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The Christian Civic League of Maine's Mike Hein calls Pam's House Blend:
"a leading source of radical homosexual propaganda, anti-Christian bigotry, and radical transgender advocacy."

He is "praying that Pam Spaulding will "turn away from her wicked and sinful promotion of homosexual behavior." (CCLM's web site, 10/15/07)


Ex-gay "Christian" activist James Hartline on Pam:
"I have been mocked over and over again by ungodly and unprincipled anti-christian lesbians."
(from "Six Years In Sodom: From The Journal Of James Hartline," 9/4/2006, written from the "homosexual stronghold" of Hillcrest in San Diego).

"Pam is a 'twisted lesbian sister' and an 'embittered lesbian' of the 'self-imposed gutteral experiences of the gay ghetto.'" -- 9/5/2008



Peter LaBarbera of Americans for Truth Against Homosexuality heartily endorses the Blend, calling Pam:

A "vicious anti-Christian lesbian activist."
(Concerned Women for America's radio show [9:15], 1/25/07)

"A nutty lesbian blogger."
(MassResistance radio show [16:25], 2/3/07)


Pam's House Blend always seems to find these sick f*cks. The area of the country she is in? The home state of her wife? I know, they are everywhere. Pam just does such a great job of bringing them out into the light.
--Impeach Bush


who monitors yours Bevis ?? Just thought I would drop you a line,so the rest of your life is not wasted.
--"Joe"

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A few more updates about Soapblox -- and the long-term survival of online progressive content

by: Pam Spaulding

Sun Jan 11, 2009 at 08:30:00 AM EST


(NOTE: I was interviewed about the hack a couple of days ago by Jeffrey Toobin of The New Yorker for the January 19th Talk of the Town column that hits newsstands tomorrow. You can read it here.)

UPDATE: The New Yorker piece is online now.


In the days since the hacking of the blogging platform Soapblox's server on which the Blend, OpenLeft and many state blogs reside (my reporting here), there have been a lot of discussions around the blogosphere about the fate of the content management software and its hosting service (Soapblox provided both).

One development has been the launch of a "Save Soapblox" fundraising campaign  on Friday by Chris Bowers of OpenLeft (administered through BlogPAC). BlogPAC was alreadly deeply involved with Soapblox, paying the service fees for most of the state blogs on the platform each year, so that existing relationship was in place. Donating to "the cause," as defined in the DKos diary, is to deal with the short-term issue of migrating the data and making it secure.  

--Recharge ten servers
--Perform a full security audit of the SoapBlox server/unix infrastructure to prevent hackers from gaining access
--Ensure all backup processes are working and functional to guarantee that if hacking happens, data is preserved
--Perform a security audit on the SoapBlox code itself so that hackers cannot exploit the SoapBlox code itself.
--Migrate to new, secure servers

The good news is that, in addition to restoring full service for Soapblox, Paul has already found a system administrator who lives in his area and is able to help. All of the work listed above is currently underway. Here is what it will cost:

--Recharging ten servers at $100 apiece: $1,000
--Purchasing new, secure severs, and migrating the data: $8,000
--One month of full-time work at $50 / hour in order to complete all of the tasks listed above: $8,400

A big caveat here -- nothing about the above is a long-term solution for a to-date closed-source, run-on-a-shoestring by one person effort, and they know it. Evolving a business based on the programming savvy (and the health and well-being) of Soapblox owner Paul Preston is not a business plan, particularly in crisis management mode, and without transparency.

The question needs to be asked -- what is in the best long-term interest of supporting the progressive blogosphere? More below the fold.

Pam Spaulding :: A few more updates about Soapblox -- and the long-term survival of online progressive content
Complicating the matter is that right now, there is not a turnkey alternative available to bloggers on the Soapblox platform that will provide the same functionality as the open-source, Scoop-based Daily Kos. If it did, we'd all already be there. Drupal, for instance, is open source and can provide the same feature set, but it involves programming expertise, time or money to develop and maintain the back end, something most bloggers on Soapblox don't have. Same thing with Scoop.

