[click image].
Why, you might ask,
do I refuse to participate on blogs that make you log in? The big excuse for this, of course, was for the ability to better manage trolls and spammers and hackers. This is bullshit, on crack, on its face. It hardly slows any of those things. It has been about demographics, and especially about squeezing more ad revenue out of those who keep their cookie folders resolutely shut.
It gives an edge to "search engine optimization". You know what buzz words to put in your post titles. You know what labels or tags get you the most traffic. You allow your advertisers to know all about your visitors' online activities. You provide the controllers with ever-improving mechanisms to control us and you. All this on top of just giving the individuals who use this feature a vastly better idea of what subjects to stay off and which subjects to hype more heavily in their quests for popularity.
You might forgive them for wanting to be popular. Some of them have important things to say. Well, their importance diminishes when they start tailoring what they say to what you like the most,
and when they finally start getting into the
really successful zone, they learn very quickly to make sure what they say can give less offense and
preserves their popularity. It just flows into packing another once-outside-the-box site into the box we must escape to save ourselves, to save the world.
This also relates to the sites that encourage you to have your own blog on their site, that let you hold forth at any length and attract commentary from the greater community at that site.
And, the social media sites? They don't even bother to be subtle about it.
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I forgot to mention that this includes sites that use the various free commenting platforms available out there. Some sites that use this cookie and flash cookie and other means of identifying your online behavior
do allow you to participate without logging in, and content themselves with the basic information about their commenters they can glean from their admin pages for these systems... and, I'm sure, with paid arrangements with those providers.
The same thing is true, not to a personal advancement extent, with Blogger. Google gets yer demographics and shares them with you if you are so crass as to put their ads on your blog, but otherwise, it all really just goes into Google's ocean. So, I also took Google Analytics off my blog. It won't keep them from putting cookies on your machines, but it keeps them somewhat aback from hassling ME to put their ads here and obviates any occasional urge I have to look and see how I'm doing now as compared with then, any trends. I can't care about that and it slows things here and ONLY helps THEM.
Be assured I will get my own page with its own commenting system with all speed the very moment enough manna drops into my lap.
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