Harry Reid is craaaaaaaaazy!

Stories

Daily Kos

Tue Jul 24, 2007 at 02:31:18 PM PDT

So
your president is at 25% approval rating. Your attorney general is a
laughing stock who doesn’t even bother concealing his perjury and
contempt for Congress (including members of your party). Iraq continues
to spiral out of control. On just about every issue, your political
foes have the upper hand. And on that one advantage you could always
count on — cash — you’re getting blown out.

So what do you do?

Seeing that Republicans can’t function without an enemy, and seeing
that efforts to demonize scaaary Nancy Pelosi have failed disastrously,
they’re moving on to Plan B — Harry Reid.

Senate Republicans are preparing to take aim at Majority Leader
Harry Reid over the August recess for being “all talk but no
action” and helping drag the Democrat-led Congress’
approval rating to a historic low, according to a document distributed
to caucus members.

Sen. Jon Kyl of Arizona, chairman of the Senate Republican
Conference, is meeting with members yesterday and today to disseminate
a message critical of Democrats for endlessly debating the Iraq war,
stalling judicial nominations and squandering time on at least 300
investigations of the Bush administration.

“We really ought to be asking why this Democrat leadership
won’t allow Congress to move forward on serious policy
debates,” Mr. Kyl said, when asked about the talking-points
memorandum he is circulating.

The Carpetbagger Report notes:

I suppose it’s possible that I’ve heard more
breathtaking hypocrisy, but nothing comes to mind. Reid isn’t
allowing Congress to move forward? Republicans are on pace to be the
most obstructionist minority in the history of Congress, and the GOP
wants to blame Reid for blocking progress?

I suppose we should have seen this coming. Fred Hiatt went after
Reid over the weekend, at the same time as David Brooks, Bob Novak, and
a handful of other conservative media voices, suggesting some kind of
coordinated effort to blast the Majority Leader.

And now the RNC is making it official.

The lemmings are in action, their hypocrisy be damned! But isn’t it
always this way? What’s hilarious is the “ammo” Republicans are
wielding in this laughable effort, as Joe at AmericaBlog notes:

The Chair of Republican National Committee, Robert M. “Mike” Duncan,
just launched a full-scale attack on Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.
The funny thing is that the first line of the e-mail could be a
fundraiser for Democrats:

On Sunday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) called President Bush “a liar” and a “part of the culture of corruption.”

Both true.

Duncan’s e-mail devolves into a rant from there. But you have to
love the fact that the RNC is attacking Reid for doing something most
Republican will never, ever do: Tell the truth.

Despite gains in recent years, the GOP still has a vastly superior
media machine to get their message out. So I’m ecstatic that they’ve
decided to give us a helping hand by reminding people that 1) Democrats
oppose Bush, his lies, and his corruption, and 2) Democrats want to get
out of Iraq.

The dumbasses think this is going to help them, so who are we to dissuade them from that notion?

Powered by ScribeFire.

Democratic Accomplishments in the 110th Congress: Leading America in a New Direction

Stories

Democratic Accomplishments in the 110th Congress: Leading America
in a New Direction

Less than six
months into the 110th Congress, Senate Democrats have made significant
strides in passing important, common-sense legislation that reflect the
priorities of the American people.  After nearly a decade of
Republican control, Democrats have worked to restore fiscal
responsibility in Washington and pass key legislation on Iraq policy,
homeland security, troop readiness, veterans’ health care,
economic competitiveness, ethics reform, the minimum wage, health care,
education, energy independence, stem cell research, and Gulf Coast
revitalization.  Democrats are committed to proving that elections
do matter, and we will continue to pursue the international and
domestic priorities that matter most to the American people. 
Together, we will take the country in a new direction. 

Under Democratic leadership, the Senate has passed the following measures:

