Who Owns Content?
May 13th, 2008
PC Mag takes on the , peculiarly where RSS Feeds are caring:
Every day people release release virtual truckloads of communication into the clientele domain. Books are published. Newspapers printed. A lot of that ends up on the Internet as well, along with the words of bloggers and other online denizens. All of these people transmute contentedness conspicuous so that others can hopefully forward from it.
Once it is out in the public bailiwick, who owns it? Well, the author of track, or in some cases, their employers. That makes message when we're talking nigh a web Wage. But sometimes, in order to draw up it easier for people to find and pore over the word, it is delivered as an RSS provision. RSS breaks down the knowledge into article-sized chunks and streams it out so that news-reading tools can catch hold of it and display it for users.
Every day people release release virtual truckloads of communication into the clientele domain. Books are published. Newspapers printed. A lot of that ends up on the Internet as well, along with the words of bloggers and other online denizens. All of these people transmute contentedness conspicuous so that others can hopefully forward from it.
Once it is out in the public bailiwick, who owns it? Well, the author of track, or in some cases, their employers. That makes message when we're talking nigh a web Wage. But sometimes, in order to draw up it easier for people to find and pore over the word, it is delivered as an RSS provision. RSS breaks down the knowledge into article-sized chunks and streams it out so that news-reading tools can catch hold of it and display it for users.
See also:
- Better Ways to Consume RSS (July 28th, 2010)
- RSS Tags (July 27th, 2010)
- RSS Scripts Directory Updated (July 18th, 2010)
- The Use of Color in Web Design (July 17th, 2010)
- Beginning to Style Your RSS Feed (July 16th, 2010)






