Categories
Weblogging

If we could take back anger

If you’ve ever left a comment and then come back to the page, unless you’ve somehow changed your IP address, you’ll see an option to edit your comment. This post-published comment editing feature is one I’ve been testing for several months, without once running into a problem. Yesterday and today I added HTMLEditor for it, though I may end up removing this (I’m not sure we need much more than the ability to edit mistakes, and check spelling in comments).

Along with live preview, spell checking, Talk Back, and throttles that will prevent mass comment spam postings, I’m including this post-publishing editing feature as the core of a comment package I’m working on that will work for WordPress (1.22 and 1.5), Wordform…and maybe any weblogging tool where some developer wants to write the necessary interface code. Which of these options is turned on is configurable–especially post-comment editing.

When I added post-published editing long ago, I was worried that people would come into my comments and write nasty things, and then once people responded, edit what they said to make those that responded look like idiots. However, this never once happened. Most people use the feature to correct grammar, spelling, add new material, or clarify a sentence or phrase.

Now, the lack of hostile ‘hit-run-and-edit’ could be due to the fact that my writing lately hasn’t been of a nature to inspire the necessary anger for this behavior. It’s true that I have, for the most part, mellowed in the last few months (all that hiking and photography); not to mention having stopped writing about politics and RSS–both topics guaranteed to raise someone’s ire.

(This could change this week, as I take aim at both digital identity and podcasting — twin irritants of mine that are currently getting a lot of *BigBlo talk. And it’s been too wet to hike.)

I wonder, though, if the comment editing feature, rather than encourage rude behavior, actually discourages it, because you’re less likely to respond to a comment left by another person if you know that person can edit what they’ve said. And if you don’t respond, they can’t respond back, and others don’t get pulled in, and so on, and so forth.

More, this ability may give us a second chance: to re-think ill-thought words and to edit an angry comment before someone else responds to it. If you had this abililty, would you use it take back your anger? Unsay what you’ve said? Edit out the sharp, pointy bits?

The only way we’ll know for sure is to try out this post-published comment editing in a weblog that gets more heated discussions than I get. Unfortunately, most of the weblogs I know that regularly get animated or even angry threads, are Movable Type (I wonder why?), so I guess I’ll have to get this working for MT in addition to WordPress and Wordform.

In the meantime, I’d appreciate feedback as to whether to keep HTMLEditor in or remove it. Note that it only works for Mozilla compatible browsers and IE (and seems to be problematical in Mac OS X — HTMLArea is currently beta for Firefox).

And if someone has a Movable Type non-production site up that they wouldn’t mind me testing code against (and possibly breaking), with SSH and direct MySQL access at the command line, please send me an email. Update looks like I may have a test site…but the price I’m being asked *shudder * oh you poor, poor dears…

*Big Blogger

Categories
RDF

PHP API for SPARQL?

Recovered from the Wayback Machine.

Does anyone know of a PHP implementation of SPARQL? Not the adorable kitten who I happen to be god-mother to (and who I can’t connect to at the moment); the W3C RDF/XML query language.

I have my old Query-o-Matic that works — barely — using RDQL, but need to create a updated, hotter version.

Categories
Weather

Now this side of the country…freeze!

You only have to look at the *severe weather map to find that most of the country from the midwest to the east is suffering either high wind advisories or winter storms. We in St. Louis are in the middle of the high wind and with dropping temperatures, and there is no way I’ll be out today.

I just noticed that Weather Underground is providing syndication feeds and I subscribed for my zip zone. It also demonstrates what happens when you get too many ’subscribe’ buttons on a page. They’re beginning to block the weather photos I enjoy so much.

