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![]() This is the research diary of researcher Lisbeth
Klastrup, since february 2001 sharing her thoughts on life, universe, persistent online
worlds, games, interactive stories and internet oddities with you on the www. May 07 April 07 March 07 February 07 January 07 December 06 2006 2005 2004 2003 Oct/Nov 2002 2002 2001 Fellow research bloggers -Denmark Jesper Juul Gonzalo Frasca Martin Sønderlev Christensen Jonas Heide Smith Miguel Sicart Mads Bødker ITU blogs -Norway Jill Walker Torill Mortensen Hilde Corneliussen Anders Fagerjord -The World Terra Nova (misc, joint) GrandTextAuto (US, joint) Mirjam Paalosari-Eladhari (SE) Jane McGonigal (US) Patrik Svensson (SE) Elin Sjursen (NO) Adrian Miles' Vog blog (AUSTR.) Other Related Blogs Mediehack Hovedet på Bloggen Bookish Tempus Tommy Flickwerk Jacob Bøtter Corporate Blogging Fellow Researchers, non-blog -Denmark Susana Tosca T.L. Taylor Espen Aarseth Soeren Pold Ida Engholm Troels Degn Johansson -Norway Ragnhild Tronstad -Sweden Anna Gunder Jenny Sunden Mikael Jacobsson -Finland Aki Jarvinen Markku Eskelinen Raine Koskimaa
©Lisbeth Klastrup 2001-2007 |
9.9.05
The joy of deleting
I got a mail yesterday from a person that I don't really know but have been mailing with professionally. She wrote me:
"your blog was a curious experience, I understand it is some sort of experiment, but it felt so, "private" somehow [..]" It got me started thinking (again) about the entire public/private/in-between space of blogs (and moblogs!) which keeps confusing me; the lure of publishing so easily that it sometimes tempts you to tell things to strangers, you wouldn't even tell your close friends. I know that I have an actual audience that reads me; comments like this is a testament to it, and that's what makes blogging so much more satisfying than writing for nobody. Yet at the same time, you just keep forgetting, that A LOT of people might read you; also people you'd prefer not to know anything about yourself as a private person. It's the paradox of blogging: you want to be read and not read at the same time. It's the same damn thing that I haven't been able to explain properly to journalists yet, when they keep asking me why people tell so intimate stories about themselves online. I wonder if I will ever really get it - I definitely fall victim to the lure of exposure myself sometimes. ...But, at least, one of the undoubtedly nice things about blogging is, that unlike human to human conversations, you can actually go back in time and delete your outbursts when you (as often happens in life) end up regretting what you said in the past.
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My Other Places Death Stories project Walgblog (DK) DK forskerblogs (DK) klast at del.icio.us Site feed Link (Atom) Klastrup family? **************** ![]() Buy our book **************** Conferences ACE 2007 Mobile Media 2007 MobileCHI 07 Perth DAC 2007 DIGRA 2007 AOIR 8.0/2007 **************** My Ph.D. thesis website: Towards a Poetics of Virtual Worlds **************** Misc I also used to host & work in a world called StoryMOO. |