Microsoft Spinning Against OpenDocument Via Fox News 559
srwalter writes "As previously reported, Fox News previously ran an article by James Prendergast criticizing Massachussetts for switching to OpenDocument format. Today, Fox News has distanced itself from that article significantly. In a new front page story they post several emails in defense of Massachussetts and OpenDocument in general, as well as apologize for not acknowledging that Prendergast's organization is funded by Microsoft."
Fair and Balanced... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, they stuck the apology/disclosure way at the bottom of a long scroll. It's almost certain to not be as widely read as the original article. Subtly dishonest, IMHO.
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:2, Funny)
This is
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:5, Insightful)
What they do have is a policy of being *extremely* inflammatory.
They will always make it a point to mention the truth as a 'viewpoint'.
They'll also announce every other viewpoint, true or untrue, and the headline will be the one to prompt the greatest amount of reaction, positive or negative.
Obivously, one can see where this develop its own sort of bias.
Fair and balanced? Technically, yes. They don't outright *lie*. They don't even particularly advertise one cause over another, except as-is necessary to generate viewer interest, positive OR negative.
Fox News understands that they can get more viewer by being extremist. Conservatives watch because they can toe the party line. Liberals watchs so they can dispute it. Fox News wins both ways.
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's because Fox News doesn't have a policy of having news. Seriously, almost all of their on-air staff are right-wing guys with their own talk shows and books - some with shady pasts (Bill O'Reilly and Geraldo are both from old-school sensationalistic tabloid shows that set the bar for the last 15 years). Hannity, Gretta Van Sustran (who has a nightly rundown on what cute little rich blonde girls have been kidnapped), O'Reilly - then those annoying women (I can't remember their name) have a stupid "talk show" for a couple hours during the day time in which they're INCREDIBLY biased.
I'm one of those people who saw how clear the "liberal bias" used to be in news. In the last six years, I've become one of those people who has witnessed the shift and now see the insanely biased conservative slant. And you can't tell me that Newt Gingrich, Oliver North, Laura Ingram and Anne Coulter are proper, non-biased political analysts? (These are all people that are ROUTINELY on the show to provide analysis of news events).
To say fox news isn't intensely biased (and barely news-based) is just plain crazy. It goes beyond just being extreme and sensational.
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:5, Insightful)
They aren't, but neither are Susan Estrich, Ellis Hennican or Juan Williams. They are, however, openly left-wing. People rattle off the list of analysts that FNC has on that are conservative/right-wingers and then conveniently forget that they also have representatives from the opposite end of the political spectrum.
I'll give you this; FNC has more well known right-wingers than left-wingers. While not a great explanation, I offer up that FNC is the most conservative/traditional network out there, so they would be likely to attract the bigger right-wing names just like an MSNBC or CNN would be more likely to attract the bigger left-wing names.
--trb
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyway, I can't give any weight to a network that had their "news anchor" interviewing the guy who wanted to take the pledge of allegience out of schools (since it was only dumped into schools to indoctrinate kids and scare the godless communists a few decades ago) - and the woman (I think it was "linda vester") asked the guy "what the hell is your problem?!". Yes. That's very professional investigation, interviewing and news reporting. If he had been a conservative complaining about videogames or half-assed attempting to justify killing abortion doctors, do you think she would have said "what the hell is your problem"? Nope. That extremely biased and unprofessional comment would never have been heard.
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:5, Insightful)
And when they do, it tends to go something like this:
Liberal commentator: "Well you know, Bill, the IAEA found that..."
Bill O'Reilly: "What! So now you're saying that some commie-loving commission, a commission run by an Arab for Christ's sake, is telling the truth to the American people - people still suffering from the shock of seeing newborn babies falling from the windows of the Twin Towers. I know for a fact that the IAEA is receiving funds directly from Osama Bin Laden himself!"
Liberal commentator: "Now, that's just not true..."
Bill O'Reilly: "I've seen the checks!!! When are you lefties going to start loving your country? Or are you only gonna be happy when all of us are dead or worshipping Allah?"
Liberal commentator: "Now, Bill, don't you think..."
Bill O'Reilly: "Shut UP!!! I'm not finished talking here! You open your lying liberal mouth one more time spouting your hatred of America and I'm gonna cut of your mike!!!"
Liberal commentator: "But I . . ."
Bill O'Reilly: "I'm not gonna tell you again, you pinko bastard..."
Liberal commentator: "...but..."
Bill O'Reilly: "That's IT!!! You and me! Outside!"
Liberal commentator: "...what the..."
Bill O'Reilly: "Shut him off, Ox. And take his sorry ass outside!"
Liberal commentator: "...put me down....you can't do this!..."