However, if we’re windy today, and cold, we’re not as cold as some, as witness the poem that Jerry wroteAt Minus Seventeen of which I only excerpted one stanza, with strong recommendations you slip, slide, and scramble over to his site for the rest:

And those of us with skinny asses
lacking essential blubber masses
desperately remained at home
ordering long johns on the phone
to only get a pair of diminutive woollies
that cut off blood to our extremities
it is less than it seems at minus seventeen

*All links in this post are guaranteed to be 100% fresh, and free of foreign contaminants

Categories
Semantics

Semantic web enabler of the year

If there was a Semantic Web Enabler of the Year award, I would nominate the site rdfdata.org (and the creator, Bob DuCharme) daily, and twice on Sunday. Especially when you see data such as details of terrorist acts since 1988, organized in OWL. My jaw dropped when I looked through it. My, my, what the warbloggers wouldn’t give for query tools on this data store. And I wouldn’t know about it if it weren’t for rdfdata.org bringing all these disparate data stores together in one spot.

As I progress in my update on the chapters in the book, I plan on using this site to find data for new examples and demonstrations, primarily because it deserves all the recognition we can give it.

Categories
Social Media Specs

I broke Nofollow

I’m still trying to write something on Technorati Tags. What’s slowing me up is there’s been such a great deal of interesting writing on the topic that I keep wanting to add to what I write. And, well, the weather warmed up to the 60’s again today, and who am I to reject an excuse to go for a nice walk. Plus I also watched Japanese Story tonight, so there goes yet, even more, opportunity to write to this weblog.

Thin excuses for sloth and neglect aside, it is interesting that a formerly obscure and rarely used attribute in X(HTML), rel, has been featured in two major technology rollouts this week: Technorati Tags and the new Google “nofollow” approach to dealing with comment spam. Well, as long as they don’t bring back blink.

Speaking of the new spam buster, after much thought, I’ve decided not to add support for rel=”nofollow” to my weblogs. I agree with Phil and believe that, if anything, there’s going to be an increase of comment spam, as spammers look to make up whatever pagerank is lost from this effort. And they’re not going to be testing whether this is implemented — why should they?

But I am particularly disturbed by the conversations at Scoble’s weblog as regard to ‘withholding’ page rank. Here’s a man who for one reason or another has been linked to by many people, and now ranks highly because of it: in Google, Technorati, and other sites. I imagine that among those that link, there was many who disagree with him at one time or another, but they’re going to link anyway. Why? Because they’re not thinking of Google and ‘juice’ and the withholding or granting of page rank when they write their response. They’re focusing on what Scoble said and how they felt about it, and they’re providing the link and the writing to their readers so that they can form their own opinion. Probably the last thing they’re thinking on is the impact of the link of Scoble’s rank.

Phil hit it right on the head when he talked about nofollow’s impact, but not its impact on the spammers — the impact on us:

But, again, it’s not so much the effects I’m interested in as the effects on us. Will comments wither where the owner shows that he finds you no more trustworthy than a Texas Hold’em purveyor, or will they blossom again without the competition from spammers? Will we do the right thing, and try to find something to link to in a post by someone new who leaves a comment we deem not worthy of a real link, or will new bloggers find it that much harder to gain any traction?

That Phil, he always goes right to the heart within the technology–but blinking, lime green? That’s cruel.

No, no. I don’t know about anyone else, but I’ve spent too much time worrying about Google and pageranks and comment spammers. A few additions to my software, and comment spam hasn’t been much of a problem, not anymore. I spend less than a minute a day cleaning out the spam that’s collected in my moderated queue. It’s become routine, like clearing the lint out of the dryer after I finish drying my clothes.

Of course, if I, and others like me, don’t implement “nofollow” we are, in effect, breaking it. The only way for this to be effective as a spam prevention technique is if everyone uses the modification. I suppose that eventually we could fall into “nofollow” and “no-nofollow” camps, with those of us in the latter added to the new white lists, and every link to our weblogs annotated with “nofollow”, as a form of community pressure.

Maybe obscurity isn’t such a bad thing, though; look what all that page rank power does to people. But I do feel bad for those of you who looked to this as a solution to comment spam. What can I say but…