Positive Consequences of Interpretation
1) Diversity of Opinion
2) Access to Experts
Unless you suffer from Selective Exposure. Then, you only see one side of an issue, and you limit your access to experts.
Negative Consequences of Interpretation
1) To the organization - Loss of revenue if audiences reject your product due to Selective Exposure.
2) To the individual - Loss of ability to form personal decisions.
Blogging has its ancestors in the still existing USENET and the pre-Internet Bulletin Board Systems such as Fidonet. What makes blogging so powerful is that anyone can set up a web blog - no experience required, no rules enforced, no geekness needed.
"Blogging technology has, for the first time in history, given the average Jane the ability to write, edit, design, and publish her own editorial product - to be read and responded to by millions of people, potentially - for around $0 to $200 a year. It has begun to deliver on some of the wild promises about the Internet that were heard in the 1990's. Never before have so many passionate outsiders - hundreds of thousands, at minimum - stormed the ramparts of professional journalism."
Click here to read "Blogworld: The New Amateur Journalist Weighs In".
As we discussed in "The Communications Setting" the Internet has made a wealth of opinion available.
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