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ʶҹТͧ the Blogosphere, ¶Ö§¡ÅÒ§»Õ 2006

posted by a_somjai | 2006-08-09 @ 0:35 AM.


David Sifry ä´éÃÒ§ҹʶԵԨҡ Technorati à¡ÕèÂǡѺ "State of the Blogosphere, April 2006." â¾ÊµìäÇéàÁ×èÍ¡ÅÒ§à´×͹àÁÉÒ¹ (17), 2006 ÊÃػʶԵԺÅçÍ¡·ÑèÇâÅ¡äÇé¹èÒʹ㨠¢Íà¡çºàÍÒÁÒàÅèÒÊÙè¡Ñ¹´Ñ§¹Õé


* ʶԵԨӹǹºÅçÍ¡·Õèà¡çºäÇéä´éâ´ÂTechnorati ¶Ö§Çѹ·Õè 1 àÁÉÒ¹ 2006 ¾ºÇèÒÁÕÁÒ¡¡ÇèÒ 35.3 ÅéÒ¹ blogs

* ¨Ò¡Ê¶ÔµÔ·Õèà¡çºäÇéä´éµÔ´µè͡ѹ¹Ò¹¡ÇèÒ 42 à´×͹·Õè¼èÒ¹ÁÒ ¾ºÇèÒ The blogosphere ËÃ×Í ¢¹Ò´¢Í§ºÅçÍ¡¨Ðà¾ÔèÁ¢Öé¹Ë¹Öè§à·èÒµÑÇ·Ø¡ 6 à´×͹ (»Ñ¨¨ØºÑ¹¶Ö§ÊÔ§ËÒ¤Á¹Õé ʶԵÔÂ×¹ÂѹÇèÒºÅçÍ¡¨Ðà¾ÔèÁ¢Öé¹à·èÒµÑÇã¹·Ø¡ æ 200 Çѹ ËÃ×Í·Ø¡ 6 à´×͹¤ÃÖè§ ËÃ×Í ã¹ªèǧ 5-7 à´×͹)

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* 19.4 ÅéÒ¹ bloggers (55% ¢Í§ºÅçÍ¡ãËÁè) Âѧ¤§â¾ÊµìŧºÅçÍ¡ÀÒÂËÅѧ¨Ò¡ 3 à´×͹·Õè blogs ¶Ù¡ÊÃéÒ§¢Öé¹ÁÒ ËÃ×ÍÍÒ¨¾Ù´ã¹á§èºÇ¡ä´éÇèÒ ÁÒ¡¡ÇèÒ¤ÃÖè§Ë¹Ö觢ͧºÅçÍ¡à¡Ô´ãËÁè¨ÐÁÕÍÒÂØÂ×¹à¡Ô¹ÊÒÁà´×͹¡çä´é áµèÁͧÍÕ¡á§èä´éÇèÒ ÁÕà¾Õ§ 50.5% ËÃ×Í 13.7 ÅéÒ¹ blogs à·èÒ¹Ñé¹·ÕèÂѧµ×è¹µÑÇ - active ÍÂÙè

* (ÍÂèÒ§¹éÍ blogging ¡çà»ç¹¡Ô¨¡ÃÃÁ·Õèà¨éҢͧºÅçÍ¡µéͧ·Ó¨¹µÔ´à»ç¹¹ÔÊÑÂÍÂÙèáËÅйèÒ) à¾ÃÒлÃÐÁÒ³ 3.9 ÅéÒ¹ bloggers ¨Ð update ºÅçÍ¡¢Í§µ¹ÍÂèÒ§¹éÍ·ء æ ÊÑ»´ÒËì (¤×ÍÊèǹ˹Öè§à»ç¹ ºÅç͡Ẻ weekly blogs)

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(º·ÇÔà¤ÃÒÐËìµèÍà¹×èͧ¶Ö§à´×͹ÊÔ§ËÒ¤Á¹Õé ¢Í§ David Sifry ÍèÒ¹à¾ÔèÁàµÔÁä´éã¹ State of the Blogosphere, August 2006 àªè¹ ʶԵԢͧ Technorati àÁ×èÍ July 31, 2006 ¾ºÇèÒ ÁÕºÅçÍ¡à¾ÔèÁ¢Öé¹à»ç¹ 50 ÅéÒ¹ºÅçÍ¡ áÅÐʶҹÐ(âÅ¡)¢Í§¡ÒÃàÅ蹺ÅçÍ¡ä´éàµÔºâµ¢Öé¹ÁÒ¡¡ÇèÒ 3 »Õ·Õè¼èÒ¹ÁÒ¶Ö§ 100 à·èÒ à»ç¹µé¹)



UPDATED: October 23, 2006
ʶԵԺÅéÍ¡à¡ÍÃì㹨չ

Anonymity Ending in China Blogs?

Proposed laws would require registration for Chinese bloggers—but can they be enforced?

| The Business of Technology | October 20, 2006

"On the heels of an announcement that Chinese mobile phone subscribers will be required to register using real names, an insider at China’s Ministry of Information Industries (MII) now says that upcoming regulations will require bloggers to register with real names and identification numbers.