As I said above the fold, the fact of the matter is that most of the blogs affected by the SB takedown don't have the technical skills or time to easily migrate their content to another platform -- they want to be free to produce the content that resulted in the progressive online political revolution. Paul Preston and Soapblox provided this on a shoestring and herculean personal commitment. Now that a good chunk of the progressive blogosphere is on the platform and politically institutionalized, the sad story of last week is that its existence is tethered by a thread to weak technical and support infrastructure -- an easy point of failure.

Interestingly, a MyDD diary by Drupal consultant Shai Sachs (and thus a competitor with Soapblox), "SoapBlox meltdown and Drupal," makes some observations that are relevant to consider in terms of a long-term future of stability, even if there's a vested interest in Drupal:

Soapblox is a reasonably good technological platform, but I think the key to its success, until this week, was its low barrier to entry.  For a low monthly fee and with very little technological expertise, a blogger could launch a full-featured blog that was felt, to readers, a lot like DailyKos.  In contrast, Drupal and multi-user Wordpress would require an awful lot of tinkering and monkey-wrenching in order to simulate the Dailykos experience.

With Soapblox hanging by a thread, it's important to develop a new and stronger alternative to the old system.  There's very little question, in my mind, that the best foundation for this kind of hosted blogging system will be Drupal, for a wide variety of reasons.  First, Drupal's out-of-the-box features include user-specific diaries, moderated comments, and the capability to front-page a diary - those are all key features of Soapblox.  What Drupal lacks is the ease-of-use of Soapblox, but as OnSugar demonstrated late last year, it's entirely possible to run a hosted, easy-to-use blogging platform on Drupal.  Second, Drupal is one of the most popular content management systems in the world, which means it has an enormous user, developer, and support community; there is no single point of failure in the Drupal community, meaning that a near-meltdown like Soapblox's is nearly unthinkable.   Finally, there is already a considerable degree of cooperation between the Drupal and progressive communities.  Many local Dean organizing groups, and later DFA chapters, developed websites based in Drupal, thanks largely to the release of a Drupal distribution called Deanspace, (which later changed its name to Civic Space Labs).  Today, there are a variety of progressive Drupal development firms, including Development Seed, Chapter Three, Prometheus Labor, ZivTech, and my own company, Lightbulb First Consulting, LLC.  Drupal is a community which is strongly based in a number of open source values, including meritocracy, transparency and accountability - the same values that drive the progressive blogosphere.

...Primarily, I think it is the responsibility of the progressive Drupal community (which I count myself a part of), to answer this call-to-arms.  We must develop a stronger, better alternative to the Soapblox platform, and we must properly productize and market that solution in order to make it palatable to progressive bloggers.  These are busy days for me, and it's not entirely clear that I'll have time to develop such a product on my own, or to organize a larger effort.  But I think we need to get the ball rolling very soon, because the days when it made sense to run the progressive blogosphere on a shoestring are long gone.  

And that last comment is quite apt because you get what you pay for. Poor Paul Preston had to deal with deadbeat customers who wouldn't even pony up their cheep $15/month. That doesn't exactly inspire one to believe in a sustainable operation.

Conversely, if Soapblox blogs migrated to a platform that required each blogger to foot the bill for redesign, programming and adequate hosting, would readers pony up and pay an annual subscription fee (like a magazine) to support the costs of keeping those blogs running? I don't know, but I do know that it would be tough for a good number of  small state blogs to pull in the funds to afford an adequate transition and hosting in perpetuity to ensure the content's survival. That's the wake up call for all corners of lefty blogtopia.

While I admire the effort by BlogPAC to raise funds for the short term issues (clearly the Blend benefits from addressing the acute problem), that's not evidence of a sustainable business plan -- and we've yet to see what that will look like.  BlogPAC is now in the precarious position by default of being responsible for the security and existence of the Soapblox blogs by asking people to endorse and support Soapblox's (uncharted) future. Even as an affected blog (and the person who first publicly alerted Soapblox customers about the hack), I haven't been privy to any specific discussions about long-term plans, so your guess is as good as mine on what's going on in back-channel discussions.

There's been plenty of speculation about what will be done about the matter at PHB.  It's odd that I've seen reports that I've 1) decided to stay, 2) decided to leave, 3) remain undecided. Clearly people see what they want to see; I did have a thread asking readers their opinion about where the Blend should go from here, but I've not stated what I plan to do.

