Blogdex
It is proposed that this article be deleted because of the following concern:
If you can address this concern by improving, copyediting, sourcing, renaming, or merging the page, please edit this page and do so. You may remove this message if you improve the article or otherwise object to deletion for any reason. Although not required, you are encouraged to explain why you object to the deletion, either in your edit summary or on the talk page. If this template is removed, do not replace it. This message has remained in place for seven days, so the article may be deleted without further notice. Find sources: "Blogdex" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR Timestamp: 20200207023542 02:35, 7 February 2020 (UTC) Administrators: delete |
Blogdex was an online resource for understanding hot topics of discussion in the blogosphere.
The site offered a time-weighted list of links to online content cited by more than one monitored blog in the recent past. Each link received a score based both on the number of different blogs citing it and the recency of those citings; the list thus typically features both popular oddities of the day as well as informative and/or controversial source material for current topics of public debate. Despite its explicit focus on blogs, it can be thought of as the original memetracker, and the inspiration for later commercial sites such as tailrank.com, Digg.com, and other social media sites.
As the previous owner of the domains blogdex.com, blogdex.net and blogdex.org, Jimmy Wales offered the domains to MIT free of charge for use in this project. Blogdex then migrated from the original blogdex.media.mit.edu location to blogdex.net.
Blogdex was created by Cameron Marlow, then a Ph.D. student at MIT along with Elizabeth Wood, then a high school student attending the RSI summer program at MIT. Marlow now works for Facebook.
Blogdex has been offline since May 2006.
References
External links
- Blogdex site[dead link]
- Earliest archived Blogdex page from blogdex.net domain (May 2003; prior to that, blogdex.net was an alias for Nupedia)
- "Tracking Bloggers With Blogdex" Wired, Jul, 30, 2001