
Readership up nearly 60 per cent in '04
Published: 4 January 2005 11:05 GMT
The number of blogs and the use of blog readers rose rapidly last year - but the majority of internet users still do not know what a blog is.
A report by the Pew Internet and American Life Project, called the State of Blogging, discovered that readership of blogs increased by 58 per cent last year, with 27 per cent of internet users, or 32 million people, saying that they read blogs. 12 per cent of people who read blogs also chose to post comments on them.
Blog creation is also growing. By the end of 2004, seven per cent of US adults, or more than eight million people, had written a blog, according to the study.
The results of the study, published on Sunday, were drawn by surveys with internet users done in November.
Blog publishing is having an effect on how people read on the web. Pew researchers found that five per cent of Internet users have content from blogs or Web sites delivered via RSS aggregators or XML readers. Instead of skipping between different websites, an internet user can use a reader to collect several different information feeds in a single program.
But despite the rise in usage, "blog" still is not a household word. Only 38 per cent of internet users know what a blog is, while the rest are not sure what the term means. (Web surfers' curiosity about the term prompted dictionary maker Merriam-Webster to list "blog" as its word of the year for 2004.)
Blog creators tend to be young men who have broadband and are internet veterans. 57 per cent of bloggers are male and are relatively well off financially, with 42 per cent living in households with income of over $50,000.
Blog readers are more "mainstream" than bloggers themselves, the study found. The majority of people who read blogs are male and younger. But the past year has seen greater-than-average growth in blog readership among women, minorities, people aged 30 to 49, and those with dial-up connections.
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