Was wondering about the surge in my server logs…
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/01/opinion/blockchains-what-are-they-good-for.html
Was wondering about the surge in my server logs…
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/01/opinion/blockchains-what-are-they-good-for.html
When I posted that yesterday, the count was: 14.
As of now, it's 48.
Factors:
- NYT is paywalled.
- It was a pretty long piece and the link was well below the fold
- I've repeatedly heard it said that less than 10% of links are followed.
- By reading Krugman's sentence you knew pretty well what the blog piece was going to say.
Still, not a big number.
Methodology: zcat ../log/access_log.* | cat - ../log/access_log | egrep 'GET /ongoing/When/202x/2022/11/19/AWS-Blockchain.*nytimes' | wc -l
If you have expertise in any area, it is a constant struggle to remind yourself how little 99.99% of people care about details
and how much info there is out there, and how truly extra ordinary you have to be - Rihanna level - to get a lot of attn paid to you
just life
@leemeade @timbray - We subscribe (and pay) for Guardian, The Atlantic, NYT, WaPo, San Jose Mercury, and a couple of others.
Yes, many journalists and editors have fallen into a "fair and balanced" trap that requires correction. But if we don't provide support, even for those who may wobble a bit, all we will have left are partisan hacks.
@timbray seriously, this is an interesting phenomenon. and one thing it means, is that you often can follow up with the subject of a piece - they may not be overwhelmed with attention
So when its a subject that should be followed up on, I am hoping more citizen journalists do that and second-interview a bit later