Seriously, anyone who would write this,
Amazingly, Glenn Reynolds is still covering the war. Seems like an exercise in futility. In its aftermath, of what use were the warbloggers. A lot of punditry, a lot of furor and outrage, quite a few flames, but what did they actually do other than act important. They got no stories, no new data, they didn’t balance the press, which reported the war as if the US was a petty Third World dictatorship. They didn’t even out the press. Pheh.
. . . clearly does not understand what a weblog is or why people weblog.
This is a perfect example of a BigEgo at BigEd simply dismissing the amateurs.
Apparently making the world safe (but still not in Google) for his BigPub partners is where the action is really at these days. Oy.
Which reminds me — is the New York Times really so clueless that is tech folks can’t figure out ways to make their archives accessible to Google for indexing but not to real users? Yes, that could be spoofed, but I’d imagine few users would have the technical know-how to do so — they’d benefit far more from having their archives indexed in Google than they would lose from the few people who would actively go around their archive system posing as Google.
In fact, frankly, I’m surprised Google hasn’t worked with such content providers to find a solution to just that problem.