Bill O'Reilly: "Well folks, looks like we're gonna have to agree to disagree on this issue. We'll be back after this commercial break, brought to you by the fine folks at 'People for the American Way'."
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Interesting)
I have become convinced over time that Bill O'Reilly is not actually a conservative. He is a mock conservative with the intention of discrediting conservative ideas by becoming a reprehensible representative of some of those ideals. He's a self-important blowhard first and a conservative a distant third. if at all.
Bill O'Reilly is as good an example of conservatives as Dan Rather.
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Informative)
Good catch - You're right, of course. I should've used "Americans for Tax Reform" instead.
As to Bill O'Reilly. He's nothing more than a thug and a bully - no different than the average high school punk who can only pick on others when the odds are heavily stacked in his favor. Whenever somebody calls his bluff, he backs off. FWIW, here's a transcript [newshounds.us] from a show where Phil Donahue turned the tables.
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:4, Insightful)
Balanced? Nope. They could have been. I'm sure EFF would have been happy to write an opposing piece. Did they bother? No. That's why Fox News has a bad rep.
Min
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Interesting)
Sean Hannity
Brit Hume
Neal Cavuto
Bill O'Reilly
Oliver North
D
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:4, Insightful)
Fox Primarily an "Opinion" Network [pbs.org]
Fox Viewers More Likely to be Misinformed [thecarpetb...report.com]
Fox Shills for the War [lewrockwell.com]
Fox, Neither Fair nor Balanced [msn.com]
There's lots more out there if you open your eyes.
All news organizations are biased to an extent (Score:4, Insightful)
When Tom DeLay was indicted most big news sites ran a headling saying something to the effect of "DeLay Indicted." FoxNews' website had the slightly different headline that was something like "DeLay says 'Im innocent'". Now both headlines are true, he was indicted and he did claim innocence. The actual event that happened that day, the NEWS, if you will, was that he was indicted. DeLay's claim of innocence is his side of the story. It may seem minor but if you took a few thousand people (who knew nothing about Delay and didn't claim to be liberal or conservative) and showed half of them one headline and half the other and asked them if they thought he was guilty or innocent I'll bet that the people who saw the "I'm innocent" headline would respond more favorably to him than the "Delay Indicted" folks. Words matter.
Foxnews is as right-wing as NPR is left-wing. The only difference is that Foxnews claims to be balanced, which is total bullshit. At least NPR doesn't lie to their listeners about their "fairness".
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Interesting)
This is what they should've always been doing! (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't think we should commend FOX News for the lone time they aren't negligent. I think we should rather focus on all of the times that the quality of their reporting has been suspect.
Just because the standards for corporate news agencies have dropped significantly doesn't mean t
"seem" indeed... (Score:3, Insightful)
"Seem" being the operative word. It's more like they got caught. Are you going to tell me with a straight face that Fox News didn't do the slightest checking on the guy's background? That editors were so incompetent, they did not check for conflicts of interest so simple they can be summed up in one line? Please. Even at Fox News, these people are professional journalists and editors. I don't buy the "whoops, silly us" excuse...the amount of
Re:"seem" indeed... (Score:2, Funny)
As opposed to CBS, where if Dan Rather were caught running a story with no factual evidence, which was received from an admitted Bush-hater and designed to throw the presidential election for Kerry, they wou
Re:"seem" indeed... (Score:2)
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:2)
Take "Fox" News with a grain of salt, for real reporting see CNN, Bloomberg, or international news if you can get it.
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:5, Insightful)
It would be unfair to apply that motto to Slashdot.
They don't post retractions.
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:5, Insightful)
Insightful? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:4, Insightful)
here's an example from the LA Times. the ombudsman was critical of they way they portrayed the abortion debate. anyone in favor was "pro-choice", opposed "anti-choice". the editor wen public chastising the paper to be more fair and evenhanded. that's bias as news. now, let's examine the war. does the ny times ever report a single positive development? never. not one school being built, nothing. afghanistan has vanished as it is so successful despite their faulty reporting. remember the winter, when we were "bogged down"? well, that sure turned out wrong, eh? the ny times is egregious. their circulation is down, they are turning to subscriptions. okrent ripped krugman for basicalyl lying.
lies? how about jayson blair? I could go on. but the ny times is not being novel. no, cronkite proved the rpess could get away with lying. the blogs have now caught them.
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, people who read the article once after a search and didn't come back, hold biased information in their heads.
Unfortunately, this topic will probably turn into a political discussion.
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Informative)
Was it a front page story earlier today for a short while?
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Funny)
Noone has mentioned the other big tech news story on the site:
Python Invasion in Florida
Also, are italics tags supposed to work in an html title? Doesn't work on FireFox.
May I suggest... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Fair and Balanced... (Score:3, Informative)
OpenDocument Debate
In Views: Tech-savvy readers pipe up about closing OpenDocument
Links directly to opinion articles also have the big VIEWS logo in the top banner.
