LiveJournal: Difference between revisions
Instantnood (talk | contribs) Revert overdone revert (diff=56849898&oldid=56834581) |
Still no cite that LJ is in houston. |
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'''LiveJournal''' (often abbreviated '''LJ''') is a [[virtual community]] where [[Internet]] users can keep a [[blog]], [[journal]], or [[diary]]. It is also the name of the [[open source]] [[Server (computing)|server]] [[software]] that was designed to run it. LiveJournal's differences from other blogging sites include its [[WELL]]-like features of a self-contained community and some [[social networking]] features similar to [[Friendster]] and [[MySpace]]. |
'''LiveJournal''' (often abbreviated '''LJ''') is a [[virtual community]] where [[Internet]] users can keep a [[blog]], [[journal]], or [[diary]]. It is also the name of the [[open source]] [[Server (computing)|server]] [[software]] that was designed to run it. LiveJournal's differences from other blogging sites include its [[WELL]]-like features of a self-contained community and some [[social networking]] features similar to [[Friendster]] and [[MySpace]]. |
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LiveJournal was started in [[1999]] by [[Brad Fitzpatrick]] as a way of keeping his high school friends updated on his activities. In [[January 2005]], blogging software company [[Six Apart]] purchased [[Danga Interactive]], the company owned by Fitzpatrick which operates LiveJournal. |
LiveJournal was started in [[1999]] by [[Brad Fitzpatrick]] as a way of keeping his high school friends updated on his activities. In [[January 2005]], blogging software company [[Six Apart]] purchased [[Danga Interactive]], the company owned by Fitzpatrick which operates LiveJournal. |
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*[[April 10]], [[2006]] - Site reaches 10 million accounts. |
*[[April 10]], [[2006]] - Site reaches 10 million accounts. |
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*[[April 18]], [[2006]] - "Sponsored+" accounts are introduced, which feature ads.[http://news.livejournal.com/91919.html] |
*[[April 18]], [[2006]] - "Sponsored+" accounts are introduced, which feature ads.[http://news.livejournal.com/91919.html] |
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*[[May |
*[[May/June]], [[2006]] - Controversy arises when LJ Abuse team bans default icons showing images of women breastfeeding if these images show any part of female nipple or areola and threatens to delete journals that have such default icons. They protest that they are not anti-breastfeeding but need to protect themselves from legal action in the puritanical American climate. Many users are annoyed, not only by the policy but by the secrecy and unaccountability of the abuse team and the often patronising and dismissive tone of their replies. |
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Revision as of 18:22, 4 June 2006
LiveJournal (often abbreviated LJ) is a virtual community where Internet users can keep a blog, journal, or diary. It is also the name of the open source server software that was designed to run it. LiveJournal's differences from other blogging sites include its WELL-like features of a self-contained community and some social networking features similar to Friendster and MySpace.
LiveJournal was started in 1999 by Brad Fitzpatrick as a way of keeping his high school friends updated on his activities. In January 2005, blogging software company Six Apart purchased Danga Interactive, the company owned by Fitzpatrick which operates LiveJournal.
Features
The most distinguishing feature of LiveJournal is the "friends list", which gives it a strong social aspect instead of being a simple blog or diary service. The friends list is used to provide various syndication and privacy services, described below.
LiveJournal allows users to customize their accounts in several ways. The S2 programming language makes journal templates easy to manage, similar to blog templates used by WordPress and other popular systems. Users may upload graphical avatars, or "userpics", which appear next to the username in prominent areas as it would on an Internet forum. Paid account holders are given full access to S2 management and more userpics, as well as other features.
Each user also has a "User Info" page, which is used to describe personal interests, similar to most social networking websites. It can contain a variety of data including contact information, a biography, images (linked from off-site sources), and lists of friends, interests, communities, and even schools to which the user belongs.
LiveJournal also allows "voice posts" to their paid and sponsored users, where one can call into the system and record an entry.
