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On Anonymous Sources, WoW, and Morality

August 10th, 2009 Adam Comments off

ahchess
There have been two stories that WoW.com has broke under my name in the past week:

Each story relied on anonymous sources (well, anonymous to you) that had information pertaining to the facts which were being reported on.  Each story was cited as such, with the words crafted in a way to express the source’s validity.

But yet here we are, the evening of the big Cataclysm leak, and the crying over WoW.com not revealing its sources has reached the worst levels I’ve ever seen.  People seem to think they’re entitled to the same trust that individuals place in myself and fellow editors at our site, and feel that without their personal seal of approval we have nothing more than unsubstantiated rumors.

Well, okay then.  I’m fine with people questioning or holding up a skeptical eye to our news, especially with something like this.  But when people shut their brains off and just start yelling, it tends to get to me. (Same with the “town halls” going on right now).  And while most of those people who are yelling are getting banned from our site over the next few hours (there’s so many of them), there are some facts I think are appropriate to put out there:

First, we would never stake our reputation on posting news like this if we were not supremely confident in our sources.

Second, the sources are not just one person saying something.  There’s a lot of stuff we’ve got with only one person saying it.  We have no idea if it’s true. It could be false.  But like a good journalist, when more than one person says the exact same thing, and are in a position where they’d know the facts at hand, it becomes valid enough to write about and bring to the public.

Third, no one will reveal their sources.  This is a founding principal of modern journalism.  Anonymous sources stay anonymous.

If I were to reveal the sources, I would likely be fired from my job at WoW.com.  I would be untrustworthy and show a clear lack of decision making capability.  I would be a person who cannot handle confidential information, and thus would be someone who could jeopardizes the welfare of the site on a daily basis.

If I were to reveal the sources I would likely not be able to get another job with responsibilities and tasks which I enjoy spending my life doing, and would be forced to be a burger expert at McDonalds.  And I’d be lucky to even be able to land that job in this economy.

I’m not going to reveal the sources under any circumstance.  If I did, I would be ruining the lives of people who put their trust in me.  That is something I will not, cannot do.  It goes against every ethical fiber of my being.

On the importance of off-topic diversification in your blog posts

June 3rd, 2009 Adam Comments off

ah060309coltraneIf you’re reading this site then you know what I do for a living; I write and edit posts at WoW.com. Some of these are true blog posts, others are news articles, and still others are encyclopedic features that take months of work. I want to ramble for a minute about diversification in blog posts.

Here’s a bold statement for you all: talking just about World of Warcraft is very boring. One of the great things about the game is that it lets you combine many other aspects of your life into it. Have a bunch of friends that play it? You’re probably going to spend the majority of your time talking about non-Wow related stuff while you’re in game. This isn’t a bad thing, indeed it’s a great thing. The inclusion and ability for non-game related material in game will, and might have already, extended the lifetime of the game many times over.

That same diversification should be taken into account in blog posts about WoW. Note that I’ve made a distinction above of the different types of posts WoW.com has. Blog posts are very different from encyclopedic reference posts. You shouldn’t include a Monty Python joke in a 50 page knowledge dump about in-game mounts. But you should include a Monty Python joke (or two) in a blog post where you answer random questions.

An example of this was The Queue that I wrote today.

I’ve reached this conclusion about diversification and inclusion of external non-game content based on the feedback we’ve had to The Queue. When something like Hawaiian Pizza is mentioned, we’ll get 75 to 100 comments talking about Hawaiian Pizza. Post some music or comic reference, guaranteed to get lots of comments on those references too.

Last week my fellow editor Alex Ziebart included some music to listen to while reading The Queue. People loved it, and we’ve continued to include optional reading music. The music doesn’t have a damn thing to do about WoW, but it’s still a piece which people seem interested in and want to comment on. That helps build a community, which means the site gets more traffic and will be around much longer.

Now on a scale of WoW.com, where the site is already well established, has been around a long time, and will be around for a long time to come, it doesn’t have an immediate impact on community building and traffic numbers (however we do see popular and well written articles have increased traffic, of course, just like anything else). But when everyone at WoW.com suddenly starts building communities of readership around their posts and columns, the site’s heath sky rockets. This is true for any long established blog. Just because you’re big, bad, and are pulling in billions and billions of visitors a day doesn’t mean you can’t improve. And that improvement, is, well, awesome.

This might seem like a justification for including off-topic content, and in some ways it is. But it’s also a recent epiphany of sorts on pulling in readers and keeping them here.

Anyone can have a blog, but only the special blogs will make a reader raise an eyebrow at their content.

Holy Jebus… An Update!

June 2nd, 2009 Adam Comments off

Really.  Look at this.  A blog update!

I have a good reason for not updating since the flood: I’ve been super busy with work.  WoW Insider has morphed into WoW.com.  WoW.com combines both social networking tools and the great World of Warcraft information site everyone has come to know and love.  The transition took a solid month of internal testing before it went live, and even now, it’s officially in beta.
I’m very impressed with the work that the entire team has put into it.  The social networking side of things really got tested thoroughly by the writing staff.  We were well prepared for whatever problems would creep up on launch day.  The other thing that happened was the new site redesign went live.  This was, in my opinion, even a larger deal; if only because the width of the columns increased from 425px to 580px.  That makes a big big difference in the content that we’re able to produce.  Expect to see lots more tables, graphs, and complicated graphics in the future.

I’ve been doing a lot more behind the scenes with WoW.com/WoW Insider now as well.  I just finished a big project that should help things out significantly.  Lots of research but a good results will come of it.  Completed projects make me happy.  +20 mood for the rest of the week.

BlizzCon is coming up in August and I’m looking forward to traveling out to LA again to enjoy the event.  Perhaps more than the actual event is getting to meetup with the WoW.com folks face to face again.  Last time was a blast, and I’m sure this time will be great fun as well.

Facebook has been discovered, forgotten about, and then rediscovered by me recently.  I’m not really sold on it personally, however.  There is too much personal information in there.  Not that there’s not already a shitton out there on the net about me already, but I’m not too keen on letting eFriends know my phone number and address.  So I think I’m going to limit it to people I know (or remember), and gently let everyone else down.  As if they’d care.  /ego.

I’ve become and am becoming more addicted to twitter.  I hate myself for that.  Oh wait, someone tweeted about their bowl movement.  I wonder how that’ll go.

/facepalm!

Everyone follow me on Twitter

March 12th, 2009 Adam Comments off

ah020109emoadam@adamholisky

You might as well follow @phenger too.

Nao plox.  K. Thx. Bai.

I’m going to try this whole “social networking” thing and see what it does.  If for no other reason then I find it rather odd that I’m making a living off the internet and I have no real presence on all these sites and tools.  Yet every day I use them for various work things.  So perhaps this will give me some new appreciation for it all.

The only real problem is that I’m a rather private person, despite the publicly available information.  All the juicy stuff in my life is kept secret, and that’s the way I like it.

But perhaps that’ll change, Kevin Smith seems to do well with sharing it all.

Zomg Free Stickers!

February 5th, 2009 Adam Comments off

ah020509gmailstickersI am all the fuck over these.

When was the last time I played with stickers?  I think it was about 2 when I learned I had a dick and a small pair of balls.

But now, gmail stickers?

You can’t do any better than that.