These guidelines have been drawn up at a conference in London by the Evangelical Alliance in response to concern at how religious blogs can quickly descend into vitriol, which I found really fascinating. The commandments, based on those delivered to Moses by God at the top of Mount Sinai, order bloggers not to "make an idol" of their web space, not to misuse their screen name by using anonymity to sin and to remember the Sabbath by taking one day off a week from blogging. They also order: "You shall not use the web to commit or permit adultery in your mind." Bloggers are commanded to honour their fellow bloggers and not to get too upset by their mistakes. They shall not murder the reputation of another blogger, shall not give false testimony against a fellow blogger and shall not steal the blog content of another. Bloggers are also told to be content with their own creation and not to covet their neighbour's blog ranking. Many thousands of blogs have sprung up in the past few years, offering easy access to online opinion forums to any user of the internet. The "instant access" nature of most blogs means people posting comments often do so in the heat of passion and rarely stop to reflect, as they would if giving a lecture or writing a letter. The result can be intemperate and sometimes foul language aimed at either the author of the blog or other contributors. Krish Kandiah, executive director of Churches in Mission, said: "These commandments are virtual rather than set in stone, but are offered to the blogging community as a way to link the Ten Commandments with the art of blogging. "In the ever-changing information age, what we need is wisdom for life, and God communicates wisdom to our culture through the Bible on every issue from social justice to social networking." Mark Meynell, senior associate minister for All Souls Church, Langham Place, London, said: "The internet is merely the latest step in the evolution of human communication – and so like any other new medium, it presents us with huge opportunities as well as challenges. "It is essential that Christians make the most of it because we believe we have good news that is as relevant to those in cyberspace as it is for those in real space." Ten commandments for bloggers: 1 You shall not put your blog before your integrity 2 You shall not make an idol of your blog 3 You shall not misuse your screen name by using your anonymity to sin 4 Remember the Sabbath day by taking one day off a week from your blog 5 Honour your fellow-bloggers above yourselves and do not give undue significance to their mistakes 6 You shall not murder someone else's honour, reputation or feelings 7 You shall not use the web to commit or permit adultery in your mind 8 You shall not steal another person's content 9 You shall not give false testimony against your fellow-blogger 10 You shall not covet your neighbour's blog ranking. Be content with your own content |
the Forge is a workplace for shaping and re-shaping, a place for the making of things which would be useful, or enable a journey ... the Old Forge is the location of our office because of its history... it's a better title than old fogey!
Tuesday, 30 September 2008
ten commandments for blogging
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
So the fact that dozens of Christian bloggers immediately make the '10 commandments of blogging' into their post for the day is deliberate postmodern irony, then?
yeah I guess so - cheers
Post a Comment