 by Michael Boyle

Mark Frauenfelder

has made an important post: Boing Boing’s explosive growth – and what to do about it. He’s opened a discussion thread so you can contribute. So far they have had a lot of good suggestions and only a few trolls.

Tags: Blogging

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