Blogging a Form of Media, Analysis Says
With the rapidly increasing popularity of both reading and creating blogs online, surveys have undertaken to study the phenomenon and demographics in clumps these days in efforts to get a firm grasp on what may have to be considered a new form of media. Analysis in an extensive form comes
most recently in a report entitled, "Behaviors of the Blogosphere: Understanding the Scale, Composition and Activities of Weblog Audiences." "Behaviors of the Blogosphere" was put together using old-fashioned techniques of media analysis and new strategies designed to cope with the traffic rules of the information superhighway.
The research was done by comScore Networks, a firm devoted to global information providing and consulting. The comScore mission statement promises that by using comScore services, superior marketing, trading strategies and sales results will manifest. Thus in studying a new online media, analysis by comScore was (and is) much sought after.
The report begins with a neat history of the "blogging" concept. Etymologically speaking, the word dates back to 1989, and its coinage is credited to Peter Merholz. Blogger.com was the first website to provide blogging software, and the race to fill cyberspace with words was on. Most recently noteworthy (at least in the eyes of the researchers) was the influence imagined to be exerted by bloggers during the 2004 United States' presidential election. In that election, argues the study (and many others), bloggers took on the role of what amount to a form of media. Analysis by comScore's research panel included measurement of the online activity of some two million participants visiting forty hosts and similar groups.
The research was done by comScore Networks, a firm devoted to global information providing and consulting. The comScore mission statement promises that by using comScore services, superior marketing, trading strategies and sales results will manifest. Thus in studying a new online media, analysis by comScore was (and is) much sought after.
The report begins with a neat history of the "blogging" concept. Etymologically speaking, the word dates back to 1989, and its coinage is credited to Peter Merholz. Blogger.com was the first website to provide blogging software, and the race to fill cyberspace with words was on. Most recently noteworthy (at least in the eyes of the researchers) was the influence imagined to be exerted by bloggers during the 2004 United States' presidential election. In that election, argues the study (and many others), bloggers took on the role of what amount to a form of media. Analysis by comScore's research panel included measurement of the online activity of some two million participants visiting forty hosts and similar groups.
Most Comments Today
- Oh No! Michael Jackson's Body and Brain Missing Is Michael Jackson's body and brain missing? According to many websites they... 31 Comments
- Michael Jackson is Missing The casket is missing, where is it? How did it disappear? 31 Comments
- Sarah Palin 2012? Sarah Palin 2012? 29 Comments
- Hot News Quickies - Thursday, July 9, 2009 News happens while you sleep - get your Hot News Quickies here! 28 Comments
- Real Estate: Renting Your Home and Bad Tenants If you decide to rent out your home, do a thorough reference check with previ... 26 Comments
- Every Day Heroes At every disaster, in every community, when people are hurting who are the fi... 24 Comments





Nick Roy
Posted on 04/25/2007 at 11:04:00 AM