Currently LiveJournal has five account levels: free (comprising approximately 95% of the network), sponsored with advertising, "early adopters" who registered in 2000, paid, and permanent. Permanent accounts are normally not available to the "average user"; there are occasional sale days or special offers, but such sales are not guaranteed in the future.
"Sponsored with Advertising" accounts, whose status may be turned on or off at any given time by the (free) user, do not cost anything extra (the costs being supplemented by allowing advertising) and allow for some of the features normally reserved for paid and permanently paid accounts. These include more user icons (up to 15, as opposed to 6 for free accounts) and space on Livejournal's own image-hosting site (1 free gb per user). The technical name of the status is "Sponsored+".
Social networking
The unit of social networking on LiveJournal is quaternary (with four possible states of connection between one user and another). Two users can have no relationship, they can list each other as friends mutually, or either can friend the other without reciprocation. To "friend" is also used as a verb to describe listing someone as a friend.
The term "friend" on LiveJournal is mostly a technical term; however, because the term 'friend" is emotionally loaded for many people, there have been discussions in such LiveJournal communities as lj_dev and lj_biz, as well as suggestions about whether the term should be used in this way; this conflict is discussed in greater detail below.
A user's list of friends (friends list, often shortened to flist) will often include several communities and RSS feeds in addition to individual users. Generally, "friending" allows the friends of a user to read protected entries and causes the friends' entries to appear on the user's "friends page". Friends can also be grouped together in "friends groups", allowing for more complex behavior in both of these features.
Controversy over use of word "Friend"
The dual usage of "friend" as those one reads and those one trusts doesn't necessarily match the definition of the word used in everyday speech. Even the individual users on a user's friends list may contain a mixture of people met through real world friendships, online friendships, general interest, and courtesy (a user friending back someone who friended them). Sometimes a friends list represents something entirely unrelated to social relationships, such as a reading list, a collection, a puzzle, or something random with no social significance whatsoever.
The fact that "friend" is used, without qualification, to describe vastly different things in the LiveJournal community is sometimes a source of conflict, hurt feelings, and other misunderstandings. This is intensified by the fact that friending and defriending (adding or removing another user from your Friends list) is as simple as clicking a button, while real-life friendships are formed and unmade over longer periods of time. Since creating a friend relationship on LiveJournal does not require permission or action on the part of anyone but a single user, any user can friend any other user. Many users are sensitive to being listed as a "friend of" a controversial user or someone whom they actively dislike. To combat this, a feature was created for users to hide the entire list of others who have listed them as a friend [1].
On April Fool's Day, 2004, the LiveJournal staff pulled a prank on all users by changing the terms "friend" and "friend of" to "stalking" and "stalked by." Though many users wanted to keep these terms, it caused controversy, particularly with those who had been victims of stalking. [2]
Despite these problems, the word friend continues to be used to define these multi-faceted relationships on LiveJournal. This possibly reflects the designers' intent to have LiveJournal become more like an off-line community than some other purely on-line organizational structure.
In the Russian LiveJournal community, the word френд (frend, an English borrowing) is often used to describe this relationship instead of the native Russian word that translates to "friend."
Privacy
All users are allowed to hide their entire journals from the major search engines such as Google. The popular "friends only" security option, which has since been adopted by Xanga and MySpace, hides a post from the general public so that only those on the user's friends list can read it. Some users keep all their posts friends-only. LiveJournal also allows users to create custom "user groups" within their group of friends to further restrict who can read any particular post, and to allow easy reading of subsets of a user's friends list.
LiveJournal additionally has a "private" security option which allows users to make a post only they can read, thus making their LiveJournal a private diary rather than a blog. The existence of all entries, regardless of security level, are shown on the user's calendar/archive page.
Some sociologists describe this system as an online gated community, similar to orkut or aSmallWorld, but LiveJournal is far more complex; any individual post can be public, restricted to some unknown group, or entirely private. Anyone can read public posts.