And the kind of public mulling I'm doing here (since I believe in transparency about the PHB community to you, the readers) is going on between Soapbloxers bloggers in private -- I've been in contact with some of them. Most 1) want to see Soapblox survive and thrive; and 2) are making their own contingency plans to abandon ship if the ship's leaks aren't repaired and there's not a sustainable plan forthcoming. I can't blame them - they'd be serving their readers poorly if they didn't. It's not a trust issue (but given some of the comments on the initial Kos thread about the panic, that sentiment was out there) or a lack of commitment to progressive solidarity, it's a simple survival instinct based on prudent business decision-making.

There's no point slagging Soapblox, the bloggers on the platform or anyone else -- we're at this point and need viable options for those who want to provide an online political base for progressive thought in a community based format that enables talented voices to stay in the game without huge overhead or fear that their contributions to the political discourse are at risk of being lost forever. Unlike a book, where there are many copies in libraries as a "backup", blog content is not guaranteed to survive 100% intact as it was the day it was first published. Look at Archive.org's Wayback Machine for the Blend. Not comprehensive by any stretch of the imagination.

An example -- the first iteration of the Blend was on Blogger, with my files not hosted at Google (the current owner of Blogger), but on my ISP's server. So if I kick off, my ISP bills will stop being paid, and eventually access will terminate, leaving some cached material in "The Google" cache, but some original content will be gone forever unless it's preserved offline to be ported elsewhere by someone I name in my will.   At least I have backups of my entire Blogger archive; those who host their content on Blogger's servers, I have no idea what access they have to download their content wholesale. Not exactly permanent.

Now I'm on Soapblox, a closed system, and I've obtained the db, but it's the same thing. Anywhere the content is hosted, its existence and access to it in the future completely intact depends on a bill being paid in perpetuity by someone. That's food for thought.

Many readers take these things for granted - the content is you read today is available for nothing but a click of a mouse. Today. Tomorrow is another story.

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Pam in NYer's Talk of the Town?
That's the coolest thing I've heard in a long time. Sister-girlfriend, you are the ROCK!  

Soapblox software
Has Paul said anything about releasing SoapBlox under a free software license? Has anyone approached him about this?

I would have offered to provide hosting (or at least attempt to) if the software were available. I'm working on my own blogging capability for MediaWiki, which would let users create blogs ad hoc while also providing spam filtering and lots of useful features, but it's not ready yet...

(I run issuepedia.org and I do PHP programming for a quasi-living.)


Subscriptions
if Soapblox blogs migrated to a platform that required each blogger to foot the bill for redesign, programming and adequate hosting, would readers pony up and pay an annual subscription fee (like a magazine) to support the costs of keeping those blogs running?

I would be quite happy to pay a subscription fee  to post comments & diaries on PHB. I don't think a subscription for simply reading blog posts would be good though ;-)

I was wondering about the possibility of a centralised system of subscriptions, perhaps including multi-blog subscriptions (i.e. paying $X for one blog, $Y for 3 blogs, $Z for 6 blogs and so on). This would mean paying the money direct to SoapBlox rather than the blogmistress/master, but it would have one advantage in that subscription fees (paid by readers) would be flat-rated across all SoapBlox blogs, meaning that blogs likely to have small readerships (e.g. state blogs in the fly-over states) would not end up having to charge a potentially prohibitively-high fee to cover costs, as would happen if each blogmistress/master was charged a set fee, as they'd be subsidised by the readerships of the more high-profile blogs.

(I'm just now wondering if the subsidising idea would be acceptable to you free-market-obsessed Americans)

Any thoughts?

____________________________________
Cuius testiculos habes, habeas cardia et cerebellum.


I think all options are open
It's about time folks started thinking ahead. In the zeal to be a free, independent entity -- something natural that sprang from the grassroots -- not a lot of energy has gone into making blogs a self-sustaining institution. It's why the MSM still has enormous advantages over blogs, even as they try to ape or assimilate them. They have librarians to archive and preserve content. We're all free agents without the time and resources to do that and produce the content.

[ Parent ]
Reader subscriptions
I'm a longtime reader. I just opened an account in order to say that I would be happy subscribe even just to read. Not sure if many others would, but I would.

