Huffington Post Finally Removes Most Articles About Fake Email Inventor; Meanwhile, Ayyadurai Threatens To Sue His Critics
from the did-he-invent-slapp-suits-too? dept
Over the weekend, it appears that someone at the Huffington Post finally realized that hoping the fuss over its entirely bogus "history of email" series would blow over wasn't going to happen. In case you missed it last week, we had called out Huffington Post for allowing Shiva Ayyadurai and his friends to post an entirely bogus "history of email" series, all designed to make it look like Ayyadurai himself had invented email -- a claim he's been making for a few years, despite it being entirely false, based on totally misrepresenting a number of things, including what copyright means, misquoting a 1977 research paper and playing "no true scotsman" over what is a "true" email system. Despite the evidence of how wrong Ayyadurai and his friends were, HuffPo allowed the series to go on with more false claims, and then told me it had "added a clarification" that didn't clarify anything, but was a statement written by Ayyadurai, repeating the false claims. On Friday, we wondered how Huffington Post could justify posting obviously false information.
It appears the powers that be at HuffPo finally realized that they had a problem.
All of the posts by Shiva Ayyadurai's friends, making the entirely false argument that he "invented email," have been removed from Huffington Post, redirecting people to this page with the following text:
The post that previously appeared in this space -- part of a blogger-generated series on the history of email -- is no longer available. Readers and media commentators alerted us to factual and sourcing issues in the series and, after an internal review, we removed it from the site.
There are some interesting language choices there. First, note that they admit that it was a "blogger-generated series," which is an attempt to distance the fake series, put together by Shiva Ayyadruai himself with PR guru Larry Weber, from Huffington Post's journalistic "news" side. Ayyadurai and Weber had been banking on the fact that most people don't realize that the blogging side of HuffPo has no editorial controls to pretend that the series had some sort of journalistic credibility. They appear to be promoting the fake articles everywhere, and some of their supporters have been trying to use the Huffington Post series as credible citations for Wikipedia (amusingly, one of their supporters kept trying to reject others pointing to my detailed debunkings by saying it doesn't count since I'm just a blogger -- ignoring that Weber, Ayyadurai and their friends were using HuffPo's blogging platform as well).
Of course, what that note also (conveniently) leaves out is that it wasn't just the "blogger-generated series" that was the problem and has been taken down. HuffPo Live (part of its "journalistic" side) also did a long interview with Ayyadurai, and had articles written up by reporters like Emily Tess Katz (who continues to ignore every question asked about this), repeating ridiculous claims from Ayyadurai about how his critics are just racists who don't like the fact that a "dark-skinned immigrant boy" invented email. Of course the reality is that it has nothing to do with racism, but rather the facts -- which Huffington Post journalists apparently didn't even think were worth the trouble of a quick Googling, to find where all of Ayyadurai's claims had long since been debunked.
Finally, HuffPo didn't actually take down all such articles. There's a blog post from 2013 by Deepak Chopra and Ayyadurai making the same claims that remains on the site. Ayyadurai is associated with Chopra and frequently uses his connection to Chopra as some sort of validation of his claims.
Amusingly, despite HuffPo PR people telling me to email them with any more questions last Wednesday, they ignored every question I sent them since then (with one exception which I'll get to below), and (of course) didn't bother to tell me they had pulled the series either, despite my sending a few questions about whether they intended to keep it up. Instead, a whole bunch of you -- the readers of this site -- let me know. It's almost as if HuffPo wished to sweep the whole thing under the rug.
Of course, one part of the problem may be that Ayyadurai is now claiming in the Economic Times of India that Arianna Huffington herself "commissioned" the series after hearing Ayyadurai give a talk. I asked HuffPo PR (and Arianna directly) if that was accurate and (finally) HuffPo PR got back to me to say that (once again) Ayyadurai is lying, and that "neither HuffPost nor Arianna 'commissioned' Shiva's series."
In that same Economic Times article, there's also the absolutely hilarious claim from Ayyadurai suggesting that he's considering legal action against his "critics."
