Queens man indicted for the fourth time

No updates from the Queens Eagle (only covered the first time), so here we go!

CNN: Trump indicted in Georgia 2020 election subversion probe

MSNBC: Read the indictment

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Copying of election data brings conspiracy charges

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Trump, 18 others indicted for trying to overthrow 2020 Georgia election

JustSecurity.org: What to Expect When You’re Expecting a Trump Trial in Fulton County, GA

CNN: Read the annotated indictment

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Complete coverage on Georgia grand jury and indictment

The Bulwark Newsletter: What’s new in the latest Trump indictment

Engaging and curation

Ken Smith recently wrote about engaging others on a topic and on curation – I have a few comments.

From the engaging others post:

The famous speaker works up the crowd about this or that issue, and then at the end the audience files out and recedes and fragments into their many private lives. It is a parallel case for blogging and other social media, isn’t it? We nod at the end of a message that moves us, but the publishing platform is not set up to encourage and simplify further steps: affiliation with others, for one thing, the power move that gives political beliefs a kind of social body moving, speaking, and echoing widely in the world.

From the curation post:

Used to be if you followed the daily writing of 15 interesting bloggers, each one would be following 10 different bloggers and journalists you weren’t following, and so your 15 would keep you informed about the best writing each week by 10 x 15=150 people they respected.

These are important ideas. The first suggested that there should be ways for readers to engage and stay engaged with a subject or topic. The second suggests that there are workflows that could be created to follow posts on a topic and create linkblogs or other collections that could curate the best info out there. For both of these, it sounds like users and developers should start to “party” and work together as mentioned in a number of Dave Winer posts (Dear Doc and DaveWhat I Wanted from BloggingWhat I Wanted from Blogging Part 2Scripting News from January 22, 2020). If anyone is interested in working together on these ideas, let me know!

Glossary plugin now available for Micro.blog and Hugo sites

As a result of this thread, I have developed a glossary plugin for Micro.blog! Thanks to @JohnPhilpin for his review and testing. The plugin is available in the Plugins directory, and more info on using the plugin is at the Github repo. Enjoy, and let me know if there are any questions!

In addition, the shortcode and data file within the repo can be used for standalone Hugo sites, so Hugo users should take a look as well. Credits go to Brian Wisti at Random Geekery for basically developing the entire concept!