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The main difference between Daily Kos and other political blogs, such as or , is the sheer volume of content on the site. Daily Kos is not a standard blog, but an interactive site powered by the "collaborative media application," ], by which user comments are privileged similarly to blog entries. Thus, while Markos and several others post entries directly to the front page, the site also features two layers of "diaries," user entries that flow into the site at a speed of up to several per minute, which are identical in format and can advance to 'recommended diary' status by user vote, and at Markos's discretion, to the front page. | The main difference between Daily Kos and other political blogs, such as or , is the sheer volume of content on the site. Daily Kos is not a standard blog, but an interactive site powered by the "collaborative media application," ], by which user comments are privileged similarly to blog entries. Thus, while Markos and several others post entries directly to the front page, the site also features two layers of "diaries," user entries that flow into the site at a speed of up to several per minute, which are identical in format and can advance to 'recommended diary' status by user vote, and at Markos's discretion, to the front page. | ||
Daily Kos also contains permanent articles, glossaries, and other content. It is sustained by advertising, mostly for political candidates and |
Daily Kos also contains permanent articles, glossaries, and other content. It is sustained by advertising, mostly for political candidates and timely political books. | ||
Revision as of 19:04, 7 November 2004
Daily Kos is an American political blog aimed at Democrats and progressives. It is arguably the most influential liberal weblog.
Daily Kos is run by Markos Moulitsas Zúniga, a young, Salvadoran-born US Army veteran, as part of his political consulting firm. It has daily traffic of 450,000 or more, and often reaches over 2,500,000 unique visits in one week. Daily Kos gave approximately $500,000 in user donations to Democratic candidates in the 2004 elections.
The main difference between Daily Kos and other political blogs, such as Atrios or Talking Points Memo, is the sheer volume of content on the site. Daily Kos is not a standard blog, but an interactive site powered by the "collaborative media application," Scoop, by which user comments are privileged similarly to blog entries. Thus, while Markos and several others post entries directly to the front page, the site also features two layers of "diaries," user entries that flow into the site at a speed of up to several per minute, which are identical in format and can advance to 'recommended diary' status by user vote, and at Markos's discretion, to the front page.
Daily Kos also contains permanent articles, glossaries, and other content. It is sustained by advertising, mostly for political candidates and timely political books.
External links
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