from a
wearable computer with
head-up display, February 22, 1995 The term "weblog" was coined by
Jorn Barger on December 17, 1997. The short form "blog" was coined by
Peter Merholz, who jokingly broke the word
weblog into the phrase
we blog in the sidebar of his blog Peterme.com in May 1999. Shortly thereafter,
Evan Williams at
Pyra Labs used "blog" as both a noun and verb and devised the term "blogger" in connection with Pyra Labs'
Blogger product, leading to the popularization of the terms.
Origins Before blogging became popular, digital communities took many forms, including
Usenet, commercial online services such as
GEnie,
Byte Information Exchange (BIX) and the early
CompuServe,
e-mail lists, and
bulletin board systems (BBS). In the 1990s,
Internet forum software created running conversations with "threads". Threads are topical connections between messages on a virtual "
corkboard".
Tim Berners-Lee created what is considered by
Encyclopedia Britannica to be "the first 'blog in 1992 to discuss the progress made on creating the World Wide Web and software used for it. From June 14, 1993, Mosaic Communications Corporation maintained their "What's New" list of new websites, updated daily and archived monthly. The page was accessible by a special "What's New" button in the Mosaic web browser. In November 1993
Ranjit Bhatnagar started writing about interesting sites, pages and discussion groups he found on the internet, as well as some personal information, on his website Moonmilk, arranging them chronologically in a special section called Ranjit's HTTP Playground. Other early pioneers of blogging, such as
Justin Hall, credit him with being an inspiration. The earliest instance of a commercial blog was on the first
business to consumer Web site created in 1995 by
Ty, Inc., which featured a blog in a section called "Online Diary". The entries were maintained by featured
Beanie Babies that were voted for monthly by Web site visitors. The modern blog evolved from the
online diary where people would keep a running account of the events in their personal lives. Most such writers called themselves diarists, journalists, or journalers.
Justin Hall, who began personal blogging in 1994 while a student at
Swarthmore College, is generally recognized as one of the earlier bloggers, as is
Jerry Pournelle.
Dave Winer's Scripting News is also credited with being one of the older and longer running weblogs. The Australian Netguide magazine maintained the Daily Net News on their web site from 1996. Daily Net News ran links and daily reviews of new websites, mostly in Australia. Another early blog was Wearable Wireless Webcam, an online shared diary of a person's personal life combining text, digital video, and digital pictures transmitted live from a wearable computer and
EyeTap device to a web site in 1994. This practice of semi-automated blogging with live video together with text was referred to as
sousveillance, and such journals were also used as evidence in legal matters. Some early bloggers, such as The Misanthropic Bitch, who began in 1997, referred to their online presence as a
zine, before the term blog entered common usage. The first research paper about blogging was
Torill Mortensen and
Jill Walker Rettberg's paper "Blogging Thoughts", which analysed how blogs were being used to foster research communities and the exchange of ideas and scholarship, and how this new means of networking overturns traditional power structures.
Technology Early blogs were simply manually updated components of common Websites. In 1995, the "Online Diary" on the
Ty, Inc. Web site was produced and updated manually before any blogging programs were available. Posts were made to appear in reverse chronological order by manually updating text-based
HTML code using
FTP software in real time several times a day. To users, this offered the appearance of a live diary that contained multiple new entries per day. At the beginning of each new day, new diary entries were manually coded into a new HTML file, and at the start of each month, diary entries were archived into their own folder, which contained a separate HTML page for every day of the month. Then, menus that contained links to the most recent diary entry were updated manually throughout the site. This text-based method of organizing thousands of files served as a springboard to define future blogging styles that were captured by blogging software developed years later. •
Blogger (blogspot.com) was launched in 1999
Political impact comments regarding Senator Thurmond. Senator Lott was eventually to resign his Senate leadership position over the matter. An early milestone in the rise in importance of blogs came in 2002, when many bloggers focused on comments by
U.S. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott. Senator Lott, at a party honoring
U.S. Senator Strom Thurmond, praised Senator Thurmond by suggesting that the United States would have been better off had Thurmond been elected president. Lott's critics saw these comments as tacit approval of
racial segregation, a policy advocated by Thurmond's
1948 presidential campaign. This view was reinforced by documents and recorded interviews dug up by bloggers. (See
Josh Marshall's
Talking Points Memo.) Though Lott's comments were made at a public event attended by the media, no major media organizations reported on his controversial comments until after blogs broke the story. Blogging helped to create a political crisis that forced Lott to step down as majority leader. Similarly, blogs were among the driving forces behind the "
Rathergate" scandal. Television journalist
Dan Rather presented documents on the CBS show
60 Minutes that conflicted with accepted accounts of President Bush's military service record. Bloggers declared the documents to be
forgeries and presented evidence and arguments in support of that view. Consequently, CBS apologized for what it said were inadequate reporting techniques (see:
Little Green Footballs). The impact of these stories gave greater credibility to blogs as a medium of news dissemination. In Russia, some political bloggers have started to challenge the dominance of official, overwhelmingly pro-government media. Bloggers such as
Rustem Adagamov and
Alexei Navalny have many followers, and the latter's nickname for the ruling
United Russia party as the "party of crooks and thieves" has been adopted by anti-regime protesters. This led to
The Wall Street Journal calling Navalny "the man
Vladimir Putin fears most" in March 2012. (Navalny died in prison in 2024.)
Mainstream popularity By 2004, the role of blogs became increasingly mainstream, as
political consultants, news services, and candidates began using them as tools for outreach and opinion forming. Blogging was established by politicians and political candidates to express opinions on war and other issues and cemented blogs' role as a news source. (See
Howard Dean and
Wesley Clark.) Even politicians not actively campaigning, such as the
UK's Labour Party's Member of Parliament (MP)
Tom Watson, began to blog to bond with constituents. In January 2005,
Fortune magazine listed eight bloggers whom business people "could not ignore":
Peter Rojas,
Xeni Jardin,
Ben Trott,
Mena Trott,
Jonathan Schwartz, Jason Goldman,
Robert Scoble, and
Jason Calacanis. Israel was among the first national governments to set up an official blog. Under
David Saranga, the
Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs became active in adopting
Web 2.0 initiatives, including an official
video blog and a
political blog. The questions and answers were later posted on
IsraelPolitik, the country's official political blog. The impact of blogging on the mainstream media has also been acknowledged by governments. In 2009, the presence of the American journalism industry had declined to the point that several newspaper corporations were filing for bankruptcy, resulting in less direct competition between newspapers within the same circulation area. Discussion emerged as to whether the newspaper industry would benefit from a stimulus package by the federal government. U.S. President
Barack Obama acknowledged the emerging influence of blogging upon society by saying, "if the direction of the news is all blogosphere, all opinions, with no serious fact-checking, no serious attempts to put stories in context, then what you will end up getting is people shouting at each other across the void, but not a lot of mutual understanding". Between 2009 and 2012, an
Orwell Prize for blogging was awarded. In the late 2000s, blogs were often used on business websites and for
grassroots political activism. ==Types==