  • A fiscally responsible budget: a budget that restores fiscal discipline and
    will lead to a surplus, while cutting middle-class taxes and funding
    foreign anddomestic priorities, including education, childrens health care, veterans, and our troops;
  • 9/11 Commission recommendations: a
    bill to make America more secure by giving our first responders the
    tools they need to keep us safe; making it more difficult for potential
    terrorists to travel into our country; advancing efforts to secure our
    rail, air, and mass transit systems; and improving intelligence and
    information sharing between state, local, and federal law enforcement
    agencies;
  • Homeland security funding: legislation
    that provides $1.05 billion in funding necessary to address dangerous
    border and transit vulnerabilities left open by the Bush Administration
    since 9/11;
  • Support for our troops: legislation
    funding the President’s requests for Operation Iraqi Freedom and
    Operation Enduring Freedom, including $1.2 billion in additional
    funding for a total of $3 billion to provide our troops in Iraq with
    mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles;
  • Health care for wounded soldiers and veterans: legislation
    that provides $3 billion in supplemental funds for military health care
    and $1.8 billion in supplemental funds to the Department of
    Veterans’ Affairs to accommodate the increasing number of new
    veterans returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan;
  • Benchmarks for Iraq: legislation
    that conditions U.S. economic support for the Iraqi government on its
    progress toward achieving key political benchmarks;
  • National Guard readiness: legislation
    to provide an additional $1 billion to President Bush’s request
    for National Guard equipment needs to remedy equipment shortfalls that
    are compromising the quality of force training and limiting the
    Guard’s ability to quickly respond to natural and potential
    man-made disasters at home;
  • Continuing Resolution: legislation
    providing funding for the nine remaining appropriations bills that were
    not completed by Republicans in the 109th Congress.  In passing
    this legislation, Democrats stayed within budget limits, eliminated
    earmarks, and increased funding for national priorities, including
    veterans’ medical care, Pell grants, elementary and secondary
    education, the National Institutes of Health, state and local law
    enforcement, and global AIDS prevention and treatment;
  • Energy Bill:
    landmark legislation to increase our energy independence, strengthen
    the economy, reduce global warming emissions, and protect American
    consumers.
  • American competitiveness: bipartisan
    legislation to increase the nation’s investment in basic and
    innovative research; strengthen educational opportunities in science,
    technology, engineering, and mathematics from elementary through
    graduate school; and develop the infrastructure needed to enhance
    innovation and competitiveness in the United States;
  • Ethics and lobbying reform: a
    bill to slow the “revolving door” for former Senators and
    staff, strengthen limits on gifts and travel, expand lobbying
    disclosure requirements, establish a study commission on ethics and
    lobbying, prohibit pensions for Members of Congress convicted of
    certain crimes, and implement reform procedures relating to earmarks
    and conference reports;
  • Minimum wage: legislation to increase the federal minimum wage to $7.25/hour;
  • Middle-class tax cuts: the 2008 Budget Resolution
    provides for permanent extensions of the Marriage Penalty tax relief,
    the $1,000 refundable Child Tax Credit; the 10 percent income tax
    bracket; the adoption tax credit; the dependent care tax credit; U.S.
    soldiers combat pay for the earned income tax credit;
    and reform of the estate tax to protect small businesses and family
    farms;
  • AMT patch: the 2008 Budget Resolution
    ensures that the number of taxpayers subject to the alternative minimum
    tax will not increase in 2007, giving Congress and the Administration
    time to come up with a permanent solution; 
  • Head Start: a bill to expand eligibility for the Head Start program;
  • Stem cell research: legislation to expand the number of human embryonic stem cells eligible for federally-funded research; 
  • Children’s health coverage: the 2008 Budget Resolution and the 2007 Emergency Supplemental provide needed funds for the Children’s Health Insurance Program;
  • FDA reauthorization: a bill to greatly improve the Food and Drug Administration’s oversight of drug safety;
  • Rebuilding the Gulf Coast: legislation
    providing a total of $6.4 billion for victims of Hurricanes Katrina and
    Rita, including $1.3 billion to complete levee and drainage repairs,
    $50 million to reduce violent crime in Gulf Coast states, and $110
    million to repair the seafood and fisheries industries, which is vital
    to the region’s economic recovery; 
  • Army Corps reform: legislation to ensure that the Army Corps of Engineers does its job more effectively and soundly;
  • Disaster assistance for small businesses: legislation
    providing recovery assistance for small businesses impacted by the 2005
    hurricanes in an effort to revitalize the Gulf Coast economy;
  • U.S. Attorney appointments: legislation
    ending the indefinite appointment of interim U.S. Attorneys and
    restoring the role of the Senate in the selection of U.S. Attorneys;
  • Tax relief for small businesses: legislation providing a range of deficit-neutral tax incentives designed to help small businesses grow;
  • Education and training: the 2008 Budget Resolution provides for the largest increase since 2002 in funding for elementary and secondary programs; and
  • Energy and environment programs: legislation
    increasing funding for basic science research at the Department of
    Energy and for energy efficiency and renewable energy programs.

 

Powered by ScribeFire.

'Company': Not what it seems

Stories

thecompanyx.jpg

Sometimes it’s not just the company you keep; it’s how long you keep it.

 

Credit
TNT with ambition, if not a good grasp of its reach, for trying to
shoehorn the history of the CIA and the Cold War into a six-hour
miniseries. Unfortunately, the project is too short to do its subject
matter justice and too long and clumsy to keep us involved — a
problem compounded by Chris O’Donnell’s boyishly bland performance as TheCompany’s central agent.

CLIP: See what lurks inside ‘The Company’

MORE: Get clued in to TV’s spy legends

Based on Robert Littell’s novel, The Company uses
O’Donnell’s Jack McAuliffe as a witness to CIA history, starting him
off in the agency in the mid-’50s and carrying him through to the fall
of the Soviet Union. He chases spies in Berlin, fights tanks in the
Hungarian Revolution, battles planes at the Bay of Pigs and hunts for
moles in Washington, D.C., yet he never seems to change, mature or even
age.

