And Another One: CNN Found 'Ripping Off' Others' Reporting
from the this-happens-all-the-time dept
Remember a few weeks back when a Washington Post reporter claimed that Gawker was "ripping off" his reporting, despite the fact that the Gawker piece linked back to the original article three times? Since then, we've noted how common it is for the mainstream press to do much worse to bloggers, quite often giving them no credit at all and pretending they came up with the stories entirely on their own.Well, here we go again...
If you're a reader of Reason, you're probably well aware of the massive amount of work that writer Radley Balko has put into investigating Steven Hayne, a controversial Mississippi medical examiner, whose testimony and autopsy practices were called into serious question by Balko's research and reporting. Balko has spent years exposing Hayne (and some of his colleagues) for practices that, if true, are abhorrent. Balko's investigative research and reporting has been instrumental in overturning questionable verdicts. If you're looking into Steven Hayne, there's simply no way you can avoid Balko's reporting and research on the subject.
And, it appears that CNN didn't avoid Balko's research and reporting either, in its own reporting on Hayne, as a part of Anderson Cooper 360. Much of what was done by CNN appears to have come straight from Balko's research -- and sources quoted by CNN told Balko that CNN claims it found them via his articles. But, does CNN credit Balko for any of it? Nope. Not at all.
Because, you see, it's only "ripping off" when it's the "alternative media" properly citing the mainstream press... not when the mainstream press doesn't credit the alternative media at all.
As Tim Lee notes, there's nothing wrong with what CNN did, but it does show how silly it is to claim that it's these other sites or "parasitic aggregators" that "rip off" the mainstream press, when the mainstream media has been doing the same thing for ages -- and continues to do it without any qualms whatsoever. Tim notes:
Now this isn't illegal. Nor should it be. But it is rather unprofessional. And I think it's a good illustration of what's wrong with the standard story about large media organizations producing the news and blogs cutting and pasting. Not only does the sharing goes in both directions, but I think people have a skewed perception of which direction is more common precisely because blogs do a better job of crediting their sources. When Gawker builds on a Washington Post story, they don't try to pretend it was original reporting; they give credit, provide a link, and they'll often just quote the original story rather than re-interviewing all the same sources. So it's obvious who's copying whom. In contrast, when a mainstream media outlet like CNN decides to build on the reporting of an online source, they do a lot of extra (and possibly unnecessary) work to avoid giving credit. One consequence is that only in really blatant cases (like this one) does anyone catch them.Indeed. But whereas the story from the Washington Post reporter kicked up a huge discussion on ethics of reporting, who wants to bet that this one dies a quiet death without the mainstream media mentioning it at all?
There's a clear double standard here. If it's wrong for a blogger to build a story on a mainstream media story with attribution and a link, it's even more wrong for a mainstream media outlet to build on a blogger's story without a word of credit. CNN owes Radley a prominent link to his past work. And an apology.
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Filed Under: anderson cooper, journalism, radley balko, ripping off, steven hayne
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No wonder . . .
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http://www.365black.com
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The reality is that once Balko published the information, other media will go sniffing around looking for a story. CNN didn't just copy his blog and call it even, they contacted people interviewed them, and drew their own story from it.
it isn't the same as just gently re-writing someone else's text.
Another big reach from Techdirt.
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"Another big reach from Techdirt."
So first you agree that the media benefited from Balko and didn't give him credit and then you claim Techdirt is making a big reach to claim that's what they did.
"it isn't the same as just gently re-writing someone else's text."
So they paraphrased it. The fact is that mainstream media wants a monopoly on the information they provide but they don't want average Joe Blow to have a monopoly on the information they provide and they want attribution when someone uses them as a source but they give no attribution when they benefit from someone else. It's a double standard.
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Nope, even the story as printed here shows that CNN people contacted and interviewed people about the story (as this is how this all "came out"), and used those interviews for a story. They wrote and reported their own version of the story.
It isn't any different from a newspaper revealing a corruption scandal, and having the TV news that night report the same thing. It is unlikely that they would give credit either (except possibly in passing.
What I don't get is this: Techdirt (Mike) is particular about trying to tear down copyright / patent so people can use other people's ideas and property, add 1% to it, and claim it as their own. Yet when there is even a sniff of the mainstream media doing the same, suddenly it is a terrible thing?
The news never resets to zero. A story that is out there is a story that is out there. CNN did nothing wrong, they saw a published story, investigated further, interviewed people, and reported what they found. Tomorrow, CNN will break that Obama said something naughty, and every blog in the universe will be all over it. If they weren't there, how are they reporting it? Oh wait, they are paraphrasing CNN, without bothering to interview anyone to get their own story.
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No, you are building a strawman. The mainstream media is the one that used other peoples "ideas" and "property" added 1 percent to it, and claimed it as their own yet your double standard mindedness just ignores the facts.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
"What I don't get is this: Techdirt (Mike) is particular about trying to tear down copyright / patent so people can use other people's ideas and property, add 1% to it, and claim it as their own. Yet when there is even a sniff of the mainstream media doing the same, suddenly it is a terrible thing?"
Ok, now try and follow along. Mike thinks that way, ok? MSM violates this by complaining, loudly, when Bloggers do it to them. Mike says this is against his thinking. Now MSM turns around and does it back. Mike says 'it is a terrible thing', for the sole reason that they JUST insisted that doing that is a terrible thing. He is pointing out their hypocrisy.
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its a Murdoch Moment ....
1) You have fear in the print mendia
2) You have business decisions coming into play
3) The business decisions are all based on uncertainty
Linking away doesnt make any money... that seems to be the problem here ... we heard that same reasoning in the 1990's and still hear it from new sites trying to keep people on their site. But linking away does give people a reason to come back. You can no longer just dictate the news and tell people this is the news and the truth you "MUST" say here is the story, here is what we know.
And sometimes I do have a rant that is worth reading ...
... Big Ole Grin
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Re: its a Murdoch Moment ....
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Re: Re: its a Murdoch Moment ....
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Re: Re: its a Murdoch Moment ....
Now go ahead and try proving that.
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Re: Re: its a Murdoch Moment ....
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CNN's own story
Tell us the two most important facts CNN added to Balko's reporting when they "drew their own story" from interviews conducted with Balko's sources.
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