I decided to do a quick research  project.  When was the first mention of blog, blogging or weblogs?  How  does July 25, 1999 sound?  (quick note, by 'research' I mean...let me  spend about an afternoon playing with this)
Update: I guess I could have gone to Wikipedia and  found 
this.   Wikipedia dates the first use of the word as 1997, with rapid growth  in 1999.
This  was the first metion I found.  It is a post to the newly created  deja.comm.weblogs USENET group.  
A description of weblogs
This Deja community is for discussion of  'weblogs', a  comparatively new sort of personal webpage where you share your thoughts  about the interesting webpages you visit, usually on a daily basis. 
Authors of weblogs are encouraged to post here about the problems  and potentials of maintaining a log, and others are welcome to ask  questions or make comments on these topics. 
A follow-up post on July 27 by Edward Vielmetti contained this  comment:
Any aspiring software developer want to write "My Blog", and then  any aspiring author want to write "Blogging for Dummies?"
Oh Ed, if you only took it upon yourself.  Ed's comment also  discussed how there was no software solution to create a blog.  He was  using simple text editors to cut/paste new content in.
I would assume that the term blog or blogging was used earlier, but  like all history, it is made by those who write it.  Do you know of any  earlier mention?  Let 
me know.
Methodology
The basis for my search was 
USENET.  For those of you  not familiar with USENET it was where all the action was.  Back in the  80's and early 90's if you had any technical question or wanted to  discuss any topic in detail USENET was the place to go.  I figured the  initial discussions about blogs would take place in USENET.
I used 
Google's Group Search  to search USENET messages.  (a traditional Google search does provide a  date next to a link, but you cannot sort by date.)  Google Groups  allowed me to search USENET posts from 1981 to the present.  In other  words, pre-WWW.  The search results can also be sorted by date. 
Another resource could have been Blog FAQ's, but most of 
them are focused more on the  setup/use of blogs rather than the history.
Results
I started off by searching for three different terms: blog, blogging and  weblog.  One of the issues with 'weblog' is that it can also refer to  stats stored by a web server.  So many of the results contained  technical discussions of web server stats.
To help narrow my search on selected words, I would use the advanced  search option to limit my date range, for example 
blog,  for the year 1989.  In continued changing the year variable.  
The term 'blog' was also used to describe 
software  to keep track of bowling scores.
The first mention of blog or weblog in reference to a 'blog' came up  first in the 
1999  search.  There are many entries dated in December, including the  first USENET spam/ad for a 
blog  service.  
Sorting the results by date showed the post on July 25, 1999 to be  the first.  Subsequent searches in 2000 and on show a marked increase in  use of the term.
Caveats
Another resource that could help this search would be archives of e-mail  discussion lists.  Many technical issues had lists devoted to them  (remember the days of Majordomo!).  Unfortunately, it is difficult to  search the archives of these lists.
Revisions
I expect to receive proof/documentation/URLs of earlier mentions.  If I  do, I will post them here.
While amusing myself by reading about the reignited discussion on  blog advertising, sponsored posts, etc. (see recent posts by 
Chris Brogan  and 
Marshall  Kirkpatrick of ReadWriteWeb), I thought long and hard about trying  to jump into that debate.
Instead of adding noise to that discussion (I have limited experience  in monetization of a blog), I thought I’d discuss a theme that both men  touch upon in their posts:  
where did blogging come from?   Stick with me, folks:  although this is going to be a meta discussion, I  want to point you toward a resource that shows that this is actually an  old question with some history that might be relevant to today.
 Image
Image by 
gastev
What is blogging?
Two interesting points of view come from both Chris and Marshall’s  posts.  Marshall calls blogging a young medium, per the following:
Blogging is a beautiful thing. The prospect of this young  media being overrun with “pay for play” pseudo-shilling is not an  attractive one to us.
His point of view is pretty clear on a certain form of monetization  (the process or means of using your blog to generate income).
Chris talks about bloggers (i.e. those of us who write online and use  blogging software to publish and distribute our work) in the following  paragraph:
Bloggers aren’t journalists. Bloggers are people who use  blogging software. There are journalists who blog. There are bloggers  who aspire to journalistic standards.
And so on.
Well, guess what?  The antecedents of blogs aren’t exactly new  things.  Amateur writers and self-publishers have been around for a  long, long time.
Before we had blogs, we had these things called zines.
What are zines?
Zines (short for 
fanzines) are amateur  publications which are normally created and distributed by their author  or, in some cases, a small team of people.  Zines are normally written  by average people who have a near obsessive interest about some topic  and the energy to create material about it.  Zines have been published  independently for many, many years, or within the confines of an amateur  press association (
APA).
APAs have been around since 1876 (the 
National Amateur Press Association  – is still alive and kicking as of the writing of this blog post; I  used to belong to 
APA  Centauri, which has been kicking around for close to 30 years).   Zines and blogging have really been around since the days of Martin  Luther and Paul of Tarsus, although they weren’t called zines or blogs  in those days.  True, they might not have had hyperlinks or any  electronic presence, but many common concepts apply.
The Inner Swine is an  example of a zine, written by 
Jeffrey Somers, which also  happens to have a cool little Web presence.
How are zines like blogs and vice versa?