The performance is so callow, it makes you wonder if it’s meant as some kind of comment on American foreign policy.

O’Donnell
has high-profile support from Alfred Molina as Jack’s mentor and
Michael Keaton as James Angleton, the CIA’s real-life head of
counter-intelligence. Chances are you’ll cling to Molina, who gives the
miniseries its few sparks of life as an amusingly bitter but
clearheaded cynic. As for Keaton, you’ll either find his oddly
mannered, tightly contained performance intriguing or, well, odd.

To fit all its history in, The Company splits
itself into three semi-separate movies: the first a spy-vs.-spy
thriller, the second an action/adventure story, the third a paranoid
conspiracy tale. But the attempts to connect the whole ultimately
destroy the parts as the continuing plot threads tying the main
characters together take away from the more interesting historic events
going on around them.

Perhaps because the
miniseries strains to cover so many time periods, none feels lived in
or organic as they do in AMC’s gorgeous paean to Madison Avenue in the
’60s, Mad Men. Here it’s more like kids playing dress-up, with scenes in Russia coming across as a bad spoof of Chekhov.

For those who follow CIA history or who have already seen The Good Shepherd,
the writers take on faith the idea that there was a mole in the CIA to
be discovered and that Angleton’s search, however obsessive, was
justified. The other theory, that there was no mole and he tore the
agency apart out of sheer paranoia, will have to wait for another
miniseries.

There is some amusement to be had from The Company‘s
initial embrace of old-tech spying: the primitive listening devices,
the secret codes hidden in walnuts. But by the time they finally reveal
the KGB’s diabolical plan to destroy the Western world, you may just
think the film has gone from walnuts to plain nuts.

Assuming you’re still around, of course. My advice? Spy out some better company.

USATODAY.com

Powered by ScribeFire.

Federated Media is an independent family owned company

Stories
 

 VEDDY INTERSESTING…

Federated
Media is an independent family owned company that offers top quality
products to our customers. Whether they listen to one of our 15
radio stations in the Midwest or read The Truth our newspaper located
in Elkhart, Indiana, we keep Northern Indiana, Southern Michigan, and
Northwest Ohio informed and entertained!

Through our
radio stations Federated Media can provide the combined power to reach
over 986,000 people each week! Our newspaper “The
Truth” reaches 571,000 people each week making Federated Media an
excellent advertising choice! That’s a total reach of over one
and a half million people each week!

We believe
it’s our employees that help discover and define our
successes. Federated Media is made up of over 368 professionals
that continue to strive to make our company “the best independent
multi-media company in the world!”

We invest literally
hundreds of thousands of dollars in training our employees to help
provide our advertisers with excellent customer service, our listeners
with the best local programming available, our readers with accurate
and dependable information, and our employees with the tools they need
to help them further their careers in media.

Thank you for
visiting our web site. If you’d like more information about
our company that has not been provided on our web site, feel free to
contact Dave Ogle regarding newspaper at
dogle@etruth.com or Tony Richards regarding radio broadcasting at trichards@federatedmedia.com .

Thanks again, and welcome to Federated Media!

Welcome to Federated Media

Powered by ScribeFire.

JOSH CATONE LOOKS INTO BLOGGER ETHICS

Stories

Written by Josh Catone / August 3, 2007 / 7 comments

Is there a new blogger scandal brewing? Allen Stern over at CenterNetworks seems to think so. Allen takes issue with the new video blog Webb Alert (which mentioned Read/WriteWeb today), saying that the blog doesn’t disclose its connection with advertising network Federated Media
(which hosts it and sells advertising for it) and suspects that the
whole thing may be an elaborate scheme to push traffic to FM clients
(and notes that FM clients have been gushing over the show in return
for the disproportionate links they get).

I honestly don’t think there’s any conspiracy here, but Allen’s post
sheds light on a larger subject: the journalistic practice of
disclosure. Blogging is still in its relative infancy and bloggers are
still struggling to figure out when and how they should disclose
potential conflicts of interest in an ongoing effort to gain legitimacy
and garner respect from readers and other media producers.

The Ins and Outs of Disclosure

Disclosure is a tricky business and as a practice is still
ill-defined even in the realm of traditional journalism. The general
idea is that anything that might be seen as a potential conflict of
interest between a writer and the subject of his story should be
disclosed to the reader. If I invested in a startup I am writing about,
for example, or if the CEO is my best friend, I should disclose that
fact. But it’s not always so cut and dry.

Journalistic disclosure is something that the ombudsman at National Public Radio writes about a lot. In November of 2005, he published an interesting piece
on the subject asking, “Do journalists have an obligation to disclose a
personal, as well as a professional, connection to a source?” This is
an instance when knowing when to disclose is not so clear. The NPR
ombudsman talks about an episode when a disc jockey on the radio
network mentions in passing a columnist from Slate magazine as a source, but fails to disclose that the columnist is also her husband.

