This is exactly like the notes we passed in junior high! Exactly! Somebody said something and somebody else scoffed and that one came back and roared and then another one said he didn't get the message. There's nothing new under the sun, but I think Mardou was more incisive way back when ... #skype
The original of this post was accidentally overwritten with another post; the original comments are thus the first ones found at http://defamer.gawker.com/5315335/how-jonah-hills-twitter-impersonator-wrecked-his-hollywood-rep
who gives a fuck about kara swisher or anyones cafeteria?
why don't you give us something juicy (intended) like why facebook had to hide all the hotties in their old lytton street office, and where said hotties are residing in the new digs?
"As to those filthy Yahoos, although there were few greater lovers of mankind, at that time, than myself, yet I confess I never saw any sensitive being so detestable on all accounts; and the more I came near them, the more hateful they grew, while I stayed in that country."
"fair use" is a doctrine of copyright law that applies to both web and print, and it allows for multiple sentences of copyright material to be used without permission of the copyright owner. specifically for "review."
like book reviews in newspapers, criticize is what blogs do. if the intent of the blogger is to supersede the work that they are excerpting (by re-publishing paragraphs upon paragraphs of unoriginal copy, as owen points out), well, that's not "fair use." i would say the WSJ crossed a line.
I think you are letting her off too lightly. Kara has a massive conflict of interest problem, not only does her obsessive negative coverage of yahoo, microsoft and facebook help google, but surprise surprise it helps out her boss Rupert. Just because you disclose a conflict of interest doesn't mean it still isn't a conflict nor that your "reporting" will be objective, especially if there are $s at stake.
@JewelAlthaemenes: A fair point. All I know is that I've seen Swisher verbally abuse Murdoch in person. He always does this old-man mumble -- a classic mogul psychological power play to make everyone lean in deferentially to listen to you. He tried this on Swisher at a tech conference and she snapped at him, "What's that, Rupert? Talk up!"
@JewelAlthaemenes: OK, I'm stumpped. How does a reporter working for a single publisher eliminate any conflict of interest with regard to that publisher?
Not only is it impossible in some cases to eliminate conflict of interest, I'm not sure we should even want such a thing.
Sure, there are many cases (most even) where I'd like the reporter to just cover the event, tell us what happened, and keep their opinions and speculation to themselves. It's fairly obvious when this is being done (and fairly rare these days).
But in the more common case where opinions are being expressed, even if subtly, there are a myriad of influences, most of which may be unknown to the reporter as well as the audience. I don't think most of us know where our gut-level opinions on many subjects originate. Best we can do when it comes to reporting is to just stick to the facts (and not just carefully selected facts) surrounding an issue and when an opinion *is* being expressed, to as best possible, disclose our influences.
Best way for readers to get at the truth is to not rely on just once source. For most people, if they tell me where they get their news I almost don't need to know much more about them to predict their opinions on a particular subject.
This is something that probably needs to be fixed by the publications themselves, not the individual journalists.
11/06/09
11/06/09
07/15/09
06/16/09
So with Van Natta at the helm of MySpace, is he going to turn them around and trounce FB? That would be poetic, I think.
06/16/09
why don't you give us something juicy (intended) like why facebook had to hide all the hotties in their old lytton street office, and where said hotties are residing in the new digs?
-mike
06/16/09
-prion
05/27/09
--Gulliver's Travels
05/13/09
Julia Allison drank a glass of water today, and twatted it. Do I smell a sixth story?
04/24/09
And I may yet learn to recognize some names from the digerati. Beyond Sarah Lacy, I mean. And my other Twitcrush, 8.
04/09/09
This ancient bastard is about 5 years too late.
People care more about writing themselves than reading. It's not logical to have a "Tribune" or "Times" company.
This luddite paper fetish bullshit has to stop.
04/09/09
like book reviews in newspapers, criticize is what blogs do. if the intent of the blogger is to supersede the work that they are excerpting (by re-publishing paragraphs upon paragraphs of unoriginal copy, as owen points out), well, that's not "fair use." i would say the WSJ crossed a line.
04/09/09
04/09/09
04/09/09
04/03/09
02/24/09
02/24/09
02/24/09
02/24/09
02/24/09
Is there video? That would be spectacular.
02/24/09
Not only is it impossible in some cases to eliminate conflict of interest, I'm not sure we should even want such a thing.
Sure, there are many cases (most even) where I'd like the reporter to just cover the event, tell us what happened, and keep their opinions and speculation to themselves. It's fairly obvious when this is being done (and fairly rare these days).
But in the more common case where opinions are being expressed, even if subtly, there are a myriad of influences, most of which may be unknown to the reporter as well as the audience. I don't think most of us know where our gut-level opinions on many subjects originate. Best we can do when it comes to reporting is to just stick to the facts (and not just carefully selected facts) surrounding an issue and when an opinion *is* being expressed, to as best possible, disclose our influences.
Best way for readers to get at the truth is to not rely on just once source. For most people, if they tell me where they get their news I almost don't need to know much more about them to predict their opinions on a particular subject.
This is something that probably needs to be fixed by the publications themselves, not the individual journalists.