Weblog on the Internet and public policy, journalism, virtual community, and more from David Brake, a Canadian academic, consultant and journalist
16 March 2004

I’m coming to this one a little late – Wired reports that according to HP researchers, the most popular weblogs aren’t necessarily the ones that come up with the interesting new ideas first:

topics would often appear on a few relatively unknown blogs days before they appeared on more popular sites.

and often bloggers fail to mention the sources of their ideas:

when an idea infected at least 10 blogs, 70 percent of the blogs did not provide links back to another blog that had previously mentioned the idea.

You can try out the software that they used to do the research – the “Blog Epidemic Analyzer”:http://www-idl.hpl.hp.com/blogstuff/index.html

If you want to read their (pre-print) paper about their results it’s “here”:http://www.hpl.hp.com/shl/papers/blogs/blogspace-draft.pdf and there’s a thread about their work on “Slashdot”:http://slashdot.org/articles/04/03/05/152244.shtml though before you read it you should probably read the researcher’s own “comment”:http://www-idl.hpl.hp.com/blogstuff/faq.html#10 on that thread.

2 Comments

  1. Hmmm… should we be surprised? Do we expect bloggers to be more ethical, sharing than the rest? What’s maybe of more concern is that bloggers end up writing about blogging, and what’s on other blogs, because that’s easiest … thus ensuring the blogosphere bears little relationship to the rest of life. Except here of course:-)

    Comment by David Wilcox — 16 March 2004 @ 11:24 am

  2. HP labs work on tracking memes

    Neat workby HP labs reported on blog.org see Blog.org: Interesting facts Archives which analyses blogs and tries to work out which blog comes up with ideas first….

    Trackback by Vivid Indigo — 3 April 2004 @ 1:23 pm

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