Monday, June 04, 2007

Site news: StLJN held hostage by robots,
and other tales from a lost weekend

By now, regular readers have probably noticed that there have been no new posts here for more than two days. This wasn't planned, but instead was a result of some problems with Blogger - specifically, late on Friday night, one of their software robots mistakenly identified this site as a "spam blog" and locked it up, leaving me unable to publish for more than 60 hours.

Mine wasn't the only site affected, as apparently the robots mistakenly locked hundreds, perhaps even thousands of legitimate sites in the pre-weekend sweep, as indicated by lots of messages posted on Blogger's online support forums by frustrated folks throughout the weekend.

Service was restored Monday afternoon after StLJN was reviewed and unlocked by an actual human being in Blogger support. So, barring further complications, regular posting should now resume unmolested, and the entries prepared over the weekend during the lockout have been posted with their original times and dates. (It would be silly to publish a "Saturday at the Movies" post on a Monday, yes?)

However, that wasn't the only thing that went wrong this weekend, as I was unable to attend and review the St. Louis Jazz and Heritage Festival as planned. After going through hoops for most of the morning and early afternoon trying to contact Blogger support, getting a massive headache from it, and then waiting as a rather substantial rainstorm shut down the Festival grounds for two hours, at midafternoon Saturday I got some bad news about the death of a friend. At that point, quite frankly, it had been a truly suckworthy day and I just didn't have it in me any more to go review a show with any sense of enjoyment.

And so, my apologies to the Festival producers, who were kind enough to provide press credentials, and to those of you, if any, who were looking forward to reading my take on the Festival. I've linked to Terry Perkins' review of the event in the next post, and have some thoughts that I'm shaping into a commentary for some time in the not-too-distant future, so the subject of the Festival will not go completely unexamined here.

In the meantime, it's just good to have the site not being held hostage any more. I do appreciate Blogger's efforts to reduce the number of "spam blogs" cluttering up the Internet, but here's hoping they can adjust their software robots so as to yield fewer false positives in the future.

(Disclaimer: Robot photo is for illustrative purposes only, and the presence of said robot photo should not be construed to mean that I was physically held hostage by this or any other robot.)

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