Should she have disclosed that fact? The ombudsman concludes that
the she should have, writing, “In this case, more disclosure would have
been better than less. By finding another person to quote, the program
would have avoided giving an impression of familial favoritism.” But
what if the columnist in question had not been a family member, but a
former co-worker? Or someone whom the radio DJ had interviewed in the
past? Is disclosure still necessary? Or, what if the columnist and DJ
had been romantically involved in the past but aren’t any longer? Does
she need to discuss her sex life on air in the interest of journalistic
integrity? You can see that it becomes quickly confusing, and at times
overtly personal.

Sometimes I think bloggers take disclosures too far. Specifically,
bloggers nearly universally seem to think that they must disclose
advertising relationships when writing about companies that they run
ads for (but then many paradoxically make specific posts thanking and
praising those advertisers). We disclose advertiser relationships here
at Read/WriteWeb, though you’ll notice that I didn’t disclose — until
now — that Federated Media handles some of our advertising. This is
something that I personally think borders on the absurd. Sure some
people might be conflicted about biting the hand that feeds them, so to
speak, and writing negatively about an advertiser. But journalism
(which, let’s face it, is what many bloggers strive for) has long been
an advertising supported medium, and the relationship between writers
and advertisers is obvious to readers.

You’ll never see, for example, Brian Williams on the NBC Nightly
News conclude a story about Ford Motor company by saying that Ford
advertises on the NBC family of networks (which includes USA, Bravo,
CNBC, MSNBC, etc.). The New York Times doesn’t stop to disclose
that the movie they’re reviewing has a display ad in their Arts
section. In fact, the screenshot below depicts the Times’ Arts web page
today. Notice the review of the “Bourne Ultimatum” right next to an
advert for the very same movie. The review was favorable, and didn’t
include any disclosures, but I don’t think anyone thinks that the paper
was shilling for ad dollars.

Further, as my NBC example may have illustrated, full disclosure can
get even trickier for journalists in today’s landscape of media
conglomerates. In a piece from three weeks ago in Slate about Rupert Murdoch’s then-impending purchase of Dow Jones, Jack Shafer wrote about what the full Wall Street Journal
disclosure will look like when News Corp. assumes control of the
newspaper. As Shafer said, it’s “almost as long as the Manhattan
telephone book.”

“Presently, the Wall Street Journal doesn’t run a
disclosure every time it cites a CNBC show or makes a passing mention
of a publication or business that competes with Dow Jones. So there’s
no obvious reason why a News Corp.-owned Journal would have to disclose
its parent company’s holdings if it mentioned Facebook, a movie from
Paramount Pictures, a book from Random House, a show on NBC, the New
York Daily News, LexisNexis, ESPN, Comcast, the Dish Network, or any of
the thousands of companies that directly compete with News Corp.

But common sense would dictate the inclusion of some sort of
rider in full-fledged news stories about News Corp. competitors. My
rough estimate indicates that upwards of a dozen News Corp. competitors
make Journal-worthy news each day.”

When to Disclose

Disclosure is necessary, however, and at times I think that maybe it
is the overzealous trend toward complete and utter transparency offered
by bloggers that makes blogs so attractive to readers. So when should you disclose?

  • Financial association — I don’t mean advertising, which is
    obvious, but less clear affiliations such as investments, ownership, or
    partial-ownership. For example, WIRED should mention they own Reddit
    when they write about the company. (Of course, you might not always even know when you’re investing in a company.)
  • Employment — If you are paid by a company you are writing about as an employee, contractor, or consultant, you should disclose that.
  • Competition — If you are writing specifically about
    a direct competitor to a company you are involved with in an
    aforementioned manner, especially if you’re writing in a negative
    way, it is probably best to disclose it. For example, WIRED should
    disclose that they own Reddit whenever they write about Digg.
  • Personal involvement – This is by far the trickiest. As I
    illustrated before, personal or emotional involvement with stories can
    get complicated and, well, personal. I don’t think it always needs to
    be disclosed. For example, I don’t feel the need to disclose my
    political views whenever I write about politics. However, if I’m
    reviewing a company run by a close friend, I would disclose that fact
    or pass the story to a writer with less emotional involvement.

You’ll notice that I don’t include a rule about disclosing when you
were paid to write about a specific topic or company. The reason is
that any blogger who wants to be taken seriously as a journalist cannot
and will not accept money or gifts from a source (or vice versa). That
said, it should also be noted that there is a big difference between
accepting gifts in exchange for writing a story and accepting review
copies of goods for free. Last year a total non-scandal erupted when Microsoft handed out laptops loaded with Vista
to select tech bloggers. These were not bribes or gifts or payments, as
some people later called them — they were review copies of Vista that
Microsoft (smartly) tried to make sure were loaded in an optimal
machine before being reviewed. I used to work as an editor for an
online computer game magazine and we never paid for the things we
reviewed, and very often were sent pricey pieces of software or
hardware that companies didn’t ask us to return. But we never disclosed
that fact, or let the fact that we didn’t pay for our review copies
influence our reviews.

