Maureen Cavanaugh (Guest Host): At last count, there were over 70 million blogs on the internet -- which means there are a lot of people posting comments on those blogs. Some people comment to further the conversation. Others use the forum to threaten and harass, to name-call and to bully others. On occasion, these threats have escalated to the point where bloggers have feared for their lives and opted to take down their blogs.
Tim O'Reilly's post : Draft Blogger's Code of Conduct (April 8, 2007)
Michael Arrington's response
:
My Thoughts On O’Reilly’s Code of Conduct
(April 9, 2007)
View responses from the blogosphere : ( Technorati search results for "code of conduct" ) |
This week, a code of conduct was proposed that attempts to define what kinds of comments are offensive and how bloggers should deal with them. But some bloggers are worried that such a code of conduct limits free speech and is the first step towards a stifling political correctness that will ultimately kill the free-spirit that makes the internet so valuable.
Guests
Tim O'Reilly,
founder and president of O'Reilly Media. This week he and Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, drafted a Bloggers Code of Conduct and it has created quite a stir in the blogosphere.
Michael Arrington, editor of the Web site TechCrunch, which tracks new companies and products that impact the web. He also writes a blog called CrunchNotes.