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Encroaching on personal data of the majority to protect the minority...

websitebuilder • 17 January 2022

There are so many good reasons to communicate with site visitors. Tell them about sales and new products or update them with tips and information.

Here are some reasons to make blogging part of your regular routine.


Blogging is an easy way to engage with site visitors

Writing a blog post is easy once you get the hang of it. Posts don’t need to be long or complicated. Just write about what you know and do your best to write well.


Show customers your personality

When you write a blog post, you can really let your personality shine through. This can be a great tool for showing your distinct personality.


Blogging is a terrific form of communication

Blogs are a great communication tool. They tend to be longer than social media posts, which gives you plenty of space for sharing insights, handy tips and more.


It’s a great way to support and boost SEO

Search engines like sites that regularly post fresh content and a blog is a great way of doing this. With relevant metadata for every post so search engines can find your content.


Drive traffic to your site

Every time you add a new post, people who have subscribed to it will have a reason to come back to your site. If the post is a good read, they’ll share it with others, bringing even more traffic!


Blogging is free

Maintaining a blog on your site is absolutely free. You can hire bloggers if you like or assign regularly blogging tasks to everyone in your company.


A natural way to build your brand

A blog is a wonderful way to build your brand’s distinct voice. Write about issues that are related to your industry and your customers.

by Ray Green 8 November 2023
King Charles III opened and addressed UK Parliament on 7 November 2023, with the announcement that the UK intends to pass laws that require tech companies to tell them if they plan to introduce new security technologies and how to disable them. His Majesties Government is keen not to lose its access to communications and associated data. This may seem an outrageous intrusion into the privacy of private citizens. However, it may be interesting to look back to the history of state interference in communications. It was the current King’s name’s sake, Charles I in 1634 who set up the Post Office in the UK, partly to deliver letters but also to “discover wicked designs against the state”. In other words – intercept mail. The power to do this was deemed a Royal Prerogative. Fast forward to the 20th Century and many of your will be familiar with the story of Alan Turin cracking the German Enigma code by building the first programmable computer. The machine was actually built by a Post Office engineer – Tommy Flowers. In those days the Post Office also provided the telephone network before that was spun off into British Telecom. Although Alan Turin has passed into history as a hero, it was his colleague in Hut 6, Gordon Welchman, whose analysis of German Luftwaffe radio message transmissions provided an early breakthrough. Although the content was encrypted, the volume, velocity and location of the transmissions enabled Welchman to predict when the Luftwaffe was about to launch an air raid. His methodology of traffic analysis is a now widely used with cell-phone Call Data Records to penetrate Organised Crime Groups. So, is it outrageous that the UK’s intends to pass laws enabling them to access communications and its associated data? No, it is just business as usual.
by Ray Green 11 May 2022
The Wild West of the internet is the target of new laws to tame the nasty stuff. 
by websitebuilder 17 January 2022
Write about something you know. If you don’t know much about a specific topic that will interest your readers, invite an expert to write about it.
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