Users may also restrict who may comment on their posts. Comments on a given entry may be allowed from anyone who can read the entry, or restricted. Commenting from anonymous users may be disabled or screened (visible only to the original posters), limiting posting to registered LiveJournal users. Additionally, posting can be limited to only users listed as a friend. The IP address of commenters can be logged as well.
Community
User interaction
As with most weblogs, people can comment on each other's journal entries and create a message board-style thread of comments — each comment can be replied to individually, starting a new thread. All users, including non-paying users, can set various options for comments: they can instruct the software to only accept comments from those on their friends list or block anonymous comments (meaning only LiveJournal users can comment on their posts). They can also screen various types of comments before they are displayed, or disable commenting entirely. Users can also have replies sent directly to their registered e-mail address.
In addition, LiveJournal acts as host to group journals, dubbed "communities" (frequently abbreviated as comms). Anyone who joins a community can make posts to it as they would on a regular journal; communities also have "maintainers", ordinary users who run the community and oversee membership and moderation.
Some areas of LiveJournal rely heavily on user contributions and volunteer efforts [3]. In particular, the LiveJournal Support area is run almost entirely by unpaid volunteers. Similarly, the website is translated into other languages by volunteers, although this effort is running down due to a perceived lack of involvement from the LiveJournal administration.
The development of the LiveJournal software has seen extensive volunteer involvement in the past. In February and March 2003, there was even an effort, nicknamed the Bazaar, to boost volunteer performance by offering money in return for "wanted" enhancements or improvements [4]. The Bazaar was intended to follow a regular monthly pay-out scheme, but it ended up paying out only once, after which it was neglected without a word from the management until about one year later when it was shut down.
Nowadays, voluntary contributions to the software are considered for inclusion less and less as the company has acquired more and more paid employees who focus on the organization's commercial interests. This has led to the formation of several forks, many of which introduce new features that users would like to see at LiveJournal, especially features that are brought up repeatedly in LiveJournal's own suggestions journal (which is sometimes stereotyped to be superfluous because many regular readers feel that LiveJournal has stopped caring about ideas from users and implement only the development team's own ideas, particularly since the buyout by Six Apart).
In some cases legal and administrative concerns have led LiveJournal to prohibit some people from volunteering.
Demographics
As of April 2006, over 10 million accounts had been created, of which 1.2 million had been updated at some point in the last 30 days [5]. Of those users who provided their date of birth, the vast majority were in the 15-23 age group. Of those who specified a gender, more than two thirds were female. This is notable because most Internet media are dominated by males.
LiveJournal is most popular in English-speaking countries (although there is a language selection feature), and the United States has by far the most LiveJournal users among users who choose to list a location. There is also a sizable Russian contingent, as many Russians have turned to LiveJournal as their primary blogging engine. The following are rounded figures as of May 17, 2006 (based on the information listed by the users):
- 3,128,788 - United States
- 292,530 - Russian Federation
- 249,547 - Canada
- 206,637 - United Kingdom
- 97,211 - Australia
The following is a breakdown of United States users, by state, as of May 17, 2006
- 507,962 - California
- 331,393 - Florida
- 307,296 - New York
- 264,097 - Michigan
- 229,524 - Texas
Notable users and journals
Certain LiveJournals have become famous throughout the years for their especially interesting content, including political commentary and anecdotal advice on subjects ranging from household care to aquariums, or because they belong to otherwise famous or accomplished people, including many well-known writers, graphic artists, mass media personalities, programmers, etc. For example:
- the LiveJournal of Poppy Z. Brite, username docbrite, author of gothic and horror novels and short stories.