In 2004 Nick Denton, owner of blog network Gawker Media, called for a code of ethics for bloggers to cover, among other ethical quagmires, the tricky and complicated maze that is disclosure.

“The guidelines would cover questions such as photo
copyright, freebies, pay-to-post deals, editorial tie-ins, paid text
links. They would be voluntary. But sites that adhered to them would be
able to indicate that they met certain blog ethics standards.”

To my knowledge, nothing has ever been accomplished in this area. Earlier this year Tim O’Reilly began to draft a Blogger’s Code of Conduct, but curiously absent are ethical concerns like disclosure policy. Perhaps it is time to revive Denton’s idea?

Conclusion

As I said, blogging is still a very new medium and its evolution is
just beginning. Bloggers are still figuring out by trial and error how
to deal with things like disclosure. I’ll close by borrowing from Vaughn Ververs, writing last year for the CBS blog “Public Eye” about the topic of disclosure:

“The world can be pretty complicated, do simple
disclosures on the part of journalists really do anything to clarify
it? Who is to judge what type of disclosure is germane to a story? If
it’s an example of, you-know-it-when-you-see-it, isn’t it
just one more judgment call that is open to everyone’s individual
interpretation?”

What sort of disclosures do you think are necessary for bloggers? Do
bloggers go overboard? Or do they not disclose enough? Leave your
thoughts in the comments below.

(Full disclosure: I was talking to Allen Stern on instant messenger when I first starting writing this piece. ;))

Blogging Ethics: When And What Should Bloggers Disclose?

Blogging Ethics: When And What Should Bloggers Disclose?
Written by Josh Catone / August 3, 2007 / 7 commentsIs there a new blogger scandal brewing? Allen Stern over at CenterNetworks seems to think so. Allen takes issue with the new video blog Webb Alert (which mentioned Read/WriteWeb today), saying that the blog doesn’t disclose its connection with advertising network Federated Media (which hosts it and sells advertising for it) and suspects that the whole thing may be an elaborate scheme to push traffic to FM clients (and notes that FM clients have been gushing over the show in return for the disproportionate links they get).

I honestly don’t think there’s any conspiracy here, but Allen’s post sheds light on a larger subject: the journalistic practice of disclosure. Blogging is still in its relative infancy and bloggers are still struggling to figure out when and how they should disclose potential conflicts of interest in an ongoing effort to gain legitimacy and garner respect from readers and other media producers.
The Ins and Outs of Disclosure

Disclosure is a tricky business and as a practice is still ill-defined even in the realm of traditional journalism. The general idea is that anything that might be seen as a potential conflict of interest between a writer and the subject of his story should be disclosed to the reader. If I invested in a startup I am writing about, for example, or if the CEO is my best friend, I should disclose that fact. But it’s not always so cut and dry.

Journalistic disclosure is something that the ombudsman at National Public Radio writes about a lot. In November of 2005, he published an interesting piece on the subject asking, “Do journalists have an obligation to disclose a personal, as well as a professional, connection to a source?” This is an instance when knowing when to disclose is not so clear. The NPR ombudsman talks about an episode when a disc jockey on the radio network mentions in passing a columnist from Slate magazine as a source, but fails to disclose that the columnist is also her husband.

Should she have disclosed that fact? The ombudsman concludes that the she should have, writing, “In this case, more disclosure would have been better than less. By finding another person to quote, the program would have avoided giving an impression of familial favoritism.” But what if the columnist in question had not been a family member, but a former co-worker? Or someone whom the radio DJ had interviewed in the past? Is disclosure still necessary? Or, what if the columnist and DJ had been romantically involved in the past but aren’t any longer? Does she need to discuss her sex life on air in the interest of journalistic integrity? You can see that it becomes quickly confusing, and at times overtly personal.

Sometimes I think bloggers take disclosures too far. Specifically, bloggers nearly universally seem to think that they must disclose advertising relationships when writing about companies that they run ads for (but then many paradoxically make specific posts thanking and praising those advertisers). We disclose advertiser relationships here at Read/WriteWeb, though you’ll notice that I didn’t disclose — until now — that Federated Media handles some of our advertising. This is something that I personally think borders on the absurd. Sure some people might be conflicted about biting the hand that feeds them, so to speak, and writing negatively about an advertiser. But journalism (which, let’s face it, is what many bloggers strive for) has long been an advertising supported medium, and the relationship between writers and advertisers is obvious to readers.

You’ll never see, for example, Brian Williams on the NBC Nightly News conclude a story about Ford Motor company by saying that Ford advertises on the NBC family of networks (which includes USA, Bravo, CNBC, MSNBC, etc.). The New York Times doesn’t stop to disclose that the movie they’re reviewing has a display ad in their Arts section. In fact, the screenshot below depicts the Times’ Arts web page today. Notice the review of the “Bourne Ultimatum” right next to an advert for the very same movie. The review was favorable, and didn’t include any disclosures, but I don’t think anyone thinks that the paper was shilling for ad dollars.

