Citing to the Blogosphere

| 1 Comment

The newest (18th) edition of the Bluebook features a new rule for citing to blog posts:

Posting to blogs take one of two formats. If there is only one poster to the blog, cite as a Web page, but include the date and time-stamp to indicate the specific posting cited. If there are multiple posters on the blog, cite as a posting to a discussion forum. In both cases, indicate the title of the blog before the URL:
single poster - How Appealing, http://legalaffairs.org/howappealing/ (Sept. 1, 2004, 21:20 EST).

multiple posters - Posting of Lyle Denniston to SCOTUSblog, http://www.goldsteinhowe.com/blog/index.cfm (Sept. 28, 2004, 13:26 EST).

Instead of taking advantage of permalinks and post titles, this citation format makes it more complicated and difficult to find a cited resource.

Anthony Rickey notes that the Yale Law Journal's new website, The Pocket Part, suggests that authors disregard the Bluebook suggested form for citing to blogs and use a citation format that makes sense: Bluebook Followup: Do As We Say, Not As We Do: "Nice to see one of the Gang of Four deciding that the rules on blog citation don't make sense."

One argument (made in a comment to Rickey) is that the Pocket Part is a "web site," not a "blog." Why are the rules for citation different? How are authors supposed to to evaluate whether an internet resource is a "web site" or a "blog?"

The Bluebook rule actually makes some amount of sense for an internet resource that has no more precise way to point to a specific page. But why not cite the author's name in a single author blog? What is to be done with blogs that use only category-based archiving, rather than date-based archiving?

1 Comment

Or for that matter, what is to be done with blogs that are anonymous, don't reveal their location, and don't publish a time zone on their page or in their RSS feed?

About

A work in progress

Recent Entries

The best fan video in the world?
Via Top Gear's blog, I found this link to a fan-made Top Gear style search for the beat driving road…
Shatner, Montalban, iPod and Kindle
Dvice tests out the range of expression in the text-to-speech systems in the Kindle 2 and iPod Shuffle by having…
A F#*&ing brilliant Supreme Court ruling?
The Supreme Court released its ruling in FCC v. Fox Television Stations, et al. (07-582), in which a 5-4 majority…