This link has been bookmarked by 7 people . It was first bookmarked on 19 May 2008, by - svartling.
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The argument around services like FriendFeed is similar: from a publishers viewpoint you are giving up some control, you are losing some of the conversation away from the main destination. But what do your readers want? You can’t stop a conversation occurring on FriendFeed, but you can do things like including that conversation on your blog (as I have here at The Inquisitr). You can embrace that conversation by taking part in it, and FriendFeed doesn’t republish the full feed so ultimately a thread on FriendFeed with a lot of activity is actually driving additional (and often new) traffic back to your site.
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- svartlingIf blogging 1.0 was about enabling the conversation on each blog, blogging 2.0 is about enabling the conversation across many blogs and supporting sites and services. The conversation has matured and no longer is it acceptable to believe that as a content owner you hold exclusive domain over conversations you have started. Users/ readers today demand more than a conversation on one site, and blogging 2.0 facilitates this.
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