If you google blog search David Tennant and entries from the last day my entry comes up on the second page (and probably going lower in the search rankings as I type) - so to read it you would need to (a) be searching for blogs about David Tennant, (b) scroll down to the 13th entry and (c) click on the actual entry to read the details for it. Yes the brief paraphrase tells you that David Tennant appears on Tonight's the Night but that's all.
I can't protect everyone on the internet from being inadvertently spoiled. The information is cut for those scrolling on LJ (which I assume from your comments you're pretty unfamiliar with) which means that they can't see the info without clicking, you would need to specifically be trawling blog search engines for Tennant info to even find the entry (and if you're specifically trawling blog entries how do you avoid being spoiled for the new specials when google could just as easily lift spoiler details from an entry as the paraphrased info?) and you still need to actually click on the entry to read the description of the Doctor Who clip.
I've taken the precautions that I can to stop people reading about the Who clip if they didn't want to but ultimately its the reader's responsibility to use a little plain old common sense. If you came across the entry on google, read the paragraph paraphrasing the entry and realised you didn't want to know that why did you then click on the actual entry and read it?
Re: DW clip
Date: 2009-04-28 12:18 pm (UTC)I can't protect everyone on the internet from being inadvertently spoiled. The information is cut for those scrolling on LJ (which I assume from your comments you're pretty unfamiliar with) which means that they can't see the info without clicking, you would need to specifically be trawling blog search engines for Tennant info to even find the entry (and if you're specifically trawling blog entries how do you avoid being spoiled for the new specials when google could just as easily lift spoiler details from an entry as the paraphrased info?) and you still need to actually click on the entry to read the description of the Doctor Who clip.
I've taken the precautions that I can to stop people reading about the Who clip if they didn't want to but ultimately its the reader's responsibility to use a little plain old common sense. If you came across the entry on google, read the paragraph paraphrasing the entry and realised you didn't want to know that why did you then click on the actual entry and read it?