- the LiveJournal of Caitlin R. Kiernan, username greygirlbeast, author of science fiction and dark fantasy
- the LiveJournal of Ursula Vernon, username ursulav professional artist and writer of the popular "Digger" webcomic
- the LiveJournal of Jamie Zawinski, username jwz, programmer of xscreensaver and founder of mozilla.org
- the LiveJournal of Jhonen Vasquez, username chancrescolex creator of such comic books as Johnny The Homicidal Maniac. He also created the Nickelodeon television show Invader Zim.
- the LiveJournal of Karen Traviss, username karentraviss, science fiction writer
- the LiveJournal of Bram Cohen, username bramcohen, creator of BitTorrent
- the LiveJournal of Sarah Dessen, username writergrl, fiction writer
- the LiveJournal of Hanne Blank, username "misia," feminist, size-acceptance activist, erotica author, and historian.
- the LiveJournal of Momus, username "imomus," British avant-garde musician and performance artist in the 2006 Whitney Biennial
- the LiveJournal of Warren Ellis, username warren-ellis, famous comic book writer.
Other LiveJournals have instead gained notoriety for the infamy of their owners. See, for example,
- the LiveJournal of Rachelle Waterman, username smchyrocky, an Alaska teen who was arrested on November 19, 2004 for the alleged murder of her mother; her journal's final entry mentions the murder of her mother. The journal has since been deleted.
- the LiveJournal of Esmie Tseng, username rockonlittleone, charged with murdering her mother. Apparently she posted on her journal from prison via letters mailed to her friends. Her journal has limited public posts now, but previously public posts are available elsewhere on the internet.
- the LiveJournal of John Dallas Lockhart, username ohbutyouwillpet, a 36-year-old lawyer who fled Ohio as he was about to be charged by the state for raping a four-month-old infant.
- the LiveJournal of Jeff Weise, username weise, a high school student in Red Lake, Minnesota responsible for the Red Lake High School massacre.
- the LiveJournal of Taylor Behl, username tiabliaj, a seventeen year old Virginia college student found murdered in September of 2005. Also, the LiveJournal of Ben Fawley, username skulz67, the alleged killer of Behl, who claims he killed her accidentally.
Instances of LiveJournal having a wider impact on the outside world include
- homeless_at_nyu. In 2004, the LiveJournal of homeless New York University (NYU) student Steve Stanzak gained nationwide attention. Stanzak had lived in the NYU library for 8 months, being unable to afford the expensive cost of housing, and chronicled his plight in his LiveJournal. His weblog ultimately caught the attention of the media and school board, who provided him with temporary free housing and increased his financial aid. [6]
- ea_spouse. Another user who generated wide discussion was the still anonymous user known as ea spouse. This user created a journal solely to make claims about unethical and possibly illegal business practices in use at EA Games. In November of 2004, the truth of those claims was disputed for several days on such sites as Penny Arcade and Slashdot, until a little over a week later a still-pending class action lawsuit was launched against EA over back pay.
- interdictor. Michael Barnett, an internet company's crisis manager who witnessed Hurricane Katrina firsthand from a datacenter in the Central Business District of New Orleans and documented it in his blog, becoming famous virtually overnight.
Frank the Goat
Frank the Goat is LiveJournal's mascot. Frank is treated like an actual living being by much of the LiveJournal userbase, and his brief "biography" as well as his "journal" reflect this.
Sometimes, callers to LiveJournal's PhonePost service are informed "Frank the Goat appreciates your call." This occurs randomly [7].
Controversies
Being a large and public website, LiveJournal is home to much controversy. Dramatic LiveJournal entries can quickly attract thousands of comments, as users are quickly alerted to noteworthy posts by the robust social network, or external sites such as the Encyclopædia Dramatica, an encyclopedia devoted to humor mocking the subjects of its articles, or LJ Drama, a blog chronicling the most interesting or funniest arguments.