Shiva Ayyadurai, the man in the middle of a raging controversy over his claims of being the inventor of email, doesn't want to go legal on his detractors but is looking for support from the public. "Lawsuits take a long time. If I have to pull the trigger I will. But I have decided to go directly to the people," Ayyadurai said in an interview with ET.
First off, there is no "raging controversy." There's no controversy at all. Ayyadurai is simply making false claims and that's agreed upon by pretty much everyone who's looked at the evidence. Second, "going to the people" is great, but historically he's done that with clearly bogus claims -- such as misquoting Dave Crocker's 1977 research and pretending that his 1982 copyright on his EMAIL software is the equivalent of a patent for the concept of email. So it's pretty easy to counter that, since the facts are not on his side. As for the idea of a lawsuit, I would hope that any lawyer he discusses a lawsuit with takes the time to look at the details here -- and also understand the laws around SLAPP suits and the nature of the First Amendment. Because I may not be "the inventor of email," but I can guess that any such lawsuits won't end well for Ayyadurai.
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Filed Under: arianna huffington, email, fraud, history, inventor of email, journalism, larry weber, lies, shiva ayyadurai, v.a. shiva ayyadurai
Companies: huffington post
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commercial pubs
you would not expect to get an honest review of a Widget from a pub. which is taking advert. money from the company that makes Widgets.
today pubs often accept comments and such comments may help to shed the proper light on various subjects. and they do, at times. but at times good comments are flagged as "trolling" and trashed by the sys-admins.
the net bottom line is that each of us needs to "be our own man" -- not a "puppet on a string" -- manipulated by whatever public consensus can be blown up by advertisers and propagandists of the times.
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Re:
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Clarification using his own words
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If HuffPo did that, they'd have to take down half the site. They let Joe Mercola have a whole channel to himself!
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Re: Re:
No, that is a description of the current state of US law.
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He determined that the essential features of these systems included functions corresponding to “Inbox”, “Outbox”, “Drafts”, “Memo” (“To:”, “From:”, “Date:”, “Subject:”, “Body:”, “Cc:”, “Bcc:”), “Attachments”, “Folders”, “Compose”, “Forward”, “Reply”, “Address Book”, “Groups”, “Return Receipt”, “Sorting”.
Ok, so he admits to creating the flawed "from:" feature of email that is not validated allowing spammers to hide their identities.
He admits to creating the feature that allows virus "attachments" in emails.
He admits to creating the flawed "address book" that is easily stolen by viruses instead of being protected.
Does this mean I can sue him for every piece of SPAM and virus I've ever received through email? He must be responsible for trillions in damages from his flawed "invention" of email.
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Re:
This is the United States of America. You can sue anyone for anything you want - you just need to be prepared for the fact that you will not win.
Apparently, he's going to be at the courthouse anyway, so have at it.
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Ironically
"Fran Drescher: 'The Nanny' lead Fran Drescher marries email patent holder Dr. Shiva Ayyadurai"
ugh. Wonder where that came from...
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Re: Ironically
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Journalism
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Legal action
*popcorn*
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Re: Re:
Ideally of course the moron would realize he's only digging the hole he's in even deeper by drawing attention to his exaggerations, misleading claims, and outright lies, leading to him shutting his mouth and hoping people go back to forgetting about him, but if he's going to insist on lawyering up, would be nice to see him get slammed in court, hard, by someone willing and capable of doing so.
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Re: Journalism
I'd certainly rather us not go back to the days when a person's two sources for news were a talking head on the TV and some guy at the local newspaper. If this series had been written back then, who would have been there to correct them?
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racism vs. facts -- rewriting history
But it seems facts mean little when it comes to writing children's history books. It took a century before the George Washington cherry tree fable was no longer presented as documented fact in history books, but it remains to be seen how long it takes before the equally-unlikely Crispus Attucks narrative starts to be addressed truthfully. And the Crispus Attucks story is just one of many examples.
As to Ayyadurai's claim of racism, I've noticed that "reverse racism" seems to be the general rule when (re)writing history in the modern era. By tossing out that he was a 'dark-skinned' kid in Newark, it looks like he was trying to ride that sympathy bandwagon by associating himself with an entirely different 'dark-skinned' race and ethnicity. (I wonder if he might also be exploiting the "minority-owned business" pool of perks, subsidies, and freebies that was never intended for people like him.)
