Posts from ‘General’
What happened to Blogivists?
Where do I start?
As most of you know… we had severe down time last week that presented a challenge unlike anything we’ve experienced to date. I want to go into that in a bit, but first, let me address the communication failure.
As the site administrator and owner, it’s my responsibility to communicate with each of you when something as significant as this happens. While I wasn’t personally aware of the “source” of the problem for several days, I understand it is my duty to let you know what is happening and I failed to do that properly.
Where the communication went wrong
Unfortunately, we haven’t kept a list of emails for blogivists. I’m not really sure why we never went through the database and did a proper address export, but the fact is… we never did. So, because of this, I didn’t have your email addresses when we were hit two weeks ago. I had an old list, but constant contact gave me problems because there were a LOT of bouncebacks and spam reports on the last blogivists message we sent out. That list was scrapped.
In short, I had no way to make an announcement. Like you, I couldn’t get into the site, and I couldn’t get email addresses from it either.
By the time the problems hit critical mass, we were getting pummeled by emails about blogivists and just couldn’t keep up.
But the reason is not really relevant at this point. The result is. And the result is that we didn’t properly communicate with you, our bloggers, and this caused a lot of problems within the community.
For that, I personally want to apologize. You have my word… it won’t happen again.
The problem explained
Running a website as large as blogivists is no easy task. And, unlike organizations that are well funded and overstaffed, we’re an all volunteer team with zero funding. We pay for the servers that host blogivists out of pocket, and when a huge problem comes along, we have to pay developers to fix it. I’m not suggesting that we’re not capable of getting problems solved, but I will admit that solutions to problems as large as the one we recently experienced will take longer to find for us.
That’s the bad news. The good news is that we’ll always eventually be able to find the solution.
Anyway… so over the past few months we’ve seen a tremendous rise in spam blogs. At the same time this was happening, our volunteer staff was dealing with several large scale campaigns such as TaxDayTeaParty.com and a few other time consuming efforts. A few weeks ago, when we were at our weakest with regards to time dedication to blogivists, the site got hit with thousands of spam blogs.
The spam blogs were being created so quickly that it eventually overwhelmed the server, shutting down the entire system. Allen Fuller had to immediately freeze the site to get the database interaction and memory use under control before the server would/could be damaged.
This is why everything went dark. And this is why we couldn’t access anything.
The solution
First, we had to get a bigger server with more RAM. The blogivists database is so large that the site will require an entire server just for itself. So we had to pay for a brand new server, and buy extra RAM, before we could bring the site back online.
Allen Fuller and his team, with the help of Lennie Jarratt, carefully moved all of the data over to the new server, and we believe the site is finally starting to stabilize. There are still some slow moments and there may be a few glitches here and there, but we’re working on them and we hope to be running smoothly soon.
The future
We now have a brand new server that is fitted just for blogivists. We’re currently having a custom design built for the new homepage, and we’re going through to delete all spam blogs and implement new spam fighting features.
Also, we’re hoping to be able to hire an intern who can work with the community and help us know what needs to be changed/fixed/implemented.
It was unrealistic for us, as volunteers, to assume we would be able to manage a large community like blogivists as a 100% volunteer effort. We understand this is a problem, and we’re trying to work out a few ways to address the situation and make sure we’re better positioned for system problems moving forward.
I hope you’ll continue blogging with us here at Blogivists.com. Please know that even though there have been some challenging times in the past, we’re working hard to make things better and strengthen the community.
-Eric Odom
Blogivists.com
Alright, I’ve tried to just ignore the constant barrage of Facebook/McCain spam coming from Sheridan Folger, but I just can’t take it any more. I’ve now been invited to 18 John McCain based Facebook groups by Sheridan Folger and they continue to come in.
Enough is enough, Sheridan. I asked you on your wall to knock it off and you still haven’t. I do not like McCain, I will not support McCain, and I certainly will not be joining any of your spammy Facebook groups.
