Recursive. Custom web app development

Back to the blog

RSS

Recent Posts

Most Popular Posts

  1. Why you should be using a framework
  2. Dynamic methods in PHP
  3. Rewriting URLs with Apache's mod_rewrite and PHP
  4. Five easy things that make you a better web developer

About the Blog

Self portrait

I'm a web application developer in Melbourne, Australia. If you find anything useful, leave me a comment, and if you need web design, development, or accessibility and usability consulting, contact me! Cheers.

Twitter: joshsharp

a bird

Are aggregator sites getting a free ride?

Thursday 20 Mar, 2008 08:56 PM

I've recently discovered popurls.com. I like it. it has the very simple purpose of aggregating a number of popular social media sites (most of which are themselves psuedo-aggregators) into one easy to browse page, so that when people like me are bored we can scan for interesting links without expending too much effort.

But are sites like popurls just getting a free ride off the hard work of the sites they aggregate? Do they deserve their traffic when they don't provide any of the content?

It's easy to see it that way. The site provides none of the content itself, but could've been knocked up in a day by finding an RSS parser and choosing the sites whose content it would display. Not exactly a work of art.

But really, I think the answer is no — it's not a free ride at all. Just like 'easy' art which causes jealous viewers to mutter, "I could've painted that", aggregators provide a service which is inherently easy to do, but is still useful to the end user — whether they "could've done it themselves" or not, they didn't. The aggregator exists as a valid service, and while it doesn't create any of the content, it still provides the service of aggregating. As long as it doesn't attempt to exploit the content, all traffic the site receives is fair and valid.

Besides, syndicating your content through RSS only serves to increase recognition of your brand and traffic to your site in the long run. So the sites owning the content are still winners — everybody's happy.

Comments

Ramona Iftode said on 21 Mar 2008:
Well, I do think they are getting a free ride on my content, especially since I make it clear in my blogs that I don't allow PARTIAL OR COMPLETE republishing on a third site. We write the content, they just use a (most of the time free to download script) and get traffic and advertising revenue on a content they did nothing to create. When I personally submit a presentation to Digg for instance it's 1 thing, to steal my articles and "present" them in your site, no matter in what form, that's something else.
Vincent said on 22 Mar 2008:
There's another site urlfan.com. I think they parsed my feed. Anyway, I went to the site, and they seem ok, and there's a credit back to my site. The site looks "legit" (that's the term right?). So I left it at that.

If the site was like completely ripping off my content, then I'd have to do something.

I remember hearing something about the value of an idea is in its execution. The idea of aggregating social media sites may be good. But until someone realises that idea into something beneficial, it's still just an idea.
JD said on 27 Mar 2008:
There are many aggregators out there but we have to distinguish between plain aggregators and memetrackers.

plain aggregators normally just show the link as it was fetched without any analysis of the information(e.g popurls ) but memetrackers aggregate and analyse the information. Trust me, there is continuous work involved there because we constantly have to improve the algorithm based on the power of semantics, review news sources..etc ..

It's not lazy work at all...as you said making all these scattered information available in 1 place is a convenience to the users and the publishers as well because we are sending them more traffic+publicity. So it's a win-win situation.

JD
http://www.techsted.com

Add a comment! Only your message is required (and proving you're human, sorry). No HTML.

 Captcha image - sorry!