Blog Content Curation and Original Writing Guidelines

About the P2P Foundation blog
Michel Bauwens: "I see the blog as a 'record of qualified and evaluated P2P development that serves not just a present function, but a strategic and historical function ..."
The P2P Foundation Blog offers a daily alternative to the deluge of irrelevant and disempowering news produced by mainstream media. We feature stories on movements and people trying to change the world in constructive ways by use of P2P dynamics: commons, collaboration, technology, IP, and more. We recommend that you take some time and read more of the blog and see the type of material we’ve featured, as that will be the best way to determine what "fits".
The P2P Foundation is a pluralistic platform. Although we regularly cover and analyze phenomena such as Bitcoin and Collaborative Consumption, the P2P Foundation is also constructively critical of these, in order to maintain a balanced perspective. Please read our About Page and our Guiding Principles to gain an understanding of our vision of P2P.
Our priority is to reflect initiatives and incite debate on the global P2P/ Commons/ Sharing/ Free Open-Knowledge movements.
How to contribute
We are always in the look out for more contributors to write for, curate or manage the blog's content. Read the descriptions below and contact us with some samples of your work and an introductory note.
Basic requirements for Blog curators/authors
- Familiarity with Wordpress.
- High level English proficiency including grammar and writing skills.
- Familiarity with the Commons movement and the P2P Foundation’s work on Peer Production, Peer Property and Peer Governance.
- Diligent and voracious reader and critical thinker.
- Willingness to learn and apply our formatting guidelines.
Types of contributor
We distinguish between Three main types of blog contributors: authors, curators and content formatters, although some individuals can and do cover all three.
Blog Authors
Blog authors contribute their own material to the blog. This can be expressly written for the blog or repurposed from other sources. We are interest in people and groups with diverse perspectives on the Commons, Peer to Peer, Activism, Economics and all the various subject we cover. You can find a full list of those within in this page. If no other source is specified, the contents of the blog are published under a Creative Commons Attribution - Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. Read more about it here.
Blog Curators
Blog curators are voracious readers with a discerning eye for convergent P2P patterns. Curated posts feature relevant extracts from one or various sources with correct attribution and a personalised introduction and context. Additionally we often cross-post material from our wiki-commons into the blog. P2P Foundation blog curators present and frame existing texts into an overall content.
Content Formatters
Content formatters take care of design, formatting and image selection and assist other contributors (authors and curators) with these tasks when needed. Familiarity with wordpress, the guidelines detailed below, and a good eye for image selection and design are the qualities that describe a good content formatter.
General Formatting Guidelines
Original material
- Check the category box for “P2P Foundation/Original Content". If you've already published your post elsewhere, use "P2P Foundation/Guest Post".

- No more than one original-material posts every two days per author.
Curated material
- Make sure that no one has already posted the same article you’re going to feature! Always do a search from the Posts menu on the Dashboard. It’s quick, and saves face.
- Always credit the author and source at the beginning of the post. Normally we use "Extracted from" or “Source:”. Hyperlink to both the original article, and to the author’s webpage or bio. Always cite the author, add the source link.
- Write an Intro (a paragraph or two) saying why you're reposting whatever you've curated; give an opinion. Formatting wise, it's always a good idea to mark the transition from your intro to the text itself. One way is to separate it by inserting a dividing line:

- Unless it's really short, don't extract the full post. Curate the juiciest/most P2P-relevant bits and, if readers are interested, make it easy for them to go to the original to read the rest. Use blockquotes when appropriate.
- Be judicious with what you curate. Is it creative commons? Does the original website have a republishing policy? Familiarise yourself with our Fair Use Guidelines but, when in doubt contact the original author to ask for permission,
- Tick the "Curated by" box at the bottom of the editor
CURATED BY IMAGE
Formatting/Wordpress Editor
- Use blockquotes where appropriate.
- If instead of uploading them directly, you choose to copy and paste images from elsewhere precede the image URL with the following code:
https://i0.wp.com/
Here's an example:
http://www.webvisionsevent.com/userfiles/throwing-rocks-at-the-google-bus.png
Should be rewrriten as:
https://i0.wp.com/www.webvisionsevent.com/userfiles/throwing-rocks-at-the-google-bus.png.
- Label post in "Categories".It's specially important to use at least one subcategory from the Channels (Streams) parent category. Read about these here (under "Streams")
STREAMS IMAGE
- Tag accordingly; it takes just 15 seconds and helps us with SEO. Read more about best practices for tagging [1].
- About SEO, please fill in the YoastSEO section at the bottom of the post. You can find instructions on that here
SEO IMAGE
- Include an attractive featured image. Check out the front page of the blog to see the types of image we feature. You can find an image search box at the bottom of the editor which will search and insert featured images. Try to use a resolution of 1200 + 600 aprox. and, if possible, with very little white content so the categories stand out. If the image suggestions in the editor aren't working for you, do a general Creative Commons, search CC on Flickr or try out Unsplash. If you really can't think of an image, ask for help!
FEAT IMAGE EDITPR
- Please, share with your networks once it’s posted! Your article will be autoposted to the P2P Foundation's Facebook and Twitter accounts, but we encourage you to share it elsewhere,
Scheduling
- 3 posts per day; 4 if there’s a 10 day 3-post buffer (although it's preferable to fill out the buffer for later dates). This may be subject to change in the future, depending the number of regular blog contributors.
- The "4th post" position can also be used for more urgent calls/campaigns, etc. If there’s a need to post something urgent on a day that already features 4 posts, be judicious about shifting one previously scheduled post to a later day (and inform the P2P blog author/curator).
- No more than two "Movement/Project/Video/Podcast/Essay of the day" features per day. Many of these are logged in our P2P Blog Planning Resources Wiki page. There is a huge backlog there, and some items could be as much as a year old, so they need to be checked for currency.
- Avoid running any specific “of the day”-type featured posts on two consecutive days. Try and leave one day between (ie., if you have available two podcasts to feature as “podcast of the day”, post one on Tuesday and the next on Thursday. Similarly if you serialize, or if you curate from the same source; always leave a day in between.
Source material
We keep a wiki page for future featured posts and we encourage you to read some of this material (and post it yourself), as well as add to it. If you post any of this material, please modify the title to italics.
Other stuff
- Curate comments.
- Problems? Report any glitches to our technical team: platform@p2pfoundation.net
- We’re constantly developing the blog, incorporating discussion forums and making it easier to find content, please share your ideas and feedback.
Final notes
Finally, if you’re familiar with the blog, you’ll see that Michel gets a free pass from these formatting conventions. That’s because a) of his considerable effort in building the Foundation and the blog, and b) he's way too busy, yet continues to contribute more content curation for the blog than anyone else.
Contributors are, however, welcome to proofread/copyedit his posts, and add images etc. When there’s a regular team, this can be divided in weekly commitments. For example, if there’s a regular team of six, you’d have to add images to Michel’s post for seven days…and not have to do it again until 5 weeks later.