The MyBlogLog Blog The source for all things MyBlogLog.

22Dec/06

Reader Roll “Slowness” Fixed

Some of you may have noticed a slowdown in the Reader Roll and Top 5 widgets early this morning.  The slowdown was caused due to the failure of one of our "pub" servers.  The server is now back and an additional mirror server has been brought online to ensure that this does not happen again in the future.

Filed under: Bug Fixes No Comments
22Dec/06

Reader Roll “Slowness” Fixed

Some of you may have noticed a slowdown in the Reader Roll and Top 5 widgets early this morning.  The slowdown was caused due to the failure of one of our "pub" servers.  The server is now back and an additional mirror server has been brought online to ensure that this does not happen again in the future.

Filed under: Bug Fixes No Comments
18Dec/06

MyBlogLog needs your help — what do we do (if anything) about spam?

MyBlogLog deals with spam on a daily basis.  In some cases, it's really easy.  When someone posts Nigerian or porn spam, it's pretty clear that the right thing to do is boot the user from the system and go about our day.  Simply put, if someone sends a bunch of messages to MyBlogLog members linking somewhere outside the system, they're gone.  But there's another kind of spam, and we're not really sure what to do about it.

A small percentage of our users try to drive traffic to their own communities (and eventually their own sites) by a) joining hundeds of communities, b) adding hundreds of contacts and/or c) sending out hundreds of messages asking people to check out their communities.

It's interesting how people respond.  Personnaly, I could care less if someone joins my communities or makes me a friend, but heaven forbid they send me an unsolicited message.  For other people, it's just the opposite -- they're fine with messages but they hate it if one of their only community members is an obvious plant.

However, most of these members are also the most engaged in MyBlogLog.  When you look at their profiles and communities they have dozens of messages, almost all uniformly positive.  People who click through seem to appreciate the attention and appear genuinely happy that somone took the time to interact with them.

So we're at a loss.  On the one hand, we have a vocal group of members asking us to stop letting people fish for traffic this way.  These people who want us to ensure that only high-quality connections are let through, either by banning the users or restricting their ability to post or just changing the whole framework of the communities.  Then there's the other group that actually like the random requests.

So we're putting it out there for you to discuss.  How big of a problem is this for you?  How would you like for us to address it?  You've been great at guiding us on other areas of feature development so
I can't wait to read what you bring to this challenge.

We are doing one small thing that we are doing in conjunction with this post.  We've added a "report as spam" button next to each message you receive.  If there's something that annoys you, click the button and let us know.  I don't care whether it's the biggest issue in the world or a minor annoyance.  I'd just like to get a better handle on what's bugging people before we try to respond with change.

Thanks for your input on this one.  It's a challenging problem and it will be fun to solve together.

Filed under: New Features No Comments
18Dec/06

MyBlogLog needs your help — what do we do (if anything) about spam?

MyBlogLog deals with spam on a daily basis.  In some cases, it's really easy.  When someone posts Nigerian or porn spam, it's pretty clear that the right thing to do is boot the user from the system and go about our day.  Simply put, if someone sends a bunch of messages to MyBlogLog members linking somewhere outside the system, they're gone.  But there's another kind of spam, and we're not really sure what to do about it.

A small percentage of our users try to drive traffic to their own communities (and eventually their own sites) by a) joining hundeds of communities, b) adding hundreds of contacts and/or c) sending out hundreds of messages asking people to check out their communities.

It's interesting how people respond.  Personnaly, I could care less if someone joins my communities or makes me a friend, but heaven forbid they send me an unsolicited message.  For other people, it's just the opposite -- they're fine with messages but they hate it if one of their only community members is an obvious plant.

However, most of these members are also the most engaged in MyBlogLog.  When you look at their profiles and communities they have dozens of messages, almost all uniformly positive.  People who click through seem to appreciate the attention and appear genuinely happy that somone took the time to interact with them.

So we're at a loss.  On the one hand, we have a vocal group of members asking us to stop letting people fish for traffic this way.  These people who want us to ensure that only high-quality connections are let through, either by banning the users or restricting their ability to post or just changing the whole framework of the communities.  Then there's the other group that actually like the random requests.

So we're putting it out there for you to discuss.  How big of a problem is this for you?  How would you like for us to address it?  You've been great at guiding us on other areas of feature development so
I can't wait to read what you bring to this challenge.

We are doing one small thing that we are doing in conjunction with this post.  We've added a "report as spam" button next to each message you receive.  If there's something that annoys you, click the button and let us know.  I don't care whether it's the biggest issue in the world or a minor annoyance.  I'd just like to get a better handle on what's bugging people before we try to respond with change.

Thanks for your input on this one.  It's a challenging problem and it will be fun to solve together.

Filed under: New Features No Comments
18Dec/06

Sometimes it’s the little things…

We added a "reply" link to messages today.  Damn, that's useful.  Sorry it took so long.

Filed under: New Features No Comments
16Dec/06

MySpace Reader Roll Issue

We have had a few people report that our
MySpace Reader Roll Widget was not showing up since we launched the
service earlier this week.  Well, we finally tracked down the issue
to a server failure.  One of the three initial servers providing the
MySpace Reader Roll went down without notifying our monitoring
system.  The server has been replaced and we should not see any
further outages.

