The New York Post rarely attributes anything that was broken on the web. They routinely refer to stories broken by web outlets as "an internet report" without any attribution.
Their New York Mets beat reporter made a big deal about bloggers posting news available to anyone with a television set and a radio, as if writing for a New York tabloid gives him a monopoly on non-exclusive information. He also used the Washington Post article that tried to insist that Gawker stole a WaPo story as the basis for 'what's wrong with aggregation sites'
The New York Post can start complaining about attribution when they start practicing what they preach.
10/11/09
Their New York Mets beat reporter made a big deal about bloggers posting news available to anyone with a television set and a radio, as if writing for a New York tabloid gives him a monopoly on non-exclusive information. He also used the Washington Post article that tried to insist that Gawker stole a WaPo story as the basis for 'what's wrong with aggregation sites'
The New York Post can start complaining about attribution when they start practicing what they preach.
10/11/09
10/11/09
10/11/09
[www.nypost.com]
10/11/09