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Technically all eemadges are quotes —a quote defined as just a text fragment— but there is another sense of quote that has become all too familiar in the web: a quote as an inspirational, meaningful (and often cheesy) passage. It is in this sense that eemadges and quotes are clearly not the same thing: an eemadge is, first and foremost, a beautiful description.
All this does not mean that eemadges should be devoid of meaning, truth, or wisdom (or even cheesiness). What I'm trying to say here is that they are simply not what we are mainly looking for in them.
Image-links are special links inside the body of an eemadge that take you straight to an image search. They offer a different and strangely compelling way to read an eemadge. Here are some good examples.
These links, though, have to be manually implemented —a lengthy and nontrivial job: you need to be part curator, part google whacker.
There are several reasons I chose to make all the eemadges editable:
In the end, it comes down to the belief that if you want a community you have to allow people to contribute and share responsibilities with them.
Not really. I believe Wikipedia (with 800,000+ articles in the english version) has served as a very important proof of the the reliability and scalability (not to mention the spirit of cooperation and sense of community it fosters) of the wiki model.
Besides, I've tried to replicate some of the well-known systems that keep vandalism in check or limit it's damage. There is a list of the recent revisions and every change is recorded and can be easily undone.
Of course, things could unfold differently here and after reaching a certain milestone (in eemadges or people), vandalism (and inaccuracy) could become important concerns, calling for more control and constraints; that may as well be, but we'll cross that bridge when the time comes.
Sorry, but no—eemadges is not an outlet for original writing, it's a compilation of extracts from previously published material. If it were otherwise, we believe its content would quickly become contrived, un-spontaneous.