You might get more interest if you start with a Basic Databending topic/post/whatever. You know, so we actually have a slight idea what you're talking about.
Old man Jack doesn't even know what Databending is.
I suppose, but I'm extending the work of the people before me,
Antonio Roberts and
questionsomething (real name unknown). They are the 'basic databending', at least in the branch I specialize in. I don't think it's particularly right to duplicate the scope of something that's purely factual and are a matter of procedure rather than art. My take on the basics won't be substantially different from that of my predecessors, and it would be worse, actually.
That being said, should I still make a "Basic Databending" topic linking to those articles and more, while making it very clear that I don't own those articles? There's
this wonderful post that contains pretty much every glitch art (databending being a subcategory) thing, but I think it suffers from front-loading everything into the reader's face at once. I suppose I could trim it down, while acknowledging that I'm basing it off someone else's work. Unfortunately, the site mod has tragically passed away, so it's impossible to ask permission.
Looks like art maybe? You could detail some of your favs, or work you've done that came out well.
I suppose you could call it art, but I work from a technical perspective. Artistic merit means nothing to me, what matters to me is that there is a repeatable and consistent procedure that can yield some kind of useful result that others can make use of later on. I'd be happy if someone implemented my techniques as automated filters, I really would. It would make this stuff far more accessible. It'd mean you don't have to download all this odd software and do all these strange things with them just to do what I did.
I'm going on a tangent here, but if someone did that, I'd link to their filter near the top of the relevant article, provided it is under an open source license under the
Open Source Initiative's definition. I've very recently put my articles under CC-BY so that I'm not scaring people off with the copyright-by-default thing that occurs in most jurisdictions, mine included. Do what you want (with attribution), but I still retain the right to promote the things that I like.
I don't do art. I don't understand what makes any particular piece any better or worse than another. I can't even tell what's good and what's not. I leave others to do that, since that's not my specialty. I suppose you could call me a scientist.