Further, as my NBC example may have illustrated, full disclosure can get even trickier for journalists in today’s landscape of media conglomerates. In a piece from three weeks ago in Slate about Rupert Murdoch’s then-impending purchase of Dow Jones, Jack Shafer wrote about what the full Wall Street Journal disclosure will look like when News Corp. assumes control of the newspaper. As Shafer said, it’s “almost as long as the Manhattan telephone book.”

“Presently, the Wall Street Journal doesn’t run a disclosure every time it cites a CNBC show or makes a passing mention of a publication or business that competes with Dow Jones. So there’s no obvious reason why a News Corp.-owned Journal would have to disclose its parent company’s holdings if it mentioned Facebook, a movie from Paramount Pictures, a book from Random House, a show on NBC, the New York Daily News, LexisNexis, ESPN, Comcast, the Dish Network, or any of the thousands of companies that directly compete with News Corp.

But common sense would dictate the inclusion of some sort of rider in full-fledged news stories about News Corp. competitors. My rough estimate indicates that upwards of a dozen News Corp. competitors make Journal-worthy news each day.”

When to Disclose

Disclosure is necessary, however, and at times I think that maybe it is the overzealous trend toward complete and utter transparency offered by bloggers that makes blogs so attractive to readers. So when should you disclose?

* Financial association — I don’t mean advertising, which is obvious, but less clear affiliations such as investments, ownership, or partial-ownership. For example, WIRED should mention they own Reddit when they write about the company. (Of course, you might not always even know when you’re investing in a company.)
* Employment — If you are paid by a company you are writing about as an employee, contractor, or consultant, you should disclose that.
* Competition — If you are writing specifically about a direct competitor to a company you are involved with in an aforementioned manner, especially if you’re writing in a negative way, it is probably best to disclose it. For example, WIRED should disclose that they own Reddit whenever they write about Digg.
* Personal involvement – This is by far the trickiest. As I illustrated before, personal or emotional involvement with stories can get complicated and, well, personal. I don’t think it always needs to be disclosed. For example, I don’t feel the need to disclose my political views whenever I write about politics. However, if I’m reviewing a company run by a close friend, I would disclose that fact or pass the story to a writer with less emotional involvement.

You’ll notice that I don’t include a rule about disclosing when you were paid to write about a specific topic or company. The reason is that any blogger who wants to be taken seriously as a journalist cannot and will not accept money or gifts from a source (or vice versa). That said, it should also be noted that there is a big difference between accepting gifts in exchange for writing a story and accepting review copies of goods for free. Last year a total non-scandal erupted when Microsoft handed out laptops loaded with Vista to select tech bloggers. These were not bribes or gifts or payments, as some people later called them — they were review copies of Vista that Microsoft (smartly) tried to make sure were loaded in an optimal machine before being reviewed. I used to work as an editor for an online computer game magazine and we never paid for the things we reviewed, and very often were sent pricey pieces of software or hardware that companies didn’t ask us to return. But we never disclosed that fact, or let the fact that we didn’t pay for our review copies influence our reviews.

In 2004 Nick Denton, owner of blog network Gawker Media, called for a code of ethics for bloggers to cover, among other ethical quagmires, the tricky and complicated maze that is disclosure.

“The guidelines would cover questions such as photo copyright, freebies, pay-to-post deals, editorial tie-ins, paid text links. They would be voluntary. But sites that adhered to them would be able to indicate that they met certain blog ethics standards.”

To my knowledge, nothing has ever been accomplished in this area. Earlier this year Tim O’Reilly began to draft a Blogger’s Code of Conduct, but curiously absent are ethical concerns like disclosure policy. Perhaps it is time to revive Denton’s idea?
Conclusion

As I said, blogging is still a very new medium and its evolution is just beginning. Bloggers are still figuring out by trial and error how to deal with things like disclosure. I’ll close by borrowing from Vaughn Ververs, writing last year for the CBS blog “Public Eye” about the topic of disclosure:

“The world can be pretty complicated, do simple disclosures on the part of journalists really do anything to clarify it? Who is to judge what type of disclosure is germane to a story? If it’s an example of, you-know-it-when-you-see-it, isn’t it just one more judgment call that is open to everyone’s individual interpretation?”

What sort of disclosures do you think are necessary for bloggers? Do bloggers go overboard? Or do they not disclose enough? Leave your thoughts in the comments below.

(Full disclosure: I was talking to Allen Stern on instant messenger when I first starting writing this piece. ;))

Powered by ScribeFire.