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Unless you have enough money to drag the process out so that your opponent is bankrupted before a ruling can be obtained. Then you effectively win.
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Re: Re: Journalism
Me either. I'd like to go back to the time before that. I took a passel of journalism courses in my young 'un days, and I was taught that the multiple sources meant multiple primary sources -- another journalist doesn't count as a source at all.
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Re: racism vs. facts -- rewriting history
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Maybe it was her publicist, or his trying to make him sound big and get more wedding coverage. Even ET wrote he had a patent for email. Wonder if he lied to her too....
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Re: Re: Re: Journalism
It seems like it has been an awfully long time since journalism had any sort of integrity.
I like the new checks-and-balances system we have now as well - people get called out on bulls*** right away these days.
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Re: Legal action
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What is Dr. Nightingale's role?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Journalism
"I like the new checks-and-balances system we have now as well - people get called out on bulls*** right away these days"
Here's the thing: journalism in the US died before the internet started picking up the slack, so there was a number of years when it didn't exist at all. The checks-and-balances system is welcome in that it's a shift back toward some kind of reliability in reporting, but it still has a long way to go, and you still have to examine everything with an extremely critical eye. I don't think it's as effective as you portray quite yet. It's improving, so perhaps it will be, but in my opinion we haven't even reached the level of reliability we had back in the "golden days" of journalism (such as it was).
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Journalism
I agree that it felt like that, but the fact that as a child I remember everyone trusting that what the news reported was true because we thought they had integrity does not mean that they actually had integrity or could be trusted. I agree with Chris that there seems to be a pretty good chance that we just didn't know when they were full of crap and since news came from all of about 3 possible sources, there was nobody telling us different.
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We still have screencaps yes?
And since you are asking questions already could you ask this one: Are they going to keep their journalistic and blogging articles separate or is another debacle like this one to be expected in the future?
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Re: We still have screencaps yes?
I'm sure there is one happening now.
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Nyuk Nyuk
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Journalism
I agree. I suppose I didn't stress that point enough -- the level of reliability was never very high. It's just that it's fallen so much lower now that in comparison it looks that way.
This isn't just a subjective thing -- pretty much all analyses of factual claims made in reporting supports the notion that we are at a nadir right now.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Journalism
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Re: racism vs. facts -- rewriting history
Although if you are going to split hairs about terminology you should at least bother to learn what the terms in question actually mean.
Our president is a Mulatto.
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Re: What is Dr. Nightingale's role?
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Re: Nyuk Nyuk
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and they have all been pillars of success. There was even a big "Mission Accomplished" banner for one of them...
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Is Ayyadyrai's Plan Working?
Despite the Huffington Post retractions (made on his wedding day) this strategy seems to be working. The same pattern is taking place as with the 2012 wave of stories. Enough inaccurate material stays online to help dupe the next wave of bottom-feeding bloggers. For example, Time never retracted its credulous online interview with Ayyadurai from 2011 and, as Mike pointed out above, the Huffington Post still has the Chopra blog post from 2013. Those both slipped under the radar when they appeared, as did a concerted effort to write Ayyadurai into various obscure Wikipedia pages. It’s only when Ayyadurai gets high profile coverage (the 2012 print article in the Washington Post, the recent epic Huffington Post series) that anyone bothers to push back.
Celebrity gossip bloggers are doing an even worse job than personal technology bloggers of evaluating his claims. Here are a few from today’s coverage:
Mail Online: “The pair met early last year when Dr. Ayyadurai - who owns the patent to email and is often credited as the inventor of the electronic mail system amid some controversy - was giving a talk at an event hosted by Deepak Chopra.”
CBS News: “Ayyadurai, who holds the patent for inventing email, met Drescher a year ago at an event hosted by Deepak Chopra.”
ABC News: "Drescher married the scientist, who is widely credited with having invented email -- at their home… Ayyadurai currently teaches at MIT and was profiled in 2011 in Time magazine for being the first person to hold a copyright for ‘EMAIL’”
People Magazine: “Ayyadurai, 50, who holds the patent for creating email, met Drescher, 56, a little over a year ago when he gave a talk at an event hosted by Deepak Chopra, according to an interview he did with the Huffington Post.” The HP news article it links to is still up, and claims that “In August 1982, the U.S. government accepted a patent for an electronic intra-office messaging system called "email" from then-teenager V.A. Shiva Ayyadurai.”