Invite system
From September 2, 2001 until December 12, 2003, the growth of LiveJournal was put under control by an "invite code" system. This was because the number of users was increasing faster than the server architecture could handle. New users needed to either obtain an invite code from an existing user or buy a paid account (which reverts to a free account at the expiration of the period of time paid for). The invite code system also had the side effect of helping to prevent abuse by deterring people from creating multiple throw-away accounts. The invite code system was lifted after a number of major improvements to the overall site architecture.
The removal of the invite code system was met with mixed feelings and a surprisingly large amount of opposition. A number of users felt the invite code system gave LiveJournal a touch of elitism, or a closed-community feel. Others, including LiveJournal's management, pointed out that when first introduced, the invite code system was intended to be temporary.
Abuse team decisions
As LiveJournal has grown, it has had to deal with issues involving the content it hosts. Like most web logging hosts, it has adopted a basic Terms of Service [8]. The Terms of Service simultaneously expresses a desire for free speech by the users while outlining impermissible conduct such as spamming, copyright violation, harassment, etc. LiveJournal created an abuse team and processes to handle claims about violations of the Terms of Service, violations of copyright, violations of the law, and other issues.
However, the process lacks transparency: the identity of abuse team members is secret, all team members utilize pseudonyms, there is no complaint escalation procedure, and there is no independent ombudsman or mediator. If the abuse team determines that a violation has occurred, the user will be either required to remove the infringing material (as in the case of copyright violations); the journal will be suspended until such time as the material can be removed (e.g., posting of home addresses or other various contact information of another); or, in cases of severe or multiple violations, the journal will be suspended (e.g., account hijacking, multiple instances of copyright violation, child pornography). The offending user is notified by email of any journal suspension or, if any offending material must be removed, the user is given a deadline for its removal. When a journal is suspended, it effectively removes from the web everything the user has ever written on LiveJournal, including comments in other people's journals. Suspended users who have paid for their LiveJournal service do not have their payments refunded.
The abuse team at LiveJournal has frequently come under criticism for their handling of alleged violations [9]. Many users felt the abuse team over-reacted to cases in disregard of the actual Terms of Service (or the reverse, that it disregards blatant Terms of Service violations). A small controversy arose in November 2004 when a policy document used by the abuse team was leaked to a group of its critics before it was due to be released. Comparisons between the policy and the Terms of Service were inevitable, with some feeling that the former were more restrictive than the latter, and others believing that the Terms of Service are very wide in scope and encompass everything within the policy document. The policy document has since been officially released [10], as it had been intended to be.
Since the takeover by Six Apart, a controversy has arisen when the abuse team banned default icons showing images of women breastfeeding if these images show any part of female nipple or areola and threatens to delete journals that have such default icons. They protested that they were not anti-breastfeeding but needed to protect themselves from legal action in the puritanical American climate. Many users were annoyed, not only by the policy but by the secrecy and unaccountability of the abuse team and the often patronising and dismissive tone of their replies.
A small number of users who have been affected by abuse team policies have made the decision to abandon LiveJournal in favor of other blogging sites, though the number of such users is very small compared to LiveJournal's total user-base. It has, however, exacerbated the opinion held by some that LiveJournal is a fine host for teenage diaries and social networking but cannot be a platform for serious web journaling. Others think that the abuse team is performing a worthwhile job, banning only those with ill intentions and histories of clear Terms of Service violations. In their opinion LiveJournal is a viable choice for serious web publishing, so long as one does not wish to cause trouble.
Sale to Six Apart
LiveJournal's parent company, Danga Interactive, was initially formed and held entirely by Fitzpatrick. However, as LiveJournal's popularity gained, Fitzpatrick was approached by many others to sell the popular journaling service. He initially resisted many of these offers, not wanting his pet project (which he has characterized as his "baby") in the hands of those who did not understand the site's core principles--reliance on paid memberships to fund site operations, the absence of advertising, the volunteer support model, and LiveJournal's support of the free software movement. Nonetheless, as the administrative aspect of LiveJournal began to consume more of Fitzpatrick's time, which he would have rather spent working on the site's technical workings, he began to take the acquisition offers more seriously.
