Via via via ...

    Where does internet information come from? Most likely from the air. If you take any article and follow the links (unless of course they are), then the chance to return to the start again is very great.

    We take the latest article from Habr ( Google launched the statistics site ) Today is September 15, 2009 from the Nativity of Christ.


    Step 1




    Here honestly affixed a link to the source, indicating a specific article
    Link . Try on a habr do not write where the text came from, already by noon the author's carcass will be scattered around the "heaped posts".

    Step 2




    Link

    Anna Lesenyuk, waking up in the morning and sitting down at a computer, began to surf the net for a loaf of bread. Again for dinner (this is a fatal date), she needs to kick the latest news on the Internet. Of particular value in such work is news from foreign sites, from where they are already multiplying on the RuNet and, due to the translation, can be distorted to the contrary. If Anna spent more than 5 minutes on 1 news, then the site would not be full of button accordions a week ago.

    The link is also affixed, but this is most likely just the fulfillment of duties than the rule.

    Step 3




    Link

    And the battle continues again ... The site refers to a certain person who, in his "cozy nonsense", shared a find, for which his site thanks him (remembering to rummage the content). The article, by the way, has been rewritten and has practically nothing to do with the original. It can be seen that the site is rich enough to afford good rewriting. The gap between the "first seen" and the publication was no more than 3 days. Rather, 1 day from the moment the editor saw the post to which he referred.

    Step 4




    Link

    God you are mine. Again not the author. But almost already. The guy just saw the link from other people and looked at it. The time from appearance to insight is 2 days.

    The final




    At step 5, it finally became clear - the first one saw this link was a certain Jamie Riddell , who shared it. Walking on the Internet, on September 7th of this year, the guy redressed the Google Statistics website into the bookmarks. I was not too lazy to even put down tags that most likely found the site.

    Of course, this path is not an isolated one. Perhaps this news has several more options (press release, developer blog) for appearance on the Internet, but most of the content on our Internet is just copying and translating (not always true). The result is not very good: Runet - this is one big copy-paste from the English part of the Internet. I am glad that there are still authors on Habrahabr who write wonderful reviews and not copy, what was already copied was copied.

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