] It's not that I'm bitter. Oh alright then, I am. When I ] was doing a weekly round-up of interesting web links in ] 1996 (still the top search result for the phrase "GLR ] jokes", if you'd like to check), I found myself using ] something very similar to what experts now call the ] weblog format. And was I hailed as the pioneer of a brave ] new form of distributed grassroots journalism? No, I was ] not. ] ] I was regarded - quite rightly, as it turned out - as ] some sort of nut who re-used the same HTML to update his ] home page every now and again. Don't get me wrong: I'm a ] huge fan of fanzines, home pages, and the whole ] do-it-yourself attitude. But because publishing one of ] these usually requires some element of effort, sometimes ] that's reflected in their contents. ] ] On the other hand, it's getting so easy to update a ] weblog that some users seem to type in their thoughts ] willy-nilly, posting unimaginable banalities, like a ] nation of Alan Partridges trying to fill an internet's ] worth of dead air: CDs they're listening to, ] scintillating accounts of their day at work, URLs of ] sites they feel they should acknowledge, despite having ] nothing new to say about them. It is like one of those ] terrible Christmas family newsletters for every single ] day of the year. I love the conclusion of this article. It's so true: "People used to worry about the government compiling a database of everything they knew about you and everything you did. But who'd have thought we'd be so keen to keep updating our own entries?" Guardian Unlimited | Online | A blogger is a stalker's dream |