Central Park West Loses Decades-Old Market

Stories

Central Park West Loses Decades-Old Market

Gristede'sThe
empty facade of the Gristedes supermarket on Central Park West that
closed last weekend. (Photo: David W. Dunlap/The New York Times)

It is not easy to find a grocery store on Central Park West. In
fact, it is not easy to find a store of any kind. But for 42 years
— until last weekend — Gristedes operated a 3,200-square-foot supermarket at the West 62nd Street corner of the Century apartment building.

Once a year, on marathon day, the store appeared to be as jammed as Fairway
(if Fairway shoppers wore aluminum foil capes). At other times, it was
simply a modest neighborhood convenience. In late evenings this week,
doormen at the Century were still intercepting eastbound pedestrians
hurrying along 62nd Street, trying to get to Gristedes before 9 p.m. In
more senses than one, the shoppers were too late. It had closed for
good.

flyerA Fresh Direct advertisement bidding farewell to the Central Park West Gristedes.

John A. Catsimatidis, the chairman, president and chief executive of
the Red Apple Group, which owns Gristedes, was quoted this week on The Real Deal
as blaming a steep rent increase. (He was also quoted as saying the
store had “been there for 50 years at least,” but Gristede
Brothers actually signed the lease in 1965.) His office did not return
phone calls this afternoon.

FreshDirect lost no time in reminding neighbors of the changed foodscape.

“Goodbye, Gristedes,” said postcards that arrived on Thursday. “Hello, FreshDirect!” Meanwhile, the Lansco Corporation
is marketing the retail space by noting its location “amid New
York’s most renowned new condominium residences.”

That doesn’t seem to describe the kind of place where you can pick up a quart of milk or a roll of toilet paper.

 City Room .

Powered by ScribeFire.

VING RHAMES' DOGS KILL 40 YR. OLD MAN

Stories

The Daily Breeze

12:30 p.m.:
Caretaker found dead at Ving Rhames’ Brentwood home appeared to have
“injuries as a result of the mauling,” police said. Two of four dogs
taken into custody weigh about 200 pounds.

A man working as a caretaker at a Brentwood
residence owned by actor Ving Rhames was found dead on the property
today after being mauled by two dogs, authorities said.

The man died
at the scene of the attack, which was reported about 7:15 a.m. in the
12900 block of San Vicente Boulevard, said Los Angeles police Officer
Sandra Gonzalez. His name was withheld pending notification of
relatives.

Los Angeles police Lt. Ray Lombardo told ABC7 that the man, in his 40s, had been a caretaker at the residence about two years.

He “appears to have suffered a number of injuries as a result of the dog mauling,” Lombardo said.

“There
were dogs loose on the property. Those dogs have been captured by
animal regulation (officers),” he said. “We have four dogs
that have been taken into custody for quarantine pending further
investigation …” Police believe two of the four dogs — both
weighing about 200 pounds — were involved in the attack.

“Both
those dogs are mastiffs; they’re rather large,” Lombardo
said. “Normally we understand they are pretty friendly dogs. But,
you know, there are occasions where dogs will turn on their owners or
their caretakers, and this looks like a tragic accident.”

The man had numerous dog bites all over his body, but the exact cause of death was pending a coroner’s ruling.

Authorities
said they could not be sure whether it was the dog mauling that proved
fatal, or if the man suffered some other type of health problem, such
as a heart attack, brought on by the dog attack.

Rhames, who appeared in the “Mission Impossible” films, was not at home when the attack occurred, police said.

Powered by ScribeFire.

More California E-Voting Reports Released; More Bad News

Stories

Yesterday the California Secretary of State released
the reports of three source code study teams that analyzed the source
code of e-voting systems from Diebold, Hart InterCivic, and Sequoia.

All three reports found many serious vulnerabilities. It seems
likely that computer viruses could be constructed that could infect any
of the three systems, spread between voting machines, and steal votes
on the infected machines. All three systems use central tabulators
(machines at election headquarters that accumulate ballots and report
election results) that can be penetrated without great effort.

It’s hard to convey the magnitude of the problems in a short
blog post. You really have read through the reports — the
shortest one is 78 pages — to appreciate the sheer volume and
diversity of severe vulnerabilities.

It is interesting (at least to me as a computer security guy) to see
how often the three companies made similar mistakes. They misuse
cryptography in the same ways: using fixed unchangeable keys, using
ciphers in ECB mode, using a cyclic redundancy code for data integrity,
and so on. Their central tabulators use poorly protected database
software. Their code suffers from buffer overflows, integer overflow
errors, and format string vulnerabilities. They store votes in a way
that compromises the secret ballot.

Some of these are problems that the vendors claimed to have fixed years ago. For example, Diebold claimed (p. 11)
in 2003 that its use of hard-coded passwords was “resolved in
subsequent versions of the software”. Yet the current version
still uses at least two hard-coded passwords — one is
“diebold” (report, p. 46) and another is the eight-byte sequence 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 (report, p. 45).

