Let bloggers know how you'd like to be attributed. If there's a photo or some text that you're hoping will get picked up and reposted around the Web, it's useful to include a byline and URL, for example, "Photo by Max Kodak, www.maxkodakphotos.com"
Finally: Send suggestions by the preferred means. Top blogs generally sport prominent links to their preferred means of receiving submissions -- sometimes it's an e-mail address, sometimes, it's a form. Misplaced blog suggestions are an inconvenience. Bloggers are people who live on the net, and people who live on the net have a million little systems for dealing with different kinds of routine correspondence. A misfired blog suggestion lands in the wrong inbox, bypassing all the bits of automation that make it possible to get it all done. For example, Boing Boing is liberally sprinkled with links to the page explaining how to send us suggestions. On Boing Boing, you want to use this form).
Getting blogged is a delicate balance between control and publicity: the more control you exert over your content, the more you lumber it with weights that slow it down and keep it from finding its way around the net. The Web is made of links, of copied bits of code and text, of snipped images and repurposed thumbnails: working with the Web, not against it, is the route to success.
Cory Doctorow blogs at Boing Boing, and is also a journalist, Internet activist, and science fiction writer. Read his previous InformationWeek columns.
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Open Government: A San Francisco Treat
San Francisco took Obama's pledge of open and transparent government seriously, and launched datasf.org -- its attempt to give the city's data back to its citizens. Developers and users have embraced it, and the city's mayor is already looking ahead....

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