Last week was not a great week for the New York Post. But then again, not many weeks are. It’s front page last Thursday wrongly identified two innocent young men as the bombers of the Boston Marathon. (It did so without explicitly referring to them as suspects, just to ensure that they wouldn’t lose a lawsuit or have to apologize.)Murdoch defended his paper on Twitter, because it is 2013 and stuff is weird:[embedtweet id="325603844383969280"]Hm. Here’s how Col Allan defended his story to Salon: “The image was emailed to law enforcement agencies yesterday afternoon seeking information about these men….” So “distributed by the FBI” might be technically accurate (not that we have any way of knowing) but it is not a great defense. The photos were not distributed to the press or to the public, as the photos of the Tsarnaev brothers would be the same day that Post cover ran. The photo was never intended to be put on the front of a newspaper with copy asserting that the people pictured were responsible. There’s also no way to “withdraw” a physical newspaper printed and distributed all over New York City. I saw copies of the paper at bodegas in Brooklyn well into the evening.Continue Reading… … Read More
Rupert Murdoch stands by his doomed, horribly irresponsible tabloid
Last week was not a great week for the New York Post. But then again, not many weeks are. It’s front page last Thursday wrongly identified two innocent young men as the bombers of the Boston Marathon. (It did so without explicitly referring to them as suspects, just to ensure that they wouldn’t lose a lawsuit or have to apologize.)Murdoch defended his paper on Twitter, because it is 2013 and stuff is weird:[embedtweet id="325603844383969280"]Hm. Here’s how Col Allan defended his story to Salon: “The image was emailed to law enforcement agencies yesterday afternoon seeking information about these men….” So “distributed by the FBI” might be technically accurate (not that we have any way of knowing) but it is not a great defense. The photos were not distributed to the press or to the public, as the photos of the Tsarnaev brothers would be the same day that Post cover ran. The photo was never intended to be put on the front of a newspaper with copy asserting that the people pictured were responsible. There’s also no way to “withdraw” a physical newspaper printed and distributed all over New York City. I saw copies of the paper at bodegas in Brooklyn well into the evening.Continue Reading… … Read More
Fox Censors Cory Doctorow’s “Homeland” Novel From Google
Cory Doctorow’s latest novel Homeland tells the story of an infowar, the suppression of information and the fight against censorship.
The setting of the fictional book is a realistic scenario according to activists, and on a small scale the book itself has now become the center of a censorship row.
Published by Tor Books, Homeland is available for sale in most book stores, but because of its Creative Commons license people are also free to share the book online. After all, obscurity is a much bigger problem than piracy for most authors.
As a result copies of the novel are shared for free on hundreds of sites, and this attracted the attention of a Hollywood studio. For a few weeks none other than 20th Century Fox has been sending DMCA takedown requests to Google for Doctorow’s novel.
Fox’s idea is to make pirated copies of the TV-series Homeland harder to find, but as collateral damage they’re also taking down the novel. Shown below is an example of a typical notice 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 being sent out, and here’s an even bigger list.
All Your Homeland Are Belong to Us!
TorrentFreak confronted Cory Doctorow with these dystopian findings and the author was outraged by the gross abuse of his rights. Without hesitation he called for drastic action to be taken against the head honcho of the content empire.
“I think you can safely say I’m incandescent with rage. BRING ME THE SEVERED HEAD OF RUPERT MURDOCH!” Doctorow says.
To make matters even worse, Fox is not the only party going after Doctorow’s books. His own publisher Tor Books has also sent DMCA takedown notices to Google, in this case for the book “The Rapture of Nerds”.
Creative Commons Who?
When we made this discovery back in February, Doctorow was more understanding. He told us that Tor Books sends out DMCA notices with his authorization, but only in instances where the book is wrapped in DRM, or when there’s another violation.
But, where DMCA notices are sent out mistakes happen.
“I think what I’d like is for Tor to be perfect in only sending out takedowns when there’s a genuine violation, but perfection is a pretty high bar. I’m sorta OK with settling for one mistake in 10 years, especially if it doesn’t happen again,” Doctorow said.
Around the same time Tor Books told TorrentFreak that the takedown was an honest mistake, and that they would tell Google to reinstate the links so that the books could be accessed again.
“Those takedown notices were simply a bureaucratic/administrative mistake. We’re withdrawing them as quickly as possible.,” Tor’s senior editor Patrick Nielsen Hayden said.
However, more than two months later the links in question remain censored on Google, and Tor Books have been unreachable since. All our follow-up questions remained unanswered, most likely swallowed by some overactive spam filter or intercepted by a local spy agency.
Get out the pitchforks!
“We’re withdrawing them as quickly as possible”
Source: Fox Censors Cory Doctorow’s “Homeland” Novel From Google
Fox set to show NRA-sponsored NASCAR race despite Senator Murphy’s plea to Rupert Murdoch
Connecticut’s Chris Murphy writes to Rupert Murdoch, citing gun control debate clash with agenda of Sprint Cup sponsor The Fox television network looks set to broadcast the NRA-sponsored Nascar Sprint Cup on Saturday, despite a plea from a Connecticut senator to pull the broadcast due to the…
A.M. Links: Senator Doesn’t Want Fox to Air NRA-Sponsored NASCAR Race, JFK Assassination Artifacts to Go on Display, Cartels Getting Cheap Cocaine
Sen.
Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) has written a letter to Rupert Murdoch
asking that Fox not air a NASCAR race sponsored by the
NRA. ;
Some artifacts from the
JFK assassination ;that have never been displayed before
are to be part of exhibitions at the ;Newseum in Washington
D.C.
The decline of
Colombia’s drug gangs has resulted in Mexican cartels having
access to cheap cocaine. ;
NYPD Sgt. Ed Mullins ;wants costumed characters in Times
Square to be licensed and fingerprinted. ;
A
woman in North Carolina has won a settlement after she was
arrested for filming a traffic stop from her front yard. ;
Obama has said that North Korea must stop its “belligerent
approach.”
Follow Reason 24/7 on ;Twitter!
Follow ;Reason ;on ;Twitter ;too, and like us
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Rupert Murdoch blasts Australian government over ‘disgraceful and racist’ language
Global media baron Rupert Murdoch accused the government of his native Australia of “disgraceful and racist” language over a crackdown on visas for skilled migrants. The Australian-born News Corporation chief condemned the centre-left Labor government’s rhetoric about the…
Listening Post – Regulating a free press
http://www.youtube.com/v/Y6KOHtea5Ec?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Continue reading: Listening Post – Regulating a free press




