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The Important Lesson I Learned From Whoever It Was Who Defaced My Blog

May 7th, 2009

In mid-April, this blog was “defaced” by someone who replaced my home page with some nonsensical statement that seemingly referred to terrorists in Algeria.


When I first saw that my blog was defaced, my initial reaction was: “Wow.  My blog must really be important because it was selected by a political group that must have feared the power of what I wrote.”  After a brief Google search, I discovered that the culprit had actually defaced about 486 other blogs in what appeared to be more of a prank than a political statement.  I’ve kept a Google alert on the culprit, and he continues to do the same thing, still in an apparently random way.


It took a few days until we figured out how to retrieve control of my blog.  The actual damage net net was really zero.  I did lose momentum in writing here, but I will get that back.  But I learned a major lesson.


I was hit with a total surprise.  I did not know that such a thing as a web site “defacing” even existed.  So I did not know how to respond when I saw it.  I did know one thing immediately:  I felt violated.  I’ve done some Google searches and discovered that is exactly the same feeling shared by all others who have commented about having their sites defaced: violated.  It’s a terrible feeling.  While I will not remember the message of the violator, I will remember my reaction.


The feeling of violation assumes as a premise that the feeling is very intense and personal.  It was my blog that was attacked, not me, but my reaction was still very personal.  That means that my blog is a part of me and all others who also shared the feeling of violation.  Our blogs are often a virtual part of us.  Millions of people are writing blogs and living at least to some degree in an online life.  Millions more are posting comments online in the form of restaurant reviews or comments about what flowers grow well in the shade or the significance of a news story, and they are asserting an identity, to a greater or lesser degree, as they do.  People are expanding their personalities in totally unprecedented ways.  I always knew that intellectually, but I did not fully appreciate it on a gut level until my blog was defaced.


I think the consequences will be very significant, but I do not know what they will be and when and how they may be realized.  But I do have some thoughts on how this will impact communications and communities, and I expect to be writing about that some more in the future.

Basic Theme Of Death Of Time, Doug's Thoughts On New Media

Social Media And Other New Media Tools Will Be Bigger, But Different Than The Gurus Think. Only If They Get Out Of The Way.

April 15th, 2009

As readers of my blog DeathOfTime.com may know, I became extremely frustrated over the past few years as I met with experts in new and social media.  The DeathOfTime.com may know, I became extremely frustrated over the past few years as I met with experts in new and social media.  The communications firm I co-founded has enjoyed substantial success since we were founded in August 2000, and that has led to my ability to meet with several people who are well-known and considered experts in new and social media. Read more…

Doug's Thoughts On New Media

Spam Email As An Economic Gauge

April 9th, 2009

I’m getting inundated with emails that somehow get through our spam mail filters.  They basically all start out by telling me that in this economy I am certainly going to want to maximize this or minimize that and these guys really do that well, and click a link to find out more. Read more…

Communications & News Business, Doug's Thoughts On New Media, The Economy, Political & Cultural Environment

How Do You Run A Revolution In The Age Of The Internet? Ask The People Of Moldova. NO. Twitter Them.

April 8th, 2009

Readers of my blog know that I believe that the protests that are arising around the world with increasing frequency, more participants and wider support from the population as a whole, could explode into something more than protests.  I’ve suggested that maybe it makes more sense to ask how this crisis compares to the period preceding the French Revolution rather than how it compares to the Depression.  That gives rise to the question:  How would you launch a revolution in the age of the Internet? Read more…

Doug's Thoughts On New Media, The Economy, Political & Cultural Environment

“New Media” Gurus Are Creating A Third Basic Flaw In The Communications Business

March 23rd, 2009

The communications industry, which has been based on two fundamental flaws, is in the process of adopting a third.  This is coming as a consequence of “New Media” gurus misinterpreting the importance of new communications tools. Read more…

Basic Theme Of Death Of Time, Doug's Thoughts On New Media

Will April 1st, 2009 Be The Day That The Last Queen Of England Meets The First President Of The World?

March 23rd, 2009

On April 1, President Obama will meet with Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace; he will be in London for the G20 summit, which will begin the next day.  Britain currently holds the rotating presidency of the G20.  In addition to the U.S., the G20 meeting will also be attended by countries including Japan, China, France, Germany, Russia, India and South Africa.  Whatever else comes out of the meeting, the photo of Queen Elizabeth and President Obama might well become iconic. Read more…

Basic Theme Of Death Of Time, Doug's Thoughts On New Media

More Comments On New Communications: The Sorry (And Getting Sorrier) State Of Journalism

March 11th, 2009

I’ve expressed my ongoing thoughts about the communications revolution previously here (to see, go to the “categories” tab to the right, and see the pull-down menu for “communications and news business” and for one on my views about “new media”).


When discussing the future of the news business, most of the attention has been focused on what is happening to mainstream media per se.  Thus, the debate is about how long newspapers will continue to publish print editions, which will be successful in a transition to the web, the “new media” plays that will replace them, etc.  But it has occurred to me that there is another serious consequence.  Read more…

Doug's Thoughts On New Media

Presentation To 2009 We Media’s Game Changers Conference: Trends In Communications

February 26th, 2009

This is a version of the presentation I gave on the evening of February 25, 2009, to the We Media’s Game Changers Conference, held at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Fl, in which I discuss my thoughts on the present state of communications and emerging trends.  Enjoy! Read more…

Basic Theme Of Death Of Time, Business Model Issues, Communications & News Business, Doug's Thoughts On New Media , , , , , , , ,

Thinking About “New Media” Part 2. One Major Change: I’m Not Going To Call It “New Media” Again (I Think)

January 22nd, 2009

During the past few days, basically taking an extended weekend with Martin Luther King’s Birthday and the Presidential Inauguration, I spent some time thinking about “new media.”  Read more…

Doug's Thoughts On New Media

Trying To Understand “New Media”? Start With This Premise: Nobody Understands It. Yet.

January 7th, 2009

I’m a capitalist philosophically, an entrepreneur by disposition, and a communicator by experience.  I’m co-founder of a communications firm, Qorvis, which seeks to achieve ongoing success by achieving a very high level of quality in everything we do.  If you are in similar shoes, “new media” has been a major issue of yours for several years with increasing intensity.  Read more…

Doug's Thoughts On New Media