<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<!--Web 2.0 Content Powered by MyST Blogsite® (http://blogsite.com)-->
<!--A service of MyST Technology Partners, Inc. (http://myst-technology.com)-->
<?xml-stylesheet href="http://myst-technology.com/public/styles/etc/object.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>

<?myst-baseUrl http://myst-technology.com/public/?>

<MySmartChannels Public="true" UserID="125119" dT="115" t0="1337228060575">
     <GetChannelItem_Result>
      <Item>
       <Resource>
        <ObjectID>10008</ObjectID>
        <ObjectClass>Resource</ObjectClass>
        <OwnerID ObjectClass="Domain" Title="[Weblog] Into the MyST">214</OwnerID>
        <CreatedByID ObjectClass="User" Title="aseidl">21</CreatedByID>
        <ModifiedByID ObjectClass="User" Title="aseidl">21</ModifiedByID>
        <CreateTime Title="2003-07-17 12:55:51 EDT">1058460951009</CreateTime>
        <ModifyTime Title="2008-03-22 12:37:42 EST">1206207462335</ModifyTime>
        <SecurityModel>Controlled</SecurityModel>
        <Name>The Sanctity of Blogs</Name>
        <Summary>With the use of blogging technologies exploding into many new areas, we should expect to see a variety of new governing practices.</Summary>
        <Description>&lt;p&gt;The grass roots days of blogging are ending.&amp;nbsp; Not that blogging is dying; in fact, just the opposite.&amp;nbsp; Blogging is going mainstream and its going corporate, like it or not.&amp;nbsp; Blogging (or blog-like technology, if you prefer) is moving inside the firewall, into marketing departments, into research tools, into intelligence tools&amp;mdash;in short, into the world of knowledge management. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;As I read &lt;a href="http://amywohl.weblogger.com/" target="_blank"&gt;Amy Wohl's&lt;/a&gt; recent posting on &lt;a href="http://amywohl.weblogger.com/2003/07/14" target="_blank"&gt;The Sanctity of Blogs&lt;/a&gt;, I found myself thinking, &amp;quot;yes, but only if you are talking about grass roots type of blogs&amp;quot;.&amp;nbsp; Specifically, Amy makes three points that got me thinking... &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;i&gt;&amp;quot;The intellectual content of blogs belongs to the blogger who wrote it and not to the blogging site which happened to host it. Therefore, [it should be possible] for bloggers to move their content for any reason.&amp;quot;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Organizations are recognizing that knowledge is the &lt;a href="mysmartchannels/public/item/7238" target="_blank"&gt;new capital&lt;/a&gt;, and blogging is poised to play an important role in capturing and managing knowledge assets.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; As I have described &lt;a href="mysmartchannels/public/item/9143" target="_blank"&gt;elsewhere&lt;/a&gt;, the needs of enterprises are very different from the needs of individuals.&amp;nbsp; As weblogs emerge as corporate assets, it should become, in general, &lt;i&gt;not possible&lt;/i&gt; &amp;quot;for bloggers to move their content for any reason.&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp; (Does anyone believe that a company employee is free to move company documents&amp;mdash;even those he or she authored&amp;mdash;for any reason?)&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;i&gt;&amp;quot;Blog site owners should not remove blogs except for good reason (breaking a well-known rule, such as including sexually explicit material) and even then, with reasonable notice, considering the problem.&amp;quot;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Again, I agree, if we're talking about truly personal blogs.&amp;nbsp; However, if we're talking about a company electing to remove from its own corporate server the blog of the company's COO who just resigned&amp;mdash;as in the cited case of Userland taking down John Robb's blog&amp;mdash;I have to disagree.&amp;nbsp; (Does anyone believe that a company should leave a former officer's bio on the company web site?)&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;i&gt;&amp;quot;Link owners should be mindful of the blogs they are attached to and make every effort to keep links stable and enduring.&amp;quot;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;I take issue with this only in that it is not stated strongly enough!&amp;nbsp; Information is an asset; but, only if you can find it.&amp;nbsp; I consider any blogging technology that does not assign a unique, immutable identity to every information artifact to be broken.&amp;nbsp; (Does anyone believe an operating system should permit a filename to change on its own?)&lt;/p&gt;</Description>
        <ResourceTypeID ObjectClass="ResourceType" Title="Item:Link">9</ResourceTypeID>
        <ContentType>application/xml</ContentType>
        <ContentDocument>
         <ItemProperties>
               <CommonProperties>
                <Hidden>false</Hidden>

