A-List is nonsense
My old pal Tristan does a great job debunking the myth of the blogging A-List (which redeems him for the insane “value your blog based on inbound links” post
.
The fact is the top 100 blogs represent < .01% of the traffic in the entire blogosphere… in what other medium do the top 100 artists account for the minority of the work??!?! Chris… any ideas here?!?!
Anyone can break into the “blogging A-list” in about six to 12 months if they a) blog every day and b) have something intelligent to add to the conversation.
Nice job Tristan
#1 Single, Lisa Loeb, on TVSquad
This is cool…. our TVSquad bloggers interviewed Lisa Loeb about her new TV show (which is about her inability to find a man–it’s very good btw). So, are we gonna interview the Donald for TVSquad or what!!?!?!??!?
More thoughts on YouTube
Matt Haughey has some interesting thoughts on YouTube.com which dovetail with some of my thoughts.
- I’d argue that YouTube is the king of this movement because they have such loose and lax legal guidelines. Of course, everyone that uploads claims they own the copyright and got release forms from everyone involved and cleared anything seen on camera, blah, blah, blah, but in reality, it is totally lawless and people are basically uploading random interesting TV bits they dump right off their computer. It reminds me of Napster in 1999, totally interesting, and totally illegal in the eyes of IP lawyers.
All good with PodShow and WIN/AOL.
My pal Eric Rice pointed out that Podshow was deep linking to us without credit, which as everyone knows is a big no-no. Here is an example.
As Adam points out, we’re old friends from the Silicon Alley days and we spoke today about it. I gave him some simple suggestion for linking into our stuff, and he assured me it was just a speed error (which I’m sure is the case). The simple solutions is, of course, to put a box that credits the publisher with two or three lines/points:
- The Engadget podast is produced by Weblogs, Inc.
- The RSS feed for the Engadget podcast can be found here.
We’re fine with being in anyone’s directory as long as we’re credited as the owners of the work and have the standard link back.
YouTube is not a real business
Wow, this is kind of scary. I wrote how YouTube was a business based on copyright infringement and used all the SNL skits on their service as an example. Now SNL has come down hard on them. [ Update: Rafat took the time out to mention my last post in relation to the SNL action--Rafat is so on point. ]
Now, let me say that a couple of things:
1. YouTube does not deserve the #1 listing on Google for Lazy Sunday. YouTube’s traffic is based on exactly this phenomenon: content owners don’t put their content online, some users pirates the content, and YouTube–the only place to get the pirated content–becomes the #1 Google search results.
2. SNL obviously got more from the viral nature of this promotion than anything they could ever buy. They should put every single one of the skits on the Internet *for free* and put an advertisement in front of them. They would be making at least 1M a month from this within six months. SNL should also put skits that didn’t make it on the show on the Internet, as well as bloggers and other colaterial material. In fact, in short period of time SNL will have more value online than offline.
3. YouTube knows they are a heaven for pirates, but I don’t think they should be shut down for it. YouTube is the telephone company and they provide dialtone. What people do with that dialtone is up to them. I beleive that.
4. YouTube is not a real business (or an innovative business). This is my main point. Let’s not look at YouTube’s page views and claim they are some amazing business. Napster and Kazaa had a ton of traffic too–it just wasn’t web-based. If you could do an Alexa graph of Kazaa, BitTorrent, Usenet, and the old Napster they would be number one through four on Alexa!
Watching DIGG, Engadget, and MySpace climb in the rankings? Those are real businesses. If those sites added the ability to distribute stolen video in two clicks they would shoot up to the top 10 sites!
Let me break it down: YouTube and other video hosting sites have made it easy to pirate stuff on the web (which is where piracy started), but they shouldn’t be positioned as some revolutionary business. It’s a silly, little business that anyone could setup in a week. The fact that folks are talking about them being bought for some large amount of money by Newscorp is commical. They are a glorified FTP site with TAGS people! I could set this up in a weekend with two kids in high-school and a couple of cases of Red Bull. In fact, the first two programmers to email me with a decent resume I’ll back you guys to build a YouTube compeititor–provided you can build it in under five days.
3. SNL has the right to have their stuff taken down, and taken down quickly. As do the other folks who are having their content stolen daily (think MadTV, Dave Chappelle, etc). However, those folks should put some free stuff up and link to paid stuff to strike a balance between piracy and not having their content available.
Really.
Folks checking in on this post: Fred, Paul & Ben. (if you have commented on your blog feel free to post the url in the comments).
The Joystiq Network goes long tail…
The Joystiq Network is on fire. It’s been two months since we did our first spinoff sites and in January the Joystiq spinoffs did about ~25% of the traffic of Joysitq.com itself! All six Sitemeter charts after the jump. Next month I think it will hit 50%, and by the summer I think the spinoffs from Joystiq will surpass the main blog–long tail style.
We’re hiring a Preditor (combination Producer and Editor)
Cool gig…. working directly with me here in Santa Monica.
Weblogs, Inc. (http://www.weblogsinc.com) is searching for a combination producer / editor to work full time writing and developing online video and audio content for the network (both podcasts and video podcasts). Must be capable of scripting, planning, shooting, editing, and delivering content quickly and professionally to the Internet and in iPod and other PVP-compatible formats.

