While I've always looked at the BIG ol' blogosphere as a series of small networks, we may be trending even smaller...and more controlled.
Take Six Apart's new "personal blogging service" VOX, launched officially in late October. According to VOX: "Putting material online used to mean putting it up for anyone to see, search, criticize, record, or repurpose. Not anymore. With Vox, you can choose the privacy level for every post, every picture, every sound clip, every video. Put up posts for the world. Put up posts for just your family. Or just your friends. You can control everything."
Or take all the internal blogs that Paul Gillin penned about in his recent "unseen blogosphere" column for BtoB Magazine. According to Gillin: "IBM Corp. has more than 3,000 internal blogs. Procter & Gamble Co. has about 100 internal blogs and is expanding their use to private communications with business partners. Talk to companies that sell blogging software and they'll tell you that most of their corporate business is internal. It's not that big businesses don't "get" blogging; they just don't see a compelling need to do it in public."
Control is key with VOX, or I should say control is key with VOX's users. Control is also key with companies. Between family photos and proprietary corporate information, I understand the desire for confidential communications (but I do advocate that brand and R&D initiatives should invite public involvement).
The sweet spot then, for both of these consumer and corporate segments is that blogging is a superior alternative to e-mail--but only when conducted privately. So maybe internal and "invite-only" blogs will be a small step to braver, open blogs. Or maybe, just as with websites, intranets and extranets, the blogposphere will continue to grow smaller as it gets bigger.