[ Parent ]
Subscriptions to Read
This could be a problem if others in the blogosqueer want to link to entries on PHB or other SoapBlox blogs - as I do occasionally: people could follow the link, but wouldn't be able to read anything and would then be put off from registering by the subscription fee. One option would be to have the "below the fold"/comments section only visible to paid subscribers.

____________________________________
Cuius testiculos habes, habeas cardia et cerebellum.


[ Parent ]
My thoughts...
You could duplicate your entire blog with Drupal on a web hosting service that charges $4.95 a month -- unlimited hosting space and unlimited bandwidth. There are plenty of these services and as long as you back up your content and templates, you can recreate your blog again and again as needed should hackers breach the security of the web hosting service (they all do their own back ups anyway).

http://www.justhost.com/
http://www.hostmonster.com/ (Utah business)
http://www.bluehost.com/ (Utah business)
http://www.ixwebhosting.com/

All of these services use cPanel and Fantastico that make it a breeze to install the latest version of Drupal.

You have to start viewing your content as portable and select a platform that allows you to move to a new web host if necessary. It shouldn't take you more than two days to move and set up shop somewhere else. (I suggest practice doing it a couple of times just in case.)

Just have your domain registered with Tucows or some other service that is independent of your web hosting service. You can simply point to the new servers. It takes just minutes to do this these days.

If the folks at Drupal are serious, they should create a simple tool for importing SoapBlox entries to Drupal.

Since you're at the center of the publicity regarding this, contact Shai Sachs and see if they're interested in making the move from SoapBlox to Drupal as easy as possible.

Also, it would be possible for someone with a bit of technical SQL database and PHP knowledge to import your Blogger entries into Drupal.

A Google seach shows that people have already done this:

http://www.astrogoth.com/node/739

http://www.eglug.org/node/1654

Other services like WordPress and Movable Type should consider adding the diaries and publish-to-frontpage feature to their blogging platforms. Obviously, that has become a standard.

When you look for the bad in mankind, expecting to find it, you surely will.

- Abraham Lincoln.


SoapBlox viability
I just posted a diary about this on PHB, My thoughts were too long for a comment.  Please feel free to my diary.

I wonder if achiving any blend material after a couple weeks, off site would make the size more manageable
If posters here realize a particular thread only has a 2 week shelf life on your site, and if there is something on it they want they save it themselves.,Maybe have a section with threads approaching their going off site so they'd know to check for anything they want.
For them most part if something is older than 2 weeks, I don't go back to it, this site is about the news stories of the moment, not a library. granted having things stored is tempting, but if you are considering what is manageable, trimming away what isn't essential, might make it easier to migrate, if that's what you decide.
I worry this gets dumped on your shoulders and you have health concerns and your real career, which needs to be your main focus, and some attention to your partner and puppies might be nice to work in there somewhere too...just saying.

"race, taste. and History finally overcome....and you ain't there"
by Tony Kushner


them = the typo
I'm so exhausted from working on the dome,reading is an effort, let alone commenting

"race, taste. and History finally overcome....and you ain't there"
by Tony Kushner


[ Parent ]
I use my archives all the time
While casual readers may not "go back in time," many do. I still get emails and comments about posts about blog content that is on the Blogger platform. It's a resource for me (and the other contributors) to search for past reporting/blogging on an issue. For instance, should all of the interviews I've done simply vanish? Or all the reporting at the DNC? There is historical value there, and I wouldn't want it to go away for expediency's sake.

[ Parent ]
I wasn't suggesting the archive disappear
I only meant restoring the archived interviews would be done by request from off your blog,  from stored files. Maybe charge a nominal fee to bring specific material back online, could help defray archive costs.
I would also be more than willing to contribute to be a reader at this site, as others have voiced, this could be voluntary so it wouldn't put off new readers.

"race, taste. and History finally overcome....and you ain't there"
by Tony Kushner


[ Parent ]
Archives in general should *contribute* revenue
The sustained advertising revenue from long-term interesting pages should far outweigh the (relatively small) storage and serving cost.

Also, any kind of offline archiving means that links won't work consistently.  This is disastrous from a user perspective.

jon


[ Parent ]
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