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August 16, 2004

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Mary's comments were of interest (August 16)--and
I agree with Jack Stephens' suggestions (Aug. 17) on blogs.
Although I don't have time to blog, it would seem that changing one's posts without acknowledgment would be confusing for readers who come along a bit later to the posting and the responses...I assume words count for something! (Otherwise, what's the use?)
No question, blogs can be useful for throwing ideas around--and who knows?--maybe we'll come up with better ideas just through sharing...

This is a very interesting subject.

I generally feel that after a reader has replied to a post, then I need to leave it as is. If I change it after someone comments, then it would appear to subsequent readers that the commenter had read the new version.

However, if I was running a blog that got lots of comments (e.g., Little Green Footballs standardly gets hundreds in the first hour) then I would probably still fix a typo or improve wording here or there after someone had commented.

Might it be a question of intent? If I changed a post in response to a piece of criticism without acknowledging that change, then that would be questionable.

You raise an interesting set of questions, actually for most online content, but I think the ethics of blogging are even less well-defined than elsewhere.

As you may know, those who get LibraryLaw by RSS feed are likely to see changes; I know I've seen three or four versions of that one post. We could save them, but who would do that?

If I had a blog [OK, I do now, but only for Cites & Insights announcements and primarily to serve RSS folk), I'd have to decide whether to follow the lead some blogs use (e.g., Boing Boing), using strikeouts and red type to clarify when something's been changed, or whether to just make changes. The former is clearer but can lead to some very messy posts.

For Cites & Insights, designed as a somewhat formal publication, the answer was simple and I think correct: Once published (once posted), text within an issue is never changed. I'll run a correction later, and certainly clarify, but in later issues--not by modifying the published issue itself. (Even when I changed sites, the only changes in the issues were the URL at the very end and, in a couple of cases, corrections for running page footers--but never the text itself.)

There's probably an evolving ethos here. Actually, given that it's the web, there are probably at least a dozen different evolutions, some of them wildly at odds with one another.

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