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Posts Tagged ‘Blogs

Blog Plug: Taco Journalism

9:13 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Blogs|Food|Internet|Linking Latinos · 1 Comment

5 Aug 2009

As a food obsessed blogger, I was delighted to see that a food blog I frequent, Taco Journalism out of Austin, was featured in this great video from The Austin American Statesman.

At Taco Journalism, taco freak Mando Rayo takes you on a culinary tour of taquerías great and small, dazzling and disappointing. If you like tacos and like blogs, then I think you might love Taco Journalism. Pay Nando a little visit here.

Via / Austin American Statesman

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Problems with comments

12:00 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · VivirLatino · 1 Comment

26 Sep 2008

frustration.jpgSo apparently Vivir Latino has got the worst spam problem in the world. As we’ve been working to fix the problem, we’ve discovered that scores of you have left comments here but have had those comments eaten by spam! I am currently working through as much spam as I can to try to recover them all–until we resolve the problem, if you don’t see any comment you’ve left posted within a day, please email us and we’ll check the spam!

Love and Kisses,
La Vivir Latino Team

P.S. The Vivir Latino Team also offers a deep and sincere apology to all those who have taken the time to leave comments but have not seen their comments published. Please know that we are working to correct the problem! And don’t let this keep you from commenting! Now that we know, we will be more on the ball!

VL

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Death by Blogging

11:51 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Blogs|Health · Comments Off

8 Apr 2008

SDC10005.jpg What exactly is the price we bloggers pay to work in our robes? Death!!!

They work long hours, often to exhaustion. Many are paid by the piece–not garments, but blog posts. This is the digital-era sweatshop. You may know it by a different name: home.
A growing workforce of home-office laborers and entrepreneurs, armed with computers and smartphones and wired to the hilt, are toiling under great physical and emotional stress created by the around-the-clock Internet economy that demands a constant stream of news and comment.
Of course, the bloggers can work elsewhere, and they profess a love of the nonstop action and perhaps the chance to create a global media outlet without a major up-front investment. At the same time, some are starting to wonder if something has gone very wrong. In the last few months, two among their ranks have died suddenly.
Two weeks ago in North Lauderdale, Fla., funeral services were held for Russell Shaw, a prolific blogger on technology subjects who died at 60 of a heart attack. In December, another tech blogger, Marc Orchant, died at 50 of a massive coronary. A third, Om Malik, 41, survived a heart attack in December.
Other bloggers complain of weight loss or gain, sleep disorders, exhaustion, and other maladies born of the nonstop strain of producing for a news and information cycle that is as always-on as the Internet.

Read more…

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Bolivia’s First Foray into Citizen Journalism

1:59 pm By Maegan La Mala · Blogs|Bolivia|Latin America · Comments Off

19 Dec 2007

ahorabolivia.jpgMy friend Mariano Amartino over at the Clarin newspaper’s “Blog about Blogs” reports that Bolivia’s first citizen-produced online newspaper has just launched. It’s called AhoraBolivia.com.

Founded by two young journalists, the project — apparently the first of this kind in Bolivia — has a noble mission:

We want to, in a selfless and free way, create an authentic citizen newspaper in which the voices of the citizens of Bolivia may be heard; free voices and voices committed to freedom. Voices that create unity in a country rich in resources and culture.

As Latin American countries such as Bolivia continue to struggle through political strife, this is a refreshing departure from mainstream media’s reporting of the issues. Let’s hope this is just the first of many citizen journalism initiatives in Bolivia.

Via / Weblog Sobre Weblogs

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Blogs Turn 10

4:48 pm By Maegan La Mala · Internet|Media|VivirLatino · 1 Comment

17 Dec 2007

23423989.jpgThis year, our humble online home, VivirLatino turned two years old. And VL wouldn’t exist at all if someone, 10 years ago today, hadn’t come up with the concept — or at least the term:

The word “weblog” celebrates the 10th anniversary of it being coined on 17 December 1997.

The word was created by Jorn Barger to describe what he was doing with his pioneering Robot Wisdom web page.

The word was an abbreviation for the “logging” of interesting “web” sites that Mr Barger featured on his regularly updated journal.

How much has the blogosphere changed since then? According to the BBC, the year following Barger’s coining of the term there were only 23 blogs online. Now there are 70 million.And if you love or hate social networking sites like MySpace or Facebook, you have blogs to thank. They paved the way for the social sharing of information and creation of virtual networks.

Via / BBC News

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Picks for International Blog Day

11:43 am By Maegan La Mala · Blogs|Internet · 1 Comment

31 Aug 2007

Blog Day 2007VL readers, today, August 31st, is International Blog Day. What is it?

BlogDay was created with the belief that bloggers should have one day dedicated to getting to know other bloggers from other countries and areas of interest. On that day Bloggers will recommend other blogs to their blog visitors.

BlogDay recommends that we suggest blogs that are different from those we normally link to — and “different from their own culture, point of view and attitude.”

Here are my picks for BlogDay. Some are new to me, some aren’t, but all are worth sharing with you. Get to know these blogs and I guarantee you’ll learn something you didn’t know before:

LobsterSquad: Ximena Maier is a talented illustrator living in Madrid, Spain. I share a passion with her: cooking. I’ve lurked on her blog almost since day one (not sure how I found it), and so should you, since her uber-entertaining entries are coupled with with her own gorgeous drawings.

Dutched Pinay on Expatriation: I enjoy reading the funny adventures of Dutched Pinay, a Filipina living in the Netherlands. Her anecdotes about adjusting to life in northern Europe with her friend “Dutchman” are definitely worth a read.

