Archive of UserLand's first discussion group, started October 5, 1998.
Re: Who owns what parts of your webpage?
Author: Dave Winer Posted: 9/2/1999; 9:17:54 AM Topic: Who owns what parts of your webpage? Msg #: 10462 (In response to 10459) Prev/Next: 10461 / 10463
But it gets more complicated, because both LinuxToday and SlashDot have back-end files that contain all the information on the home page. With LinuxToday, they have set things up so that they get more hits on the individual summary page for each link.I have also been thinking about extending RSS to include full story text, so that there would be a way of giving permission to push a whole story around the net. For some kinds of news, this is the way it wants to work. For example, if you're running a channel containing news of product updates. Such an
- would contain a one-two sentence description of the enhancement. Or a press release channel, could contain the full text of each press release. The intention of the sender is that it be disseminated far and wide.
So there's lots of different kinds of content, not just the kind that has ads on it.
There are responses to this message:
- Re: Who owns what parts of your webpage?, Eric Kidd, 9/2/1999; 9:32:07 AM
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