I learned from the liblicense list today that the Lund University Libraries have put together a directory of open access scholarly journals. While I have little love for scholarly publishing in general, I am a big fan of open access and efforts to aggregate resources, especially when they are “free, full text, quality controlled scientific and scholarly journals.” Nice work. Hopefully, this project will encourage others to venture into open access publishing. And let’s hope for enough open access LIS publishing to warrant its own category.
Archive for May, 2003
Blaming the bloggers
I was intrigued that Google has plans to create a separate search tool specifically for blogs. In reading the Register’s article about it, I was led to this article by the same author from the April 3rd Register that essentially decries the ability of the blogging community, particularly the “A-list” tech bloggers, to transform the meaning of ideas in such a way that the original meaning is supplanted. Because of the incestuous linking amongst blogs, content from these authors takes precedent over other sources in Google’s PageRank system, forcing the original sources into virtual invisibility (a process called Googlewashing). The implication is that this is a form of censoring the original idea by driving it into obscurity.
The author talks about how it took a million people to create the original meaning of the term “Second Superpower” and only a few people to take it away. This is utter nonsense. First, you know as well as I do that it only took one person to create the term and associate a meaning with it. Second, the Web (and Google in particular) is not the only tool of meme propagation and if the term had some legs in its original form, then it would have been picked up more widely. But it really didn’t, mostly in my opinion because peace-seeking people don’t really want to be seen as part of the Superpower paradigm, with all of the inherent combatativeness that it implies. Third, he bemoans that this happened in only 42 days. Well, let me suggest that those 42 days included the 41 days after the mainstream media forgot about it.
I think the real issue is the short-sightedness of the author. How can a thriving community that works to create new meaning through interactivity and collaboration be a bad thing? Rather than bemoaning the “power” of the tech community, why not learn something from it? The question shouldn’t be why bloggers can make these transformations possible, but why more people aren’t making use of this unharnessed potential. I’m not saying there aren’t avenues for abuse, but the more participants, the more balanced the coverage will be.
I think I mostly resent the suggestion that bloggers are to blame for the loss of meaning, rather than celebrated for its creation and transformation. The author’s perspective seems far too limited, much like the music industry’s take on peer-to-peer. The one thing he did correctly was to repropagate the phrase’s original meaning by writing about it in relationship to blogging. This article has be much-discussed and heavily linked (already replacing some of those top 30 Google listings that are the crux of his argument), which has provided more people with the origin of the term than any other media had up to that point. He should be thanking bloggers for the exposure.
A plea for help
Fellow members of the LIS community, I have reached the crisis zone. Graduation is in 10 days and the job hunt has been utterly fruitless. Not so much as an interview. I have a strict geographic limitation that limits my options. So I ask of the blogging contingent: if you have any professional connections in southern Indiana, Louisville or Cincinnati, please consider working them on my behalf (or directing me to them, so I can).
Why would you want to do that? Well, first, so you don’t have to read of my unemployment on an ongoing basis. Second, it can’t look good for an LIS blog to be written by someone who can’t find a job. I don’t really want to rename this site “The Unemployed Librarian.” Third, a rookie can use all the help he/she can get, especially with networking.
Any other advice you might have would be welcome. This is my working resume, which is just a recreation of my paper resume (no web design quality - that will happen after graduation). How can I step it up?
BTW, to those who take the time to read my posts, a heartfelt thank you.
Enetation disappears
It appears that my commenting system Enetation has gone down. I don’t know if this is a long-term situation, but it has encouraged me to at least attempt an import into Movable Type. The new location of Open Stacks is at http://planetneutral.gotdns.com/openstacks. Please come check it out. I’ll be adding categories and trackback soon, while avoiding my last grad school project (If you know anything about implementing Questionpoint, let me know). I’ll plan on posting to both sites, until I’ve relocated my computer and established a new ISP. So for now, please leave any comments on the new site.
Update: Apparently, this was just a temporary problem, but the Movable Type transition will continue as planned.