IndiaUncut: Amit Varma writes from Mumbai on everything from Bollywood gossip, tech, politics and travel. He’s an entertaining writer with a great sense of humor, so check him out.

Cajun Squeezebox Blog: Want to get to know Cajun music? This is the place to learn anything and everything about Cajun accordion music, and get a taste for Cajun culture as well.

Scribbit:
Michelle Mitchell writes about the adventures of raising a family in Alaska, fielding questions from her kids like “How old was I when I was a baby?” and “Who trained Yoda?” Funny stuff.

I hope you’ll drop by these blogs and have a look around. And if you have a blog, why not post your own picks? Or feel free to link to your own blog in the comments section of this post.

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Fox News thinks bloggers are evil

9:32 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Blogs|Media · 2 Comments

31 Jul 2007

And Bill O’Reilly thinks bloggers are “radical Internet assassins”. Have a laugh with this collection of asinine Fox News soundbites, then bask in the guilty pleasure of being a reader of such an evil publication, just another a “vicious far left website”.

Via / YouTube

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hate.gifHate crimes against Latinos are on the rise according to two new studies by the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center; it seems that aggressors are using the immigration debate as an excuse to incite violence:

Hate crimes against Latinos are on the rise, according to a two recent reports. The Southern Poverty Law Center reports that the number of hate groups has risen 30 percent since 2000.

Mark Potok, editor of the SPLC’s quarterly report on extremist organizations, told USA Today that immigration “has been critical to the growth of the hate movement.”

ADL’s report, released on April 24, states that white supremacists, skinheads, and other extremist groups are using the immigration debate to incite violence against Latinos, regardless of status, around the country.

The most recent and most publicized hate crime incident against a Latino is the case of David Ritcheson, a Houston teenager who was brutally beaten in Houston after some other teens suspected he had attempted to kiss a white girl.

Spring Democrats, a liberal Houston-area blog (yay!), points the figure at the local press, which seems to be shining the light away from the incident. Indeed, the case is getting less attention than one would expect. The Houston Chronicle has no coverage of the incident on its website, even though it happened fairly recently.

Other media seem to have forgotten about it as well; just do a Google News search on “David Ritcheson” and you’ll get basically nothing. Not so the case with Natalee Holloway. That wasn’t a hate crime, but it is a story that still has major legs a whole year later.

Via / CivilRights.org and Spring Democrats

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At least not when it’s flat-out plagiarism.

plagiarism: the act of appropriating the literary composition of another author, or excerpts, ideas, or passages therefrom, and passing the material off as one’s own creation. (Via UCB Libraries web site).bp2.jpg

It has recently come to our attention that a startling number of our posts are being repurposed in their entirety for use on a series of web sites, all of which seem to be controlled by the same person. The posts are often republished with a very discreet link to the original VL post, one that the typical reader would perhaps not notice.

We probably would have let that one slide — it would not have been the first time. But I also found that a post that I wrote for another blog I maintain was used in its entirety with no credit given at all. Straight-out plagiarism. This compelled me to look deeper into the site to find, to my surprise, that the site in question is not only plagiarizing content from that blog, but VL content (what a coincidence) and…our company information as well! Yes, they’ve even copied our “About” statement — I should know; I, along with Mala, wrote it:

Brown Pride is a daily publication developed by ublog, featuring all the latest in Latino style, products, entertainment, culture, and politics created for the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.

Look familiar? It should. It’s located to the right of this post. The only thing they changed was the company name.

Are we being uptight? No. Just because we operate under a Creative Commons license does not mean that anyone has the right to lift our content — much less corporate messaging — and use it on their site without citing us. First off, if you read the CC agreement, you’ll find that if one does not cite the source of the information and intends to use it for commercial purposes (AdSense!), they are in direct violation of said agreement.

What really gets us riled up here is that we are extremely tedious about citing our sources. You’ll note that when I quoted the definition for plagiarism, I linked to the place where I found the definition. Not to mention the work that Mala and I do on a daily basis to keep our readers informed. We care about what we write and give credit where credit is due, so yes, it pisses us off to see that others — particularly Latino blogs — are not doing the same. That doesn’t sound like “brown pride” at all to me.

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To our copycat friends: we know that the Latino market is booming, more Latinos are on the web and that having Latino content on your site will make you some AdSense dollars. If that’s your motivation (it happens to not be ours), here’s a novel idea: create your own content. I know, I know, it’s time-consuming, but you know what? It’s totally gratifying as well.

In the end, this is no unsolved mystery. We know who’s behind this and we don’t plan to let up should this continue. Though hopefully by the time you read this the plagiarized content will be removed.

As for those who legitimately cite us, link to us, mention us and read us, we thank you for respecting our work and making VL a part of your day.

For more about online plagiarism, visit Plagiarism Today

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Nuyorker: a new blog en español

1:34 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Blogs|Internet|New York City · 1 Comment

7 Dec 2005

nuyorker.jpgMy friend Oso tipped me to Nuyorker, a new blog that just launched that’s all about NYC, in Spanish. I must say it immediately got my attention because the first post I read was about rapper 50 Cent’s entrepreneurial endeavors — apparently he is promoting his own line of vibrators:

El hip hopero y actor de cine 50 cent va a sacar una linea de “sex toys”. El articulo estrella es una version de 50 cent motorizado con un vibrador igualito a su miembro viril, pero azul (salvo que 50 lo tenga realmente azul) “para que todas las chicas puedan experienciar lo que es tener sexo con 50″.

Read more…

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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.

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