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Attack of the Newbie Bloggers
I’m sitting at the library tapping my fingers on the keyboard of my laptop as I normally do at least a few times a week. In the area behind me, separated by a divider, there’s a class going on. It’s a class on how to blog using wordpress. I’m listening to this class — the questions being asked by the students (many of them working class people who are not only new to blogging, but are relatively inexperienced with the Internet in general) and the instructor’s answers. According to the last estimate, I read, there are something like 250,000,000+ blogs currently online globally with about 175,000+ new blogs being created every day. I’m not exactly a math whiz (and correct me if I’m wrong), but that means that nearly 3 blogs are being created every minute of the day. Wow! That’s an astounding number. That means that while I’ve been writing this something like 6 or 7 new blogs have come into being and that at least a couple more will arrive on the scene by the time I key-in the last period of the last sentence in this post.
(Wait a second I have to go off-topic here and interrupt the flow to comment on something the instructor just told his class that is stupid and wrong: The instructor just told the class that “open source software is free and not protected by copyright.” Not true, dipshit. Open source just means that the code of the software has a license to be freely modified by other programmers. That doesn’t mean that software created from that source code can’t be sold commercially or that the code isn’t protected by copyright.)
Getting back to my original point, there are increasing numbers of people joining the blogosphere every day — regular people who mostly don’t have a damn clue about what they are doing and aren’t professional writers. That’s not necessarily a bad thing because some of them will improve or discover they don’t like doing it and hit a wall and quit thus sparing us from their mediocre blog one way or another. And, even if you are not a terribly good writer, writing still has it’s own rewards. Unfortunately, you also have people posting illegal podcasts, plagiarizing, infringing on copyrights, etc. Some know better but do it anyway because they figure they can get away with it, but most do it because they don’t know the difference. (And with guys like the erstwhile instructor confusing open source with copyright-free, it’s no wonder) until one day they end up getting sued. Ignorance breeds ignorance. On the other hand, with so much ignorance being spread around, there is a need for bloggers like me to blog about it. So kudos to ignorant newbies for giving me something to write about.
Ain’t That Stupid
Yesterday, I was watching a tv show on Fancast.com and if you’ve ever watched a television program online you know that every few minutes or so, the program is interrupted for a ad break. Well, as I was watching my program, the ad comes on — except it isn’t an ad, but a message where the ad is supposed to be stating that the ad cannot be shown at this time and the reason may be because the viewer is running ad-blocking software or something. That the viewer should disable the ad-blocker to be able to watch the ad. Now, I was not running any special software and I have no idea why this ad was unable to play, but that’s not the point. What is pertinent is why, if I were running ad blocking software, would I want to disable it since the whole point of running such software is so the user wouldn’t have to watch commercials to begin with. Furthermore, what’s the point of running such a stupid message? Are there Internet users out there lodging complaints because they are unable to view commercials online? Is there actually a mob of people going, “What’s up with that? Where’s the commercial? I tuned-in to watch it and all I’m getting is this dumb tv show.” It ain’t happenin’, right? Yet, Fancast, Hulu or whoever the fuck is behind the airing of these commercials saw fit to write-up an obnoxious little message and run it anyway.