Filed under: Bug Fixes No Comments
14Dec/06

The New MyBlogLog Community Wiki

Not everyone knows, but MyBlogLog is "virtual" organization.  Eric, until very recently, was based out of Western Massachusetts; Scott Rafer is in San Francisco when he isn't jet-setting; and the tech team - John, Steve and I - are based in Orlando, Florida.  As such we rely heavily on IM, email and way-to-expensive cell phone bills to keep things grooving.

We also live by our internal wiki.  It has everything from product plans to coffee making instructions.  Being such big wiki fanatics, it is amazing that we never got a wiki rolled out to the community.  Well, we have finally solved that oversight:

We are proud to announce that the MyBlogLog Community Wiki is LIVE!

Starting now, the MyBlogLog Community Wiki will replace the badly out of date FAQ that was our excuse for Help on MyBlogLog.com.  But improved member support is just the start.  We want the new wiki to become the central place for all things MyBlogLog.  Have a great tip or tick for the service, share it!  Have an idea for a new site feature or widget, let us know.  Think we are the Devil incarnate - we hope not, but if so - tell us why.

MyBlogLog is driven by the community.  We hope the new wiki makes it easier for everyone (including YOU) to get involved.

(Tags: | | )

Filed under: Company News No Comments
14Dec/06

MySpace and WordPress happenings

A bit of news, part rather belatedly, part fresh off the grill.

We've added support for MySpace pages.  They said it couldn't be done.  That maybe it shouldn't be done.  That we were mad for even thinking about it.  That I should get on with the point.  Yeah.

Loads of our users have MySpace accounts and Rupert Murdoch hasn't been up with the sharing of information, like how many people visited their page and who's been by recently.  As TechCrunch reported over the weekend, we've rectified that.  Just add a new version of the Reader Roll to your MySpace template and you're off to the races.  You'll need to add your MySpace account as a new blog on your profile page in order to get the custom Reader Roll code.  Let me know if you have any questions.

Next up, we have our first user-created service extention.  Francesco over at Napolux has created an awesome improvement on Comment Faces for Wordpress users.  It's called MyAvatars, and it works like Gravatar, in that you pop it into you plugins directory.  In doing so, you get a couple of awesome benefits:

  • Complete freedom to place the Comment Face wherever you like
  • The ability to show comment faces for people who just leave their email address
  • Automatic notification of followup comments

This is a rad little hack and I think it will continue to get better over time, as additional Wordpress users work with Francesco to add even more features.  I hope that other members will follow Francesco's example and help us extend the value of MyBlogLog by bringing it to even more platforms and providing you with even more ways to make it your own.

If you get a chance, swing by Francesco's MyBlogLog profile page and share the love.

Filed under: New Features No Comments
14Dec/06

MySpace and WordPress happenings

A bit of news, part rather belatedly, part fresh off the grill.

We've added support for MySpace pages.  They said it couldn't be done.  That maybe it shouldn't be done.  That we were mad for even thinking about it.  That I should get on with the point.  Yeah.

Loads of our users have MySpace accounts and Rupert Murdoch hasn't been up with the sharing of information, like how many people visited their page and who's been by recently.  As TechCrunch reported over the weekend, we've rectified that.  Just add a new version of the Reader Roll to your MySpace template and you're off to the races.  You'll need to add your MySpace account as a new blog on your profile page in order to get the custom Reader Roll code.  Let me know if you have any questions.

Next up, we have our first user-created service extention.  Francesco over at Napolux has created an awesome improvement on Comment Faces for Wordpress users.  It's called MyAvatars, and it works like Gravatar, in that you pop it into you plugins directory.  In doing so, you get a couple of awesome benefits:

  • Complete freedom to place the Comment Face wherever you like
  • The ability to show comment faces for people who just leave their email address
  • Automatic notification of followup comments

This is a rad little hack and I think it will continue to get better over time, as additional Wordpress users work with Francesco to add even more features.  I hope that other members will follow Francesco's example and help us extend the value of MyBlogLog by bringing it to even more platforms and providing you with even more ways to make it your own.

If you get a chance, swing by Francesco's MyBlogLog profile page and share the love.

Filed under: New Features No Comments
13Dec/06

The Site, She Grows!

Scott's not the only stats hound 'round the parts.  We've hit a couple of pretty awesome achievements this week and it set me off on a morning binge of charts and graphs.  First the major milestones:

  • We hit 40K registered sites today
  • We served a million Reader Rolls on Monday
  • We've had consecutive 50M work weeks for pages tracked (that's 2.5B pages tracked per year if we don't grow another bit [and don't track anything on weekends])

It was a great opportunity to compare against Scott's stats post from two weeks ago and see the trends.  I love the continued adoption of the Reader Roll widget:

  • Oct 30: 1,325 Sites with Reader Rolls
  • Nov 28: 2,398 Sites with Reader Rolls
  • Dec 13: 3,658 Sites with Reader Rolls

Can you say "doubling every month"?

We're also seeing growth in our nearly 10,000 communities.

  • Communities with 20 or more members:   6.5%
  • Communities with 10 or more members: 13.5%
  • Communities with   5 or more members: 26.0%

In each case, more than double what it was in September.

Lastly, for the visually oriented, a couple of graphs to look at:

Screenhunter_034_1


Screenhunter_035_1


Oh, and Todd would kill me if I didn't mention that we broke into the Alexa 1,000 last week.
This is all so rad to be a part of!

Filed under: Company News No Comments

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