And I generally trust NPR to attempt to bring both sides to the debate. I listen to it during lunch almost everyday.
Fox News (Score:3, Funny)
Politics? (Score:4, Insightful)
For the record, all my liberal friends tell me constantly that Fox News is oh-so-biased and CNN is oh-so-great, without EVER citing a single example for either case. It's just become conventional wisdom for them without question.
Heck, one could make the case that Slashdot is extremely biased and inaccurate every day.
Re:Politics? (Score:2)
Re:Politics? (Score:2)
Re:Politics? (Score:2)
Re:Politics? (Score:2, Insightful)
After September 11th when Fox News got really big, I started hearing the claims of bias. The only evidence I ever heard about was that documentary "Outfoxed," which I also found out was a hack edit job (zooming in on split-screen footage to make it
Re:Politics? (Score:5, Insightful)
Then one day, I talked to this very left-wing girl, and she was telling me that "The Media" was right-wing biased.
Then it occured to me. If someone is reporting fair and balanced news, then it would come up as middle of the road. And to a right-winger, that looks left-wing, and to a left-winger that lookes right-wing.
After that point, I take claims of bias in "The Media" to be stupid useless political griping. Essentially both sides being upset that the view point isn't theirs.
Re:Politics? (Score:5, Insightful)
However, beyond that obvious point, more can be said about media bias.
"Bias" does not mean a malicious attempt to deceive; it means that the world seems a certain way to the editors, and therefore they write, edit, and print stories that make sense to them. Bias is therefore revealed not by blatant, willful lies -- which rarely happen anymore in reputable papers and TV news stories. Instead it is revealed by a choice in terminology, details, and layout.
Here are some examples:
Here's a semi-randomly chosen story from the front page of CNN.com at the time of this writing: http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/10/13/iraq.mai n/index.html [cnn.com]. Take a look at these paragraphs:
"Before the teleconference, Allison Barber, deputy assistant to the secretary of defense, went through a rehearsal of the scripted question-and-answer session, telling the troops that any nonscripted questions from the president should be handled by Kennedy.
When asked about the rehearsed event, White House spokesman Scott McClellan said the coordination was done because of the "technological challenges" of a satellite feed, denying responses had been screened."
Forget the liberal/conservative bias for a minute and ask "why did the writer see this as important news?" Because it reflects a controversy, and because it places the president in a light which is familiar to his readers: GW is "well-known" for his inability to speak articulately in unscripted sessions.
The writer of this article, whether consciously or unconsciously, focused on story details that fit into his view of the president. How much of that view is conscious, we'll never know. But it's a sure bet that he was willing to believe (and wants us to believe) that responses actually were screened, because we *all* know that (a) spokesmen don't tell the whole truth and sometimes deny the obvious, (b) GW can't handle unscripted events well, (c) single phrases in "quotes" are not to be taken seriously.
That is a part of his worldview as a writer; it's a part of our worldview as readers. It's bias. AND, it's a great story because it raises *controversy*, the gold-winner in news stories.
Re:Politics? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Politics? (Score:3, Informative)
The NEWS ITSELF at Fox News is pretty balanced IMHO, it's just the "commentary" shows that tend to be right wing in nature.
Re:Politics? (Score:5, Informative)
Then your liberal friends are morons. CNN is also skewed in its coverage.
Do you want examples? Are your fingers broken? Any search engine can help you out.
If you want a biased, but truthful, look at examples of conservative bias in the media, check out http://www.mediamatters.org/ [mediamatters.org]
Yes, Bill O'Reilly has lambasted Media Matters on his program... which is a pretty good recommendation, for my tastes
Re:Politics? (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.aim.org/ [aim.org]
Like I said, examine the source of the bias claims. Media Matters claims to cover bias in the media, but ALL they cover is so-called conservative bias. Hmm...wonder why that is.
Accuracy in Media claims to cover bias in the media, but ALL they cover is so-called liberal bias. Hmm...wonder why that is.
You can't trust either organization exclusively. You have to trust yourself. It's all partisanship
Re:Politics? (Score:3, Informative)
Glad you asked [alternet.org]:
Re:Politics? (Score:5, Informative)
P.S. Avalon versus Quartz (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Politics? (Score:2)
Re:Politics? (Score:2, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fox_News [wikipedia.org] (scroll down to "Ownership and management")
Re:Politics? (Score:4, Funny)
One could also make cases for the following:
Re:Politics? (Score:2)
Here's an example: FoxNews posted an editorial about Microsoft products, written by a Microsoft advocate and employee. They did not disclose the author's conflict of interest.
CNN, in comparison, did NOT post the FUDitorial. This doesn't make them flawless, but in this case they're at least better than Fox.
