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Case Study 2 Of Existing Blog - The Power of Weblog

Matt Haughey is the founder of community weblog MetaFilter. One day he got a telemarketer call while he was sitting at home. The cold callers were Critical IP, who had gotten his home phone number from the central database of domain name owners. He posted his outrage on his own weblog:

The gang at Critical IP feel the whois database is a virtual goldmine worth cold-calling and bothering you at home (when I asked them if they got my number from the whois database, they admitted that yes, that was how they obtained it). ...

Matt then asked other bloggers to spread the word that Critical IP was coldcalling people while they were eating supper:

If you feel like sharing this message with anyone else, just copy this HTML and post on your site: Critical IP sucks.

The result: over the next few days, it was noticed that dozens of blogs had linked to Matt's post, all with the same message: "Critical IP sucks". Even today, you may find over two-dozen weblogs linking to Matt's post.

The thought here was that the collective linking of the weblog community can achieve a sort of mob justice, with Google searchers finding the message "Critical IP sucks" whenever they searched for Critical IP.

As collective votes of the weblog community determine what sites you see on Google, Matt's personal site soon became the #1 search result for google searches of "Critical IP".

Its worth noting how frighteningly powerful weblogs are. There's even a name in the weblog community for this phenomenon: Google Bombing. Whether it's done accidentally or more purposefully, the very existence of this phenomenon points to the power of Weblogs to impact the Google search experience.

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Whether a professional journalist or a teenage high school student, they all have been doing the same thing: using blog to link to their friends and rivals and comment on what they are doing. Tools that could be considered are database programming, CGI/Perl scripting, Flash animation etc. These are the examples of what visitors actually want to read. One can try coding to "render a blurb in HTML" to be in a separate file. All of the links were reorganized and retitled and did a simple, clear Information Architecture on the site was created. These new information gatekeepers help to rewrite the rules to the degree that they complement, supplement and otherwise advance understanding.


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Most of the time, the Weblogs tend to be less about actual reporting and more about analysis and punditry and opinionated commentary. There are extra site features like articles etc. These are probably the reasons why they have been widely adopted and maintained - for several years in some cases.