(...................................)

“Many bloggers have told me that they’ll have many ways to escape from the regulation,” said Mr. Mao.

“[The proposed regulation] wouldn’t solve the problem, and I think it would just drive Chinese bloggers to move their blogs to foreign-hosted sites,” said Mr. Fang.

"Big Brother Can Still Watch You

China now boasts over 17.5 million bloggers, producing nearly 34 million blogs. An estimated 75 million Chinese netizens—more than half the country’s estimated 130 million Internet users—are blog readers.

Most of the sites—like blogs the world over—chronicle the banalities of young people: sick kitties, puppy love, carping about boring jobs, shopping. Only a handful of bloggers tend to tackle sensitive political issues, and they’re generally unwelcome on China’s domestic blog-hosting sites.

Beijing has had little trouble tracking down cyber dissidents who have used what they thought were anonymous email accounts created with companies like Yahoo China, which has come under heavy fire for turning over user data to Chinese courts in the cases of three dissidents.

“If they did manage to enforce this in any meaningful way, it would certainly put a damper on what people write on their blogs,” said Ms. MacKinnon. “But as it is, seriously anti-government content—particularly anything calling for action which gets any kind of significant traffic—is taken down by domestic blog-hosting services anyway.”

Blog service providers “must police the blogs they host in order to keep their licenses,” she said.

“In the end, they’ll do it,” said Mr. Mao. “They’ll issue regulations, but they won’t really be able to deploy them. It’s totally unrealistic.”
"



ÍèÒ¹àÃ×èͧµèÍà¹×èͧ >>> ·Õè China Digital.net àÃ×èͧ Tag: 'real name registration' (¢éÍÁÙŤÇÒÁàËç¹â¾Êµì/¢Í§ªÒǺÅçÍ¡¨Õ¹·Õá»Åà»ç¹ÀÒÉÒÍѧ¡ÄÉäÇé·Õè䫵ì¹Õé à¢éÒä» updated àÁ×èÍ 2006-10-26)

¡Ã³Õ¤ÇÒÁàË繤¹ä·Â âÅ¡Í͹äŹìàÁ×ͧä·Â ÍèÒ¹>> âÅ¡¨ÃÔ§ µÑǵ¹ äÍ·Õ áÅÐä;Õ
ËÃ×Í/¤×Í䫵ì·Õè //www.biolawcom.de/?/blog/420 â´Â / by ડÙÇÒÃÒ | 04 Nov 06 | tags ¹Ò¹ÒÊÒþѹ , äÍ·Õ , ¡¯ËÁÒ ,



updated: October 24, 2006.

The History of Blogging
(10/24/2006) | zonaeuropa.com | EastSouthWestNorth

" In the history of blogging in mainland China, there is a characterization of three generations so far:

Generation #1: The first people who knew how to blog and maximize the technical capabilities were people involved in Information Technology (IT). Thus, the first generation of bloggers were those who tried to preach the technology of blogging.

Generation #2: Once the gospel of blogging technology becomes simplified and widespread, the next issue is content. What good is a technology if there is no content? So the second generation of mainland Chinese bloggers turned out to be media workers. Why? Because these are the people who knew their topics (both the backgrounds as well as the latest developments) and the writing techniques. For the same story, they can say and argue it better than most others.

Generation #3: Once blogging achieved a certain momentum threshold, the major portals (such as Sina.com and Sohu.com) decided that they can be blog service providers too and invited a number of celebrities to become their bloggers. This initiated the age of celebrity bloggers, and Xu Jinglei and others would top the Technorait popularity list for the entire planet.

What is Generation #4 in China? I wouldn't know (or else I would be a prophet). "




Create Date : 09 ÊÔ§ËÒ¤Á 2549
Last Update : 5 ¾ÄȨԡÒ¹ 2549 4:28:25 ¹. 3 comments
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â´Â: ÍÂèÒÁÒ·Ó˹éÒà¢ÕÂÇãÊè¹ÐÂÐ Çѹ·Õè: 9 ÊÔ§ËÒ¤Á 2549 àÇÅÒ:10:37:12 ¹.  

 
Quality Control: Q&A with John Battelle, Web content visionary

By Sarah Colombo
Posted: 2006-10-12

"[Online journalism] is much more like performance art. I would compare the skill set [with that of] a radio talk show host. They talk to each other, they interview people and they take calls, and 50 percent of the callers are regular commentators. We as audience participants love to listen to the conversation. Blogs in particular have that same kind of conversation. On Searchblog, there are three to four times more comments than there are posts from me, and I would say that of the 10,000 comments on the site, probably 50 to 100 people are responsible for 8,000 of them."


â´Â: a_somjai Çѹ·Õè: 19 µØÅÒ¤Á 2549 àÇÅÒ:4:57:22 ¹.  

 
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â´Â: ¼Á IP: 210.203.182.92 Çѹ·Õè: 17 ¾ÄȨԡÒ¹ 2549 àÇÅÒ:1:09:21 ¹.  

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