Ripped Off News? Or Spreading The News?
from the what's-the-problem-here dept
It appears that some (certainly not all) in the mainstream press still seems to have problems understanding the value of getting people to talk about what they reported on. They seem to come at this viewpoint from the old line of thinking that a reporter reported on the story and that was it. The story was done. But that's not the way the news works. A news story is simply a part of the conversation. It may be a starting point in a bigger effort -- which is why it's important for so many people today to be able to spread and share the news with others. Yet, if you come at things from a viewpoint of the newspaper article being a final and definitive word, then suddenly such sharing and spreading is viewed as "theft" or being "ripped off" and the person promoting and discussing and sharing your work is suddenly a parasite.Over the weekend, just such a situation cropped up, when Ian Shapira, a writer for the Washington Post wrote about how he felt when the blog Gawker wrote about one of his articles. At first, he was thrilled. It was validation. In fact, he called it "one of journalism's biggest coups." He should have stopped there, because he was right.
But after excitedly telling his editor about it, his editor claimed that Ian was "ripped off" by Gawker... and Ian appears to have come around to that view. But was he really? Not at all. The Gawker post links to the Washington Post three separate times. And, even worse, almost all of the article they quoted wasn't actually Shapira's writing at all, but quotes from the person he was profiling -- someone Shapira most certainly did not pay. As we recently discussed, newspaper reporters regularly get free quotes and free insight and free advice from various experts, that they get to use in their articles. And now suddenly it's "stealing" for someone else to quote the same people (with a link -- or three) back to the story? Please.
At some point, more people will come around to realizing that when others are discussing the stories you helped bring forth and linking back to you, it's time to join in the conversation -- not scream and whine about others stealing. That just makes it less likely anyone will ever write about one of your stories again.
This isn't even an issue about fair use, as some are suggesting. It's an issue about common sense. If you have a story, you'd better want it to spread, and what better way to get it to spread than to get more people talking about it wherever they want to talk about it. You can't keep all the discussion at your site, nor should you want to. Doing so only guarantees no one cares about what you have to write.
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Filed Under: ian shapira, journalism, news, sharing, spreading
Companies: gawker, washington post
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Although they seem to have conveniently not come up with a way of doing this! Seriously though, if they really wanted to, they could come up with a short url system for referencing online articles.
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If they got what they want
If you didn't already subscribe, how would you know to go there? Would it even really be news if only one site could talk about it?
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Re: If they got what they want
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Re: Re: If they got what they want
So, we'd have a television news sourced system. I get 5 different news programs beamed over the air for free to my television several times a day, and each channel provides its news on-line for free, frequently with video clips of the aired news story. All that news is already paid for by the time it gets to me, they never have wanted money from anyone else, because they've already been compensated by their advertisers.
Additionally, local bloggers who first-hand witness news in progress would be another point of news creation. A passerby with a camera phone captures the event, and then the blogosphere spreads the news and analyzes it, while also conducting investigations into validity and background information on the incident. Investigative journalism would happen in the public, in real-time, by real people. And would build upon other people's efforts in a community developed news story.
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Be Careful What You Wish For
This is not the case of one of those 4 sentence AP articles where one is the title as a full sentence and another is "John Doe could not be reached for comment before press time." And it's also not a case where the established media repackaged a press release or agency/court filing. It took 2 days to investigate and package this info for distribution, and 30-60 min for Gawker to repackage it.
On top of that, the Gawker article includes pretty much all the meat of Wapo's investigation, and after reading it, there's no need to click through (this guy does the math). It's one thing to republish an rss title+summary (what part of really simple syndication do they not understand), but Gawker basically took all the important stuff.
And while it's likely that this isn't copyright infringement and hot news is likely no longer good law, this is the exact ammo that the established media will take to Congress, which will then hand over hot news on a silver platter.
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"And, even worse, almost all of the article they quoted wasn't actually Shapira's writing at all, but quotes from the person he was profiling -- someone Shapira most certainly did not pay"
Yes, the original reporter didn't actually pay for the quotes, but if you read the story, he spent hours in the interview and editing process, something for which a salary was paid to him. Then Gawker just copies it all in to their own article, with no work needed. Would Gawker be willing to spend the hours necessary to get all those quotes from the interview participant? No. But hey, its just part of the conversation man... roll with it.
There is a line between quoting or summarizing another's article, and wholesale rewriting it via copy/paste.
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Re:
Yes, and the experts he was interviewing spent years at school studying(which was an out of pocket expense for them), as well as (presumably) many years of work in the field (which they are receiving salary for) to gather the knowledge that they are sharing for free with this reporter. The REPORTER is the one who deserves the credit for this knowledge? Because he spent hours interviewing people and assembling information, and cost the newspaper maybe hundreds of dollars (as opposed to the experts, who spent YEARS and have cost millions of dollars)? I hope that you can see how badly your logic fails here.
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Unfortunately, this seems to be a fairly common model in todays media saturated world. Used to be "journalists" required multiple sources before they would report on something. Today, if I post something and three different sites link to my post, that qualifies as multiple sources. This type of grapevine journalism has many flaws. It is how a story about an accident on the Terry Bradshaw Passway (in Shreveport, Louisiana) turns into an ESPN breaking news post about Terry Bradshaw passing away.
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So what... I get into an accident and I can't talk about it because a reporter happened to be there and now it is... NEWS?
My house gets robbed and I can't blog about it because (well, one my computer was stolen) but secondly, I can't blog about it because it was reported on and is now NEWS?
The newspapers forget that they don't MAKE news... news HAPPENS... and they HAPPEN to be there, or they get someone there... they should never have a monopoly on things that happen.
NEWS is a four-letter word now... may the newspapers burn...
