Julia Lipman schrieb einen Artikel im Flak Magazin zur Userland-Salon-Partnerschaft in Sachen Weblog-Hosting.
Cullen and another Salon blogger, Erik Speckman, recently tried to quantify
the impact of content posted on blogs versus in comments to those blogs.
Front-page posts, Speckman argued, are “first-class content,” and comments
are “second-class content.” In terms of the hierarchical organization of the
typical blog, this is accurate. But if the content on Salon itself is
considered first-class content, then where do these blogs lie? It’s hard to
make the case that they’re on the same level, since they’re put together by
unpaid, unedited and often unknown writers and not linked to from the front
page, but they’re a step above traditional forums. Salon’s challenge is to
convince the general public that for a small fee, they too can be
first-class
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