[IP] "Battle-blogging for profit" -- Yahoo, China, and news as entertainment [fs]
Begin forwarded message:
From: Declan McCullagh <declan@xxxxxxxx>
Date: October 12, 2005 5:34:01 PM EDT
To: politech@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Politech] "Battle-blogging for profit" -- Yahoo, China, and
news as entertainment [fs]
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: for politech consideration: op-ed re: law + internet, China
+ Yahoo...
Date: Tue, 11 Oct 2005 10:40:56 -0700
From: Xeni Jardin <xeni@xxxxxxxx>
To: 'Declan McCullagh' <declan@xxxxxxxx>
Los Angeles Times | SUNDAY CURRENT
http://tinyurl.com/8tqr4
-----------------------------------
WAR—WHAT IS IT GOOD FOR?
Battle blogging for profit
By Xeni Jardin
Xeni Jardin is co-editor of the blog BoingBoing and a contributor to
Wired
magazine and National Public Radio.
October 9, 2005
AS BLOGS become big business, Internet giants have begun trying to
profit
from new forms of journalism, including war coverage. The results are
not
encouraging.
Yahoo's latest experiment reveals that it considers war news just
another
form of entertainment. This from an online giant that has already
shown it
is cavalier about press freedom and a friend of oppression.
Look back to 2004, when reporters at a Hunan province newspaper
listened as
their editorial director read a statement from the Communist Party's
Propaganda Department about the upcoming 15-year commemoration of the
Tiananmen Square massacre. It warned that dissidents may use the
Internet to
spread "damaging information."
One reporter used an anonymous Yahoo e-mail account to ask a
colleague in
New York to post a report about the statement on pro-democracy website
Minzhu Tongxun (Democracy Newsletter).
But as the 37-year-old married reporter behind the numeric pseudonym
"198964" learned, he shouldn't have assumed that Yahoo defends press
freedom. When Chinese security agents asked executives at Yahoo Holdings
(Hong Kong) to identify the man, they did so. Police grabbed him on a
street, searched his house and seized his computer and other belongings,
according to documents filed in his defense.
Mr. "198964," whose real name is Shi Tao, is serving a 10-year jail
sentence
for "divulging state secrets abroad." Bloggers, human rights groups and
journalism organizations, including PEN and Reporters Without Borders,
condemned the action.
Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang brushed off responsibility. At an Internet
conference Sept. 10 in Hangzhou, China, Yang said Yahoo and other
U.S.-based
multinationals "have to comply with local law."
Or else what? They lose access, that's what, which means losing profits.
Shi Tao's attorney, Guo Guoting — who was detained, placed under house
arrest and shut out of his office before his client's trial — argues
that
the company has a greater obligation to international law than to
local law.
"China is a signatory of the [U.N.] International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights," Guo told the Hong Kong independent daily
Epoch
Times. "Shi Tao … was legitimately practicing his profession, not
committing
a crime. The legal entity of Yahoo Holdings [Hong Kong] is not in
China, so
it is not obligated to operate within the laws of China or to
cooperate with
Chinese police."
As morally repugnant as Yahoo's actions may be, other tech vendors
before it
have acted similarly. "Many big companies, such as Microsoft and
Nortel, in
their quest to gain shares of the large Internet market in China,
transform
China into an information prison by collaborating with the Chinese
regime on
questions of censorship," Guo said. "They should not forget all moral
principles under the temptation of financial gain."
Yahoo's hypocrisy is even more shameful because it is also in the news
business. The company recently opened a news production division with
promises of hard-hitting stories that U.S. mainstream media are
afraid to
report.
Yahoo launched "Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone," pledging to send the
former
television reporter to "every armed conflict in the world within one
year"
and dispatch blog-sized "bites" of war.
Several years ago, I introduced Sites to the world of blogs,
collaborating
with geek friends to launch kevinsites.net. I helped him publish his
firsthand impressions of the Iraq war as a not-for-profit project.
But as
the war heated up, Sites' employer, CNN, forced him to shut down the
blog.
Sites later joined NBC and videotaped the shooting by a Marine of an
unarmed
Iraqi. As a way to explain why that piece of truth mattered, he
reopened his
blog. (Last November, these pages excerpted his explanation of the
shooting.) Another "warblogger" is BBC news producer Stuart Hughes, who
stepped on a landmine while covering the Iraq war. On his blog, he
documented the amputation of his right leg and his recovery. Like me,
he is
troubled about "Hot Zone."
"It seems like the journalistic equivalent of a Simpson and Bruckheimer
high-concept movie — all concept and very little content," Hughes
said from
London. "I've lost too many friends in war zones — and come too close
myself
— to have any time for this 'stamp-collecting' approach to conflict. The
presentation is distasteful — war reporting comes with a strong public
service agenda, and it's cheapened by this 'Geraldo Rivera'
presentation.
This goal of covering every armed conflict in the world — so what? At
what
cost? It leaves a very nasty taste in my mouth."
The launch of Yahoo's corporate-powered warblog, and its promise of more
newsertainment to follow, raises anew the question how to define
journalism.
One obvious answer: Real journalists don't treat war as
entertainment, and
real news companies don't help imprison a man for reporting the truth
— even
if that would ensure profits.
# # #
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