It is almost as if the whole thing is a post-modern performance art stunt designed to highlight the failings of online media. A few minutes with Google would reveal that he does not currently teach at MIT, that he was not granted a patent on email in 1982, and that he is credited as inventor of email primarily by his friends, family members, and business partners. I have updated my online evaluation of Ayyadurai’s claims with a one paragraph summary at the beginning, but do not expect it to make much difference.
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Where's the source code?
So where is it? I (and others) can lay our hands on source code from that time period: heck, I have copies of far more trivial, far less important pieces of my own work from v6 days, including the manual pages. So he must have a copy of this of email system somewhere, and of course, he should be willing to back up his claims by publishing the entire corpus for public scrutiny.
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I guess HuffPo removed that one now too. All I get is a 404 error.
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Re: Where's the source code?
The documentation and source were both registered with the copyright office, so copies (masked, in the case of the source) are in the possession of the copyright office. There is little reasonable doubt that he wrote the system he claims he wrote.
As an aside, when I was 15, I wrote and deployed a class registration and grade recording system for my high school. This was a project about as large as implementing a full email system. However, I lost the source code to this many, many years ago. It happens.
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Re:
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Journalism
There is no such thing. See "Amendment, First."
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Re: racism vs. facts -- rewriting history
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Re:
and this one: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/one-world-with-deepak-chopra/the-boy-who-invented-emai_b_5021127.html
H uffPo got really infested; guess it's easy when nobody over there seems to care about the truth.
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Re: Re: Re:
Why do you want whoever that is to divert a bunch of money to a useless lawsuit? It would clearly be better if nobody were sued over this.
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I'll bet GM would have some thoughts on that subject.
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Also in both situations, you don't actually have to have the better hand to win.
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Re: Is Ayyadyrai's Plan Working?
Holy crap, none of them even know the difference between patent and copyright...
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Have to?
Where do people even get the idea that they have to sue in situations like this? There could be times when you have little choice but to sue, but this doesn't even resemble one.
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Re: Re: Is Ayyadyrai's Plan Working?
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OK good, just making sure. :-)
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Re: Re: Re: Is Ayyadyrai's Plan Working?
Kind of depressing when the complete lack of interest in any investigation of claims is so in your face.
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Ok Mike, you might not be a racist, but you finally admit to being a facist!
Oh, what was that? Factist?
Never mind.
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To make it worse, when the Australians did start applying the lessons they learnt in the Malayan Emergency, the American sector commanders who copied them were criticised for not killing enough Vietnamese.
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Re: Re: Where's the source code?
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Re: Re: Re: Where's the source code?
Why do you think the claim is so extraordinary?
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Re: We still have screencaps yes?
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Re: Re: Re: Where's the source code?
In my view, given the ample evidence (both in documentation and in eyewitnesses), the extraordinary claim is that he didn't write it.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Where's the source code?
The problem is that to be the inventor of email you don't just have to make an electronic mail system. You have to make the first electronic mail system. So he would have to prove that none of the dozens, probably hundreds, of electronic mail systems documented between 1965 and 1980 deserve to be called "email."
I go through this is great detail at http://www.sigcis.org/ayyadurai. But that's the bottom line: you can't invent something that is already invented.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Where's the source code?
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Ayyadurai is a FRAUD!
India is full of liars & con artists like this scumbag
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You may be wrong about this
If he did design a system with all the features he described in 1978 and copyrighted it as EMAIL, then he can credibly say that he invented email. The point he makes is that his feature set was complete and working and it was the first system that truly resembles modern day email.
His arguments that earlier systems were text messaging systems that did not resemble modern email also needs be closely looked at but from what I see he may be right here.
It makes no difference if email evolved from his system or from a different lineage. If he rolled out modern email first, then he invented email.
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Once again, from the year 2019:
Shiva Ayyadurai DIDN'T INVENT EMAIL!
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