Sat, 23 Nov 2002 17:24:02 GMT
I've received a number of emails recently about an article that I wrote a
while back - a small burst of fan mail I suppose. The burst got me to
thinking that the way the Internet links changed in some small way over the
last little while - like the recent google dance for
instance. Checking the referring logs to my website I couldn't come up with
anything concrete, so on a lark I did a
Google search for "History of DNS" and lo and behold, in some small way
it looked like I found a keyword that was mine. (Considering that I don't
own Ross" or
"Rader"
this wasn't a bad consolation.). The problem is though that while my *words* own the link,
my website doesn't. See, I
wrote the article for Webhosting Magazine
a long time and ago and the version that they put up on their website is
substantially more popular than mine. The problem? They don't have
publication rights for the Internet. I would never say anything to them - no
harm, no foul, I'm not a "real writer" and there
is no real economic losses of material consequence (although I'm sure that
under the legal definition of loss that there would be). What bugged me
about this initially, and still does today, is that I *gave* them the
article on very specific grounds and they essentially ignored me. And now I have to share my keyword with them.
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