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Re:
1) the free web guys who want to be able to quote 25% or more of a 1,000 word article, or reword someone else's article without even linking back
2) the middle guys who think it's okay to quote without divulging the details/scoop (including aggregating/filtering rss leads), or alternatively, you can write your own entire story from your own sources, regardless of who else has written about it
3) MSM nuts who think that once they write a story on X, no one should be allowed to write a story on X for a few days at least, regardless of independent investigation -- and if you want to quote more than 4 words, regardless of whether those words are clearly in the public domain, you have to pay them.
i think most of us are advocating for the middle position. we're not claiming anyone has ownership of facts. if gawker had called up the person on their own, then there would be nothing wrong. but what gawker did was basically gank wapo's investigation.
likewise, if your house was robbed and the news reported on it, there's nothing wrong with you writing about your house being robbed. the "wrong" part happens when you decide that instead of writing up your own story, you basically mass blockquote from the news article. if you want quotes from the police chief, then go ask the police chief yourself, or find his press release or the arrest form. it's the notion that if these news sites shut down or put up a paywall tomorrow, would gawker's article still exist? no, it wouldn't.
us guys in the middle don't think the debate should be around merely whether you profited off of someone else's work. if you add value to someone else's work, you're more than welcome profit. the problem is that reprinting the meat of the entire investigation and adding a comment section is not value adding -- it's detracting from value to the guys who did the actual work.
there's a certain line, and gawker has crossed it.
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Where does news come from anyway?
Regarding your comment, ". . . almost all of the article they [reporters] quoted wasn't actually Shapira's writing at all, but quotes from the person he was profiling -- someone Shapira most certainly did not pay. As we recently discussed, newspaper reporters regularly get free quotes and free insight and free advice from various experts, that they get to use in their articles. And now suddenly it's 'stealing' for someone else to quote the same people (with a link -- or three) back to the story? Please." Dude, just because a reporter did not pay his source doesn't give you a free ride to the information. Hey, if reporters did have to pay their sources, then you would argue that the quote wasn't unbiased. Give me a break!
Free stuff is charged for all the time. Think about the processor chips you use on your PC - made from sand for which nobody was paid. Similarly, petroleum is pumped out of the ground for free. It is the labor that adds value to everything you use. And it is the labor that should be paid for.
Simply putting links in a lifted article is not sufficient when the entire contents of the article is divulged. When your readers don't feel compelled to link back to the article being commented upon ('cause you gave them the entire scoop), then you've stolen something.
Ironically, I think you handled this article pretty well. You provided a link back to the source, and you gave me a compelling reason to link back to it. :-)
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Re: Where does news come from anyway?
That's not stealing. It might be unethical, but it's not stealing. The rest of your comment makes a good point.
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News happens all around us, all the time. It is the astute reporter that captures it and writes about it. The rest of us pays him or her for this service. In a nutshell, that's how the news business works. If you take the story and republish it, then you're stealing. Covering yourself simply by providing links to the original source is a weak argument.
Actually, it is anybody with an audience that wants to take the time to reference it. In the "good 'ol days" if a newspaper broke a story, all the others would jump on it and begin reporting the same facts the original did. They still do, actually. In this case, the website actually links back to the original article, which is more than physical newspapers ever did. And misconstruing the actions here as "covering" is a weak argument.
Dude, just because a reporter did not pay his source doesn't give you a free ride to the information. Hey, if reporters did have to pay their sources, then you would argue that the quote wasn't unbiased. Give me a break!
Uhh...we already have a free ride to information. Facts are facts. A quote exists because a source chose to say it; it was not created by a reporter.
Simply putting links in a lifted article is not sufficient when the entire contents of the article is divulged. When your readers don't feel compelled to link back to the article being commented upon ('cause you gave them the entire scoop), then you've stolen something.
It's a damn good thing you're here to tell us these things so we can know exactly what all is stealing. Is it stealing if I tell a friend in person about an article, after which he has no desire to read it? Is it stealing if somebody else who heard the quote personally emails it to everybody, thus precluding any desire to read the Post? I have so many questions about stealing, I would be happy if you could pull more arbitrary definitions out of your ass to share with us all.
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Re:
Regarding a "free ride to information," don't believe it. Information only makes it to your computer screen because someone put effort into gathering the facts. Maybe you don't feel like you paid for it, but somebody did.
Regarding your reference of arbitrary definitions out of my ass - dude - don't make this personal. I'm just expressing my opinion, and I'm not, as you say, pulling definitions out of my ass.
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Re:
No, that's not stealing, because you're having a private conversation. The problem is, that's not what Gawker did.
To use your talking-with-a-friend analogy, what Gawker did was akin to filling an auditorium with 6000 of your friends, reading to the audience the best parts of the article -- without adding any analysis or further insight into the matter -- and, here's the biggest issue, placing billboards in the room and charging advertisers for ad space.
So the problem here is the profiting from someone's work unfairly. Gawker is a business, and its ultimate goal is not to promote a conversation -- it's to generate profit. Nothing wrong with that goal itself. In fact, most of Gawker's posts add some sort of commentary or analysis to the subject at hand. In this case, though, they didn't add anything; all they did was summarize the reporter's story, so here I see a problem.
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Sorry, but this is absurd. Knowledge is cumulative. Where do you think science would be if every new generation of scientists had to keep rediscovering the same things over and over again? We would never move forward as a species. When one person interviews the police chief, I can't see why others can't use the same quote, and then maybe spend the time interviewing, say, one of the responding officers instead. This way, we get a fresh perspective instead of rehashing the same ground, as well as being kept up to speed with previous developments. That is how knowledge and information works, it is not something that can be owned or locked down. If this were the case we would still live in caves.
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Why do we want news?
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Re: Why do we want news?
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Copyright and Advertising Revenue
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is it stealing....
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