Thursday, 9 April 2026

Blogger info

 



My Journey Through Blogger Privacy: Lessons from the Dashboard

I remember the first time I realized that managing multiple blogs on a single account wasn’t as straightforward as I thought. I had several projects running, each with its own purpose, and I wanted some of them to exist quietly, almost like private workshops, while others could be open to the world. It seemed simple: “Draft posts are private, published posts are public,” I thought. But as I soon discovered, Blogger has a few layers of complexity that I had never noticed before.

It all started when I tried to make one of my blogs “invisible” to the public without taking it offline. I imagined I could just flip a switch and that’s it—the blog would be published, the posts live, but the general public wouldn’t be able to stumble across it. I quickly learned that it wasn’t quite that simple. In Blogger, a blog is either public, visible to anyone with the link (and possibly searchable), or private, restricted to certain people. There’s no half-measure—unless you know the settings well.

I dug into the dashboard, clicking on the blog in question. Settings, Permissions… it all sounded straightforward, but there were nuances. Blogger offers two forms of private settings. The first is “Private – Only Authors.” This means only people listed as authors can see the blog. Perfect for collaborative projects where everyone needs access, but not ideal if I wanted to share the blog with a friend or client without giving them full author privileges.

Then there’s “Private – Only These Readers.” This setting is more flexible: you invite specific people by their Google accounts, and only they can view the blog. Suddenly, what had seemed impossible—publishing a blog but keeping it out of the general public’s eyes—was achievable. I could publish posts, share them with the select few I wanted, and the rest of the world wouldn’t even know the blog existed.

Of course, I wanted to know what would happen if I left a blog public. After all, some of my projects were meant to be seen. Public blogs are visible to anyone with the link, yes, but there are other implications. Search engines can index your posts, meaning that even if you don’t share the link, people might find the blog through Google or Bing. RSS feeds broadcast new posts automatically. It felt like shouting into the void—you can’t fully control who sees the blog once it’s public.

I learned a few workarounds. First, you can disable search engine indexing in the blog settings. This doesn’t make it private, but it stops search engines from showing your blog in results. It’s a form of stealth publishing: anyone with the direct link can read it, but the general public is unlikely to stumble upon it. It’s not perfect, but it’s better than nothing.

Another lesson: you can manage each blog individually. One can be fully public, another restricted to authors, another shared only with select readers. Blogger doesn’t force you to apply the same visibility setting to all your blogs at once. This flexibility was crucial for me because I juggle multiple projects with different audiences. Some are for public consumption, some are internal notes, and others are experimental spaces for ideas I’m not ready to share broadly.

I also discovered that individual posts within a blog can still be drafts, even if the blog itself is published. This was handy. I could have a blog visible to invited readers but keep some posts as drafts until they were ready. Each post is like a small vessel of content, and you can control which ones see the light of day while the blog continues to exist quietly.

Of course, none of this is intuitive at first glance. I spent a fair amount of time clicking through menus, trying different settings, reading help articles, and testing links in incognito windows. There were moments of frustration when I realized a public post had slipped through my custom reader list, moments of relief when a draft stayed hidden exactly as intended, and moments of triumph when I finally had a system that made sense.

Looking back, I see that managing a blog isn’t just about writing; it’s about curation and control. Each setting—public, private authors, private readers, search engine indexing—is a tool, a way to shape who experiences your work and how. Using these tools thoughtfully transforms blogging from a simple publishing act into a craft. The experience taught me patience, attention to detail, and a kind of digital mindfulness I hadn’t anticipated.



So, what did I take away from this journey? A few key principles that now guide how I approach any new blog:

  1. Define the audience first. Before publishing a post or even creating a new blog, ask: Who should see this? Public? Only me? A select group?
  2. Understand Blogger’s privacy modes. “Only Authors” vs. “Only These Readers” may seem similar, but they serve different purposes. Choose carefully.
  3. Leverage draft posts. Even in a published blog, drafts allow you to prepare content without exposing it prematurely.
  4. Control discoverability. Use search engine indexing settings to reduce accidental visibility without fully privatizing a blog.
  5. Test your settings. Always check in incognito or with a test account to see what others can actually view. There’s nothing worse than assuming a post is private when it’s visible.

By the end of my explorations, I had a system that worked for me. Each blog had a purpose, a defined audience, and a level of visibility appropriate to its content. Some were open to the world, shouting ideas into the public square. Others were quiet, intimate spaces where only a chosen few could enter. And the process of figuring it out—clicking through menus, testing permissions, inviting readers—felt oddly satisfying, like the careful assembly of a finely made tool.

In truth, managing blogs is less about technology than it is about intention. The settings, the menus, the checkboxes—they are just instruments. What matters is how you choose to use them: which voices you allow, which thoughts you protect, which ideas you share with the world. And if you approach it thoughtfully, even a technical platform like Blogger can become a space not just for posting words, but for crafting experiences, guiding readers, and shaping the digital life you want to live.

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