Posting Bleg: Blogger-to-Blogger Public Dialogue Software Question

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Mon, 2009-08-03 16:23

“To bleg is to write a blog entry or comment for the sole purpose of asking for something.” — Blogglossary.com

In email another blogger suggested that it would be nice to have a joint dialogue about a particular topic related to both our areas of expertise. The idea being we could have some sort of email-like threaded discussion that would be like, well, email except it could be posted to one or both of our blogs. Or possibly to a third-party… something or other… and we could each link to that.

The easiest thing for bloggers, I suppose, would be for each of us to just post to our own blogs, link to each other with our replies, and then link to our links to our replies to our replies… and, yeah, that’s where it sort of breaks down.

Twitter’s a little too chaotic and, to be honest, 148 characters posts isn’t exactly my forte.

Facebook is another possibility, I think, maybe. I have a Facebook account and so does the other blogger, but neither of us are exactly Facebook wizards.

So!

Anyone know of a nice, easy way to go about that? Using a plugin for either a MovableType (this blog) or possibly WordPress (that blog?)

Thanks in advance.

Submitted by 3100 (not verified) on Mon, 2009-08-03 21:33.

Umm... unless I'm misunderstanding something, wouldn't a message board be close enough?

[It might be fine, especially if we could figure out a way to tie it to our respective blogs. Thanks, Nightfall. --fl]

Submitted by 3100 (not verified) on Mon, 2009-08-03 22:03.

If you each created accounts at Friendfeed.com, you could start a conversation there and then embed that conversation into each of your blog posts (click "share" then copy the code from the "embed" field). Then as the conversation continued on Friendfeed it'd show up on each of your blogs.

It wouldn't be so suitable if you want to do really long essays, or add images etc, but it gives you more space to play with than Twitter does.

[Great tip, Zeborah. I'll check it out. Thanks. --fl]

Submitted by 3100 (not verified) on Tue, 2009-08-04 18:49.

Maybe I'm missing something, but couldn't you just set up a separate blog with both you and your public dialogue correspondent as contributors, and then you both simply cross-post relevant blog posts to that blog?

In 2009 South Korea

Submitted by infiplinahDib (not verified) on Tue, 2010-02-02 08:34.

In 2009 South Korea introduced imaginative legislation against online copyright infringement. Penalties were mainly sour and included disconnection from the Internet. As digital sales skyrocket by more than 50% but logged infringements definitely dilate, a examine controversially places South Koreans as the dialect birth b deliver’s edition 2 music pirates.
South Korea was included in the Intercontinental Highbrow Trait Association’s predominance piracy watchlist in 2009. It’s members, including the RIAA and MPAA, had been asking into bruiser action and in the stomach of the year, that came to pass.
At the motivation of July 2009, new anti-piracy legislation took start to work in South Korea which aggressively targeted illicit file-sharers and other online copyright infringers. The laws, created past the sticks’s Elders of the church of Lifestyle, Sports and Tourism, gave the authorities the power to unhitch pirates because up to 6 months.
According to the annual backfire of state-run piracy proctor the Korea Copyright Commission, it detected 35,345 cases of copyright contravention from so-called ‘cyberlocker’ services and P2P sites in 2009, approaching three times as many as the 2008 total of almost 12,000. Video and music infringements accounted proper for for everyone 32% of all violations. Cases against human being file-sharers are peaceful to be revealed.
This stringy legislation was welcomed around the IFPI, who in their Digital Music Dispatch 2010 labeled the action as the punish response to a “crisis”. The music corps noted that digital sales had jumped 53% in the basic 9 months of 2009, although sales of the same had already risen aside 18% in the fundamental 6 months of the year – pre-legislation – largely apropos to the fresh availability of legal alternatives.
However, according to the results of a survey carried old hat through Hong Kong-based Music Matters of 8,500 people in 13 countries, South Koreans nevertheless committed the surrogate greatest horde of online music infringements in 2009.
Released at the 2010 MIDEM affair, the results revealed that the crown speckle was taken by the Chinese, with there 68% of users admitting they had downloaded music without paying for the sake it. The South Koreans took bat of an eye position with 60% with the Spanish coming in third with 46%.
The South Korean Religion of Culture, Sports and Tourism has choose dubiosity on the piece though. Apparently the question asked away Music Matters to those surveyed was a to a certain extent dubious “Set up you downloaded music from the internet without payment?”
It’s unworkable to say if the respondents felt that, on specimen, an ad-supported repair like Spotify or other legitimately unrestrained services should be captivated into account when giving a response.
In the meantime, the South Korean administration has asked dope outlets not to publish the results of the evaluate until they’ve had a occur to look into its validity. Those calls be experiencing been widely ignored.

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