Finally, Fitzpatrick was approached by Ben and Mena Trott, co-founders of Six Apart, who gained his trust and seemed to understand LiveJournal's core principles. He felt that a sale to Six Apart would allow him to focus on technical aspects of the site, while Six Apart's usability and design expertise could improve LiveJournal. Six Apart was interested in buying Danga and LiveJournal to complement their other blogging products.
Community reaction
Rumors of Danga's impending sale to Six Apart were first reported by Business 2.0 journalist Om Malik in his blog, on 4 January 2005.[11] The rumor immediately spread, as users began to speculate (and some panic) about the prospect of the sale of LiveJournal's parent company.[12] [13] [14] [15] By the next evening, speculation of major changes, including a rumor that LiveJournal would require non-paying users to purchase memberships, had caused enough users to backup their journals to impact the site's performance.[16] A few hours later, Fitzpatrick confirmed the sale, and insisted the site's core principles would not be discarded by the new ownership.[17] He also stressed that he and other Danga employees would still continue to manage LiveJournal and that he had determined that Six Apart was committed to the site's core principles before selling.
While the userbase was generally supportive of Fitzpatrick's decision, a few have questioned the deal, objecting to Six Apart's sale of proprietary software, or objecting to changes in LiveJournal's "Guiding Principles" document [18]. In addition, some users had developed a trust of Fitzpatrick, but felt that the sale of Danga to an outside company meant that Fitzpatrick was not ultimately in control of the site.
Fitzpatrick's supporters offered rebuttals to many of these arguments.[19] They noted that the bulk of the code running LiveJournal at the time of the acquisition would continue to be open source, as it was licensed under the GPL. Furthermore, it was noted, most of the changes to the "Social Contract"/"Guiding Principles" document were minor rewordings to prevent legal problems. (The document was never a binding legal contract.)
Others argued that Fitzpatrick, as the sole owner of Danga Interactive, had every right to sell the site, without first consulting the users.
Finally, Fitzpatrick himself noted he was growing tired of the administrative aspects of the site — to the point where he had contemplated shutting down the service — and "I knew I would've shut down the site on my own if I didn't get help."[20]
Other sites running the LiveJournal engine
The software running LiveJournal is open source and primarily written in Perl. Because of this, many other communities have been designed using the LiveJournal software. However, with the exception of DeadJournal, GreatestJournal and Blurty, these tend to be unstable and short-lived. An example of this is the August 2004 closing of uJournal, which temporarily left approximately 100,000 accounts without hosting before the content was moved to AboutMyLife. Another is Journalfen, which for much of its existence has suffered from frequent downtime and now is assailed by spam in the comments of journals, despite its main focus being a single group of communities. Another, slowly growing but not dying, journal is InsaneJournal.
LiveJournal timeline
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
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2004
2005
2006
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See also
- The Nexus, about using LiveJournal in support of roleplaying
References
External links
- LiveJournal.com
- Hyperfriendship: An Ethnographic Account of Friendship Amongst LiveJournal Users, one blogger's research (in PDF format)
- LjFind.com - Livejournal search engine
- LjSEEK.COM - Search engine indexing all public livejournal posts
- LjTAGS.COM - Browse LiveJournal posts by tags
Media attention
- Structure and Evolution of Blogspace, a December 2004 analysis of LiveJournal, published in the Communications of the ACM
- Journals might be gaining ground, a September 2002 article from the San Jose Mercury News
- Young Web whiz blogs his way to a bundle, a January 2005 article on the sale of LiveJournal from The Oregonian
- Youth craft new world on Web site, a January 2005 article on the impact of getting more news from online sources such as LiveJournal instead of mass media, written for The Oregonian
- Detailed Changes in Support, from LiveJournal.com
- Pulling sense out of today’s informational chaos: LiveJournal as a site of knowledge creation and sharing, from First Monday