The  Inner Swine  (vol. 7, Issue 2   June 2001) has an article called 
Mr.  Mute’s Guide To Making A Zine which helps illustrate the point  that I’m trying to make.  The article lists five points about making a  zine, which I’m going to paraphrase here:
- Decide what kind of zine you’re going to put out - Jeffrey  lists different types of zines like perzines (zines about a person’s  life experience), music zines, and more.  Sound familar?
- Actually create some material – same as blogging: you gotta  write stuff, take photos, etc.
- Then, just @#$%ing do it.  Typeset, layout, collate, etc. -  similar to the process of putting some life behind your content with  formatting, images, hyperlinks, etc.
- Give the @#$%ing thing away – isn’t most blogging just  giving content away?
- Stop &*@#ing off on your first issue and put out the second.  – in other words, keep going.  Repeat.
The biggest difference between zines and blogs – publication and  distribution
The biggest difference between these two types of content are  publication (call it Webification, if you like) and distribution.   
Pubication  is the process of creating the finished product.  
Distribution  is the process of getting the product out to places where  people can find and read it.
In the pre-electronic era, zine publishers had to spend increasingly  large amounts of money to distribute their content.  Publication also  cost some money, but it was mainly things like printer ink, paper, etc.   Mass production of a zine was the cost of photocopying, which could add  up if you wanted to create hundreds of copies.
I would argue, however, that distribution would have been the real  killer.  Either you:
-  mailed out the zine
- distributed it by hand
- or convinced some book store, music store or comic book store owner  to carry the zine for you.
For example, I got my copy of 
The Inner Swine  several years ago at a cool book store called 
Quimby’s in Chicago.  You can buy  zines from Quimby’s, and the small number of places like it around the  world, and then somehow the author would get reimbursed.  Mr. Mute (or  Mr. Sowers, I guess) talks about giving your zines away (point 4) but  the realities of distribution is that many zine authors would distribute  by mail at a moderate price to help cover the costs of distribution.
The interesting thing is that zine publishers built up their  distribution networks over time with a combination of word of mouth  advertising; zine trades; reviews (good old 
Factsheet Five); and places like  Quimby’s.
It’s worth noting that zine publishers did go electronic prior to the  Web era with mailing lists, news groups, bulletin boards, etc.
Bloggers have it easy when it comes to publication and distribution
Now, in this era of blogs, publication and distribution basically  occur in a single process that’s virtually free to the publisher.  Mind  you, you still need to tell the world about your blog, but the resulting  networks to help promote content are very similar to the networks that  zine publishers use.  Think social media, blog directories, blog  reviews, etc.  A blogger can have a reach that many zine publishers  would have given their kidneys for at a tiny fraction of the cost.
How much is an independent voice worth?
It’s also worth noting that some zines, like some of today’s blogs,  did run ads as a means of cost-recovery or, in other cases, promoting  friends, helpers, supporters, etc.  However, zine publishers were  mavericks, independents, and free-speakers.  Editorial integrity was  highly valued and assumed.
(Um, does this remind you of blogging at all?)
Here’s the thing, though:  paid zine writing, paid articles, etc. for  willing sponsors barely existed, if it ever existed.  Why not?   Simple:  
the economics just weren’t there. Few zine publishers,  if any, could afford the necessary scale of distribution required to  reach a mass audience.  I would have been very surprised if any large  organization with any kind of ad budget would have deigned to entertain  the notion of sponsored articles because zine audiences were selective,  often anti-establishment, and too darned small.
The idea of advertiser-sponsored zine publications just would not  have entered anyone’s minds (although I suppose it could have happened  and some smart reader will find an example to point out where I’m wrong,  which I’d like to see, actually) 
because they would have been  seen as a waste of the advertiser’s money.
I do believe, however, that there would have been a few  zine-publishers who would have been mighty tempted to cash in on some  advertiser money.  
It would have been a very human temptation in a  marketplace that placed virtually all of the cost and risk in the hands  of the publisher.
The new (yet ancient) media
So here we are in the 21st century.  Yes, Marshall, technically  blogging is a young media, but the concepts behind it aren’t.   Self-publishing has a very long history and blogging is just the newest  iteration with a number of neat value-added features to make it pretty  cool.
Should blogging be kept pristine, free of any kind of  monetization?  I support monetization in principle because even  though production and distribution costs are minimal, they still exist  in a diminished form and being able to cover those costs is cool.   Moreover, there is always the opportunity cost of blogging (time not  spent on other important things) which revenues can help compensate for.
As for whether sponsored posts are ethical, what the right way is to  handle them, etc., I’ll let other, more experienced bloggers, marketers,  analysts, etc. sort that out.  I really don’t know what to think about  them.  I can’t see myself writing advertiser sponsored posts on 
Broadcasting Brain, but who  knows what the future might bring?  (
EDIT:  Mitch Joel  weighs in with his post 
Ethics  in Blogging for Dollars.)
However, the situations predate the current blogging era, in my  opinion, and they will never really go away.  So we have to accept and  learn how to deal with them, either by accepting, rejecting, or  consciously ignoring them.
So that’s my opinion.  How about you, what do you think?   Do you see parallels between zines and blogs?  Do you see any  differences that I might have missed that makes the comparison  inaccurate?
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