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      <title>The Evolution of Blogging</title>
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         <title>The Evolution of Blogging</title>
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         <description>Well, I've finally had enough. As of today, there'll be no more comments on this blog.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;There was a time when blogging was a community conversation. We found people with common beliefs and interests, we shared information and personal stories with each other, and we had a constructive dialog via our comment sections. I made several real-life friends through this blog, and I learned to open up about myself; I don't regret any of it.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;But blogging has changed as a medium. Now, really, there are basically two types of blog commenters: rabid Obama-bashing trolls, and spammers. I didn't get so much of the former category on this blog, but I did get buckets and buckets of spam. Despite all my attempts to rein it in (CAPTCHA, keyword blocking, IP address blocking, country blocking), I still got a thousand spam comments for every useful one. I'm tired of trying to ban every possible spelling and usage of "Oakley", "Gucci", and "Nike". Handling email spam is easy compared to handling comment spam.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;I'm really not sure where I want to go with this blog in general. I don't write as much overall, as I'm sure you can tell. For short-form stuff, I've pretty much switched to Facebook and Twitter. I still like having this blog for longer-form writing every now and then, because I like having it under my control, and I like that my posts won't get lost in all the noise of social media sites.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;I predict that someday we'll come up with something new: some kind of decentralized social media organization, one where we can connect with real people and real friends, but cut out spammers, trolls, and advertisers. Ideally it'd be a place where each person has some control over their own layout and content. The technology exists; someone just has to put it together and find a way for it to gain widespread adoption.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Maybe we'll call it "Geocities".&lt;br/&gt;</description>
         <author>Ken</author>
         <pubDate>Sun, 13 Oct 2013 11:21:45 +0000</pubDate>
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