Legal risks in corporate blogging

This article about legal risks in corporate blogging is from early November but well worth highlighting. Some key points:

> Negative or defamatory posts about a corporation or an individual might result in libel suits.

> Do your homework. If the blogger is going to make negative statements about a company he has to do his research and be able to prove his statements.

> Disclosure of trade secrets or confidential information. Employees who blog may intentionally or unintentionally share company secrets.

> Careless statements about the business that can be used during litigation.

Paying bloggers to blog – a sell out?

Software company Marqui.com are paying about 15 leading bloggers 800 USD to blog about their company. Bloggers need to put up a logo and link to the company website and mention Marqui once a week. I’m not so sure about this. OK, they claim that the bloggers can write positive or negative information, and they will not interfere. And because is it a first, it is a good PR opportunity for Marqui to create a buzz about the company and they even got mentioned in Business Week. But this approach is clearly different from just having ads on your blog. I have never been a friend of mixing advertising with editorial content. It dilutes the credibility of both the advertiser and the medium and bloggers who get paid to blog by one specific company are very close to selling out. The reason so many have turned to blogging is that they feel the corporate powers have too much influence – direct or indirect – over traditional media. If you then let sponsors have influence over your editorial content, I think you’ve lost a lot of cred, no matter what you actually write in those Marqui posts.

Sure I wouldn’t mind 2,400 USD for three months of blogging, but this is not the model I would choose.

What the paid bloggers say themselves about the sponsorships: here and here.

Only rock bands sell out. Journalists are supposed to make their money from ads. The second point is that this all comes down to trust. If you can trust me to be objective, it doesn’t matter that I’m being paid, so long as you know I’m being honest.

A wake-up call for bloggers

Super-popular blogger Jason Kottke, is in trouble with Sony for posting first an audio file of a Jeopardy show with serial winner Ken Jennings, then a transcript from the same show that revealed the outcome of his record long winning streak.

Kottke says:

“I can’t say too much about it (soon perhaps), but it sure has had a chilling effect on my enthusiasm for continuing to maintain kottke.org.”

One wonders if Washington Post recieved the same treatment. But regardless if you think Sony is right or overreacting, it seems incredibly naive to think that your blog somehow makes you immune to rules and regulations that are present elsewhere in the world – moral, ethical or otherwise. Of course that is not the case. I have no opinion on if Sony or Kottke are the moral winners in this story, but the incident should serve as a wake-up call for bloggers who are aiming for scoops or are just posting controversial information in general.

Microsoft launches blog tool

I sent an email yesterday to tip Internetworld about the rumour that Microsoft would be launching a blog service this week. And today it turns out that Microsoft now have rolled out MSN Spaces during the night. MSN Spaces lets the user:

* Create blog posts

* Search other blogs for information

* Transfer photos from your mobile to your blog

* Create and manage your page from your mobile

I was right, Urban 😉

Bloglines goes multi-lingual

News aggregator Bloglines yesterday launched a new internationalized site in six new languages.

* English

* Spanish

* Japanese

* Chinese (Traditional)

* French

* German

* Portuguese

They also reached the milestone of 200 million articles indexed. The first 100 million took one year, and less than 4 months to reach the double amount.