Just sayin…
E.M. Zanotti, one of my favorite bloggers in the entire sphere, is celebrating her 26th birthday today.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY E.M.!!!
E. M. Zanotti, the American Princess, is, as she is so oddly described, a 25-year-old overeducated, overopinionated, politically conservative relapsed Catholic, technogeek, “crunchy con” and member of the legal profession. She has served as the editor and lead writer of American Princess since its inception in 2004, and alternately as a freelance political journalist, columnist and talk radio personality (go figure). Her work has been featured and/or maligned on National Review Online, the Washington Post, Salon.com, Slate.com, BBC World Online, AOL News, Netscape News, The Huffington Post, Say Anything Blog, Lew Rockwell, Right Wing News (where she also serves as a perpetual guest blogger), Hot Air, Michelle Malkin, Wizbang Politics, Ms. JD, TechRepublican, TechPresident, GotDetroit.com, RightMichigan, and Wonkette (among numerous, less hip others). She can, occasionally, be found on television as the “token conservative” on various CNN programs and on Michigan public television.
She is a Detroit (yes, that Detroit) native, but currently an Ann Arbor resident, and has all of the necessarily pretension and apathy that that address requires (as well as the requisite love for film, art, ethnic food and indie music), only she has to hide it because she consistently votes Republican. In her spare time, she shops for shoes, reads non-fiction (particularly on philosophy, economics, religion and political science), plans cheesy vacations involving large fiberglass objects and obscure museums, and researches Disney history. No joke.
I was planning on posting here at FVM for CPAC, but as it turns out finding time to actually post is a bit more difficult that I had originally thought. With this in mind, I’m trying to streamline the blogging efforts and keep it all in one place.
That being said… keep an eye on ConservaBlogs.com for CPAC updates.
Shoemoney points us to Silicon Alley Insider story that suggests, according to sources, Yahoo is getting ready to can 1500-2500 of its employees.
Last night we reported a tip that Yahoo has created a list of 1,500-2,500 jobs that may be cut within two weeks and that Jerry Yang will make the decision to go ahead with the layoffs–or not–this week. We have now received additional details from the same source, who has been reliable in the past.
The decisions appears to be based on poor stock performance.
The decision to go ahead with lay-off is said to be largely dependent on stock price: Yahoo’s stock trading in the low $20s has gotten Jerry’s and president Sue Decker’s attention. Jerry will feel vulnerable if the stock goes into the teens and will try whatever he can to prop it up. He’s not ready to give up the CEO job, sell-out, or shop the company around at this point.
Ouch.
OK… I got it. Trying to run several different blogs on the site was a pain in the ass. Not just for me, but for you. Up until today I was running SE Tattler, Blogging Tips, and my “personal” blog on the same site and server, but on separate Wordpress installs.
The original logic was sound, I believe, but proved to be far more time consuming for myself as well as my readers.
Why did I try it? Well, it’s worked wonders for my political site, ConservaBlogs.com. Over at CB we have more than 20 Wordpress installs running on the same domain and server. Google is LOVING having each independent site with a different political niche on its own install. Each blog also has its own sitemap, and the search engine traffic is constantly on the rise.
In fact, it’s fairly safe to say that we’ll be breaking 90,000 unique visits per month over at CB from here on out. Time and time again I’ve posted a page that went on to outrank BIG sites like RealClearPolitics and ABC News within a matter of minutes. Some of those keyphrases brought an instead 900+ unique visits. Continue Reading
Netscape tried to copy Digg when it came out with its voting system some time ago. As expected, the move failed miserably. Netscape is now a pit of user bots, crap submissions, and a dwindling community.
AOL could have learned a lesson from that move, but it looks like they decided to ignore it. As reported by Tech Crunch, AOL is Beta testing a new portal design for it’s site. Continue Reading


Good news today… I got my paperwork back for my LLC. That’s right, I now officially operate as Fresh Vision Media LLC!