                <Keywords>
                 <Keyword>blog adoption</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>blogging inward</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>blogging outward</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>KM</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>knowledge management</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>weblog adoption</Keyword>

       </Keywords>

                <Links>
                 <Link>
                  <Title>Amy Wohl : The Sanctity of Blogs</Title>

                  <Synopsis/>

                  <URL>http://amywohl.weblogger.com/2003/07/14</URL>

        </Link>

       </Links>

      </CommonProperties>

               <RemoteInfo>
                <UserAgent>Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; .NET CLR 2.0.50727)</UserAgent>

                <RemoteHost>127.0.0.1</RemoteHost>

                <RemoteAddr>127.0.0.1</RemoteAddr>

                <RemoteUser>aseidl</RemoteUser>

                <ForwardedFor>68.40.167.222</ForwardedFor>

      </RemoteInfo>

     </ItemProperties>
        </ContentDocument>
       </Resource>
       <Shares/>
       <Subjects/>
       <UserPermissions>
        <CanDelete>false</CanDelete>
        <CanDiscover>true</CanDiscover>
        <CanEdit>false</CanEdit>
        <CanEditPermissions>false</CanEditPermissions>
        <CanRead>true</CanRead>
       </UserPermissions>
       <CommentInfo>
        <CommentChannelRef AllowAnonymous="true" Inherited="true">
         <ChannelID ObjectClass="Channel" Title="[Public] Public Comments">190014</ChannelID>
         <UserPermissions>
          <CanCreateChannelItem>false</CanCreateChannelItem>
          <CanDelete>false</CanDelete>
          <CanDiscover>true</CanDiscover>
          <CanEdit>false</CanEdit>
          <CanEditPermissions>false</CanEditPermissions>
          <CanPublish>false</CanPublish>
          <CanRead>true</CanRead>
         </UserPermissions>
        </CommentChannelRef>
        <Comments/>
       </CommentInfo>
       <Views>
        <SourceID ObjectClass="Channel" Title="[Weblog] Into the MyST">214</SourceID>

               <View>
                <Name>blog</Name>

                <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/web</Model>

                <Style/>

                <Scheme/>

       </View>

               <View>
                <Name>edit-item</Name>

                <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/web</Model>

                <Style/>

                <Scheme/>

       </View>

               <View>
                <Name>left</Name>

                <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/left-content</Model>

                <Style/>

                <Scheme/>

       </View>

               <View>
                <Name>right</Name>

                <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/right-content</Model>

                <Style/>

                <Scheme/>

       </View>

               <View>
                <Name>wide</Name>

                <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/wide-content</Model>

                <Style/>

                <Scheme/>

       </View>

      </Views>
        <Views>
         <SourceID ObjectClass="Channel" Shared="true" Title="[Public] What's New">192423</SourceID>

                <View>
                 <Name>blog</Name>

                 <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/whatsnew</Model>

                 <Style/>

                 <Scheme/>

       </View>

                <View>
                 <Name>edit-item</Name>

                 <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/web</Model>

                 <Style/>

                 <Scheme/>

       </View>

                <View>
                 <Name>left</Name>

                 <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/left-content</Model>

                 <Style/>

                 <Scheme/>

       </View>

                <View>
                 <Name>right</Name>

                 <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/right-content</Model>

                 <Style/>

                 <Scheme/>

       </View>

                <View>
                 <Name>wide</Name>

                 <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/wide-content</Model>

                 <Style/>

                 <Scheme/>

       </View>

      </Views>
        </Item>
       </GetChannelItem_Result>
      </MySmartChannels>

