A lawsuit against US Weekly seems to suggest that publications owe coverage to brands, and can be held liable if they stop providing the brand profile in their publications, etc.
Tod Maffin found that getting a correction made to the online version of a newspaper article was hard to do. This compares to bloggers, who are usually pretty good about fixing errors so they don't st
Rob Cottingham agrees with Darren Barefoot that the Weblogwire service that makes news releases available to bloggers isn't a great idea, because bloggers aren't interested.
David Weinberger puts out a call for examples of web sites that adjust the visitor experience based on the user's past behaviour, or their connections.
Similar to blog comments, this tool would allow you to leave comments about a web page, so other visitors can see what you have to say. Sounds a lot like the wrtieable Web first envisioned when the WW
Another entry into the use of geotagging and social networks to post information about an area that residents or visitors to that areas can use. Once this can easily be done by cell phone, it has a lo
Avinash Kaushik puts these metrics on the table: Raw Author Contribution, Unique Blog Readers, Conversation Rate, Technorati “Authority," Cost, Return on Investment