Similarly, Diebold in 2003 ridiculed (p. 6)
the idea that their software could suffer from buffer overflows:
“Unlike a Web server or other Internet enabled applications, the
code is not vulnerable to most ‘buffer overflow attacks’ to
which the authors [Kohno et al.]
refer. This form of attack is almost entirely inapplicable to our
application. In the limited number of cases in which it would apply, we
have taken the steps necessary to ensure correctness.” Yet the
California source code study found several buffer overflow
vulnerabilities in Diebold’s systems (e.g., issues 5.1.6, 5.2.3
(”multiple buffer overflows”), and 5.2.18 in the report).

As far as I can tell, major news outlets haven’t taken much
notice of these reports. That in itself may be the most eloquent
commentary on the state of e-voting: reports of huge security holes in
e-voting systems are barely even newsworthy any more.

Freedom to Tinker

Powered by ScribeFire.

Stocks Tumble amid Subprime Turmoil

Stories

Financial issues plunged Friday on a spate of negative mortgage
headlines. The Fed will be in a tricky position at next week’s meeting

Who said Summer is dead on Wall Street? Major U.S. stock indexes
started August with another wild week, capped by an honest-to-goodness
rout Friday. Once again, the main culprit behind the sell-off was
investor fears over the subprime-loan mess, and the degree to which
hobbled credit markets may hinder U.S. economic growth.

On Friday, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 281.42 points, or
2.09%, to 13,181.91. The broader S&P 500 index was off 39.14
points, or 2.66%, to 1,433.06. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index
dropped 64.73 points, or 2.51%, to 2,528.89.

There was plenty of bad news to go around. A move by ratings agency
Standard & Poor’s to lower its credit outlook on Bear Stearns Cos. (BSC)
to negative also weighed on sentiment, as did a comment by the firm’s
CFO on a conference call with analysts that fixed-income market turmoil
is the worst in 22 years. Meanwhile, mortgage lender American Home
Mortgage (AHM) basically closed up shop amid financing difficulties.

Investors also weighed a disappointing report on job growth in July and
a decline in a service-sector sentiment gauge for the month, both of
which suggested the economy isn’t growing at the pace some people had
hoped.

Investment banking and homebuilding stocks were among the groups plunging on the credit-market fears.

Stocks Tumble amid Subprime Turmoil

GEORGE STEINBRENNER IS NOT WELL

Stories

GEORGE IS FADING


Friday, August 3rd 2007, 2:54 PM


George Steinbrenner

George Steinbrenner making an appearance at Yankees spring training camp
earlier this year. There has been much speculation about Steinbrenner’s
health in recent months.


George
Steinbrenner “looks dreadful,” his “body is bloated” and “his skin
looks as if a dry-cleaner bag has been stretched over it,” according to
a lengthy article about The Boss coming out in the September issue of
the magazine Conde Nast Portfolio.

“He doesn’t look all right. In fact, he looks dreadful,” Franz Lidz,
the author of the piece, writes in the story, which hits newsstands
Aug.15. “Steinbrenner’s face, pale and swollen, has a curiously
undefined look.”

There has been much speculation about Steinbrenner’s health in
recent months, and The Boss rarely makes public appearances – he’s been
at only one Yankee game this season, the April2 opener. But, according
to team officials and Steinbrenner’s personal spokesman, Howard
Rubenstein, the Boss is still active in the Yankee decision-making
process and recently he was involved in organizational meetings near
the trade deadline.

Steinbrenner was seen often by reporters during spring training, but
at times walked unsteadily in the hallways at Legends Field. In a
recent interview with The Associated Press, in which he said GM Brian
Cashman was “on a big hook” this year, Steinbrenner’s responses seemed
lucid.

But the Conde Nast story seemingly paints a different picture. Lidz
recounts a visit to Steinbrenner’s home in Tampa with Tom McEwen, a
longtime Steinbrenner pal, in which, according to Lidz, Steinbrenner
answers a series of different questions, including inquiries about his
wife, Joan, by saying, “Great to see ya, Tommy.”

Lidz writes:

“McEwen asks about his sons, Hank and Hal. ‘Great to see ya, Tommy,’ he says.

McEwen asks about his daughters, Jennifer and Jessica.

‘Great to see ya, Tommy,’ he says.

McEwen asks about his health.

Steinbrenner sighs heavily and mutters, ‘Oh, I’m all right.'”

Rubenstein said that Lidz and McEwen “came in under false pretenses”
and that Steinbrenner didn’t know Lidz was there to report a story.
Lidz writes that McEwen “introduces me as a writer working on a story.”

“George was better off saying, as a gentleman would, ‘Nice to see
you, nice to see you,’ rather than something harsh,” Rubenstein said.
“George remained a gentleman and they really shouldn’t have come in
under false pretenses.”

Asked about Steinbrenner’s health yesterday, Rubenstein said, “I’m
not going to go beyond saying that I talk to George almost every
day….He’s OK and he’s still an active participant in every decision.”

NY DAILY NEWS

Powered by ScribeFire.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started