Re:Politics? (Score:2)
The center is moving to the right, and we're all paying the price.
Re:Politics? (Score:2)
I'd just like to point out that this statement is not logically consistent.
"Cable news viewers" != "American public"
The sets intersect, but are not equivalent.
Thus, you cannot assert that, because a FoxNews is the most popular cable news channel with viewers, that the views it espouses are held by the majority of the American public.
And that's just the largest logical error you made
Best of both worlds? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Best of both worlds? (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
What teh..!? (Score:5, Funny)
"Microsoft has a long and well-documented history of not supporting standards."?
"embrace and extend practice"?
O.O OH boy, those ARE slashdotters' comments!
Guys, we're on FOXnews!
At least... (Score:2)
I don't know why the slashdot crowd is surprised.. (Score:2, Insightful)
"from the strangest-thing-you'll-see-lately dept."?? Could you be any more self-importantly snide?
When is the last time you saw CNN, the New York Times, or CBS news print this many well-articulated reader responses to an article? Then own up to the author's bias and assert they made a mistake by not making it apparent?
Let me think, now. Ummmm..
Re:I don't know why the slashdot crowd is surprise (Score:2)
Other networks with an online presence (& also print media) also do this. The difference is, they normally don't have errors so egregious that it requires such a big response.
The NYTimes does this in its opinion page. Recantments and corrections are also included in paper.
"When is the last time you saw CNN, the New York Times, or CBS news print this many well-articulated reader respon
Re:I don't know why the slashdot crowd is surprise (Score:4, Insightful)
Yea, they fessed up instantly that Tailwind was a work of fiction and fired the commie bastard responsible for the lie. Oh wait, they didn't. But surely they fired the idiot exec who asserted as a fact that US forces target journalists. Wait, they didn't exactly do that either.
> the New York Times,
Well after four tries over a month or so they finally got a semi-complete correction into print about Paul Krugman's 'creative use of fact' regarding the Florida recounts. But seriously, considering how many times they have been caught lying, distorting, confusing the news and editorial sections and outright printing fiction as news (Jayson Blair ring a bell anymore?) the real question is why their circulation is still over a thousand copies a day.
> or CBS news
Yup, they fired Mapes and Rather the second their treason was uncloaked. Oh, wait they are STILL trying to hide behind the "factually false but we still stand behind the gist of the story' excuse.
> print this many well-articulated reader responses to an article?
Exactly. The got skunked by a Microsoft shill, got called on it by thousands and did the right thing. They put the retraction in basically the same spot on their homepage as the original, picked very good responses to print instead of the raving lunatics and denounced the original author along with stating for the record they should have at least did the background research to spot the PR flack and include that fact in the original story. In short I suspect it will be a while before they fall for this one again.
Fair and balanced (Score:5, Insightful)
If someone runs an article with a title "Massachusetts Should Close Down OpenDocument" (which is a rather one-sided title) then I feel the correcting article should have a title like "Everyone should drop Microsoft"
Re:Fair and balanced (Score:2)
No wonder Slashdot enjoys so much popularity.
Re:Fair and balanced (Score:3, Funny)
Not a front page story (Score:5, Insightful)
I love the editor's note down at the bottom of the column -- they bury their corrections as well as print papers do
Also, in mentioning the founders of ATL, they don't mention that Citizens Against Government Waste is not a citizens' group -- it is an industry-funded group.
Fox news is like a slashdot poll.... (Score:3, Funny)
HowTo Letter an Editor (Score:5, Insightful)
In short, Halloran's message makes it easy for the editor, and a followup reporter, to change their story. It doesn't require FoxNews to change anything else, or admit anything else (like the unprofessional journalism that saw the original astroturf article published). We rant among ourselves here on Slashdot, but when we mix it up with the normals, we must abide by their weasel ways. Because that's what works - for Halloran, for the many FoxNews consumers he's reached, and for us, who he represents (if mildly, and not all of us
Re:HowTo Letter an Editor (Score:3, Funny)
Re:HowTo Letter an Editor (Score:5, Insightful)
I figured there'd be enough "Evil MS shill FUD FUD FUD!!" notes sent in.
Given Fox's leanings, I thought a note talking up market competition and less government spending might get their attention. Seems I was right.
Not Fox's Fault (Score:4, Informative)
They actually emailed a non-automated response, and mentioned that the article was in the Views section, which indicated it was like reading an opinion column in the newspaper.
While I'll let Fox slide on that, they really do not do a good job of indicating that the article is an opinion, or that you are in the views section, unless you look at the banner add looking header of the page. I was thinking of emailing them back and mentioning a site design update to further differentiate opinion articles of this type from the usual news propoganda.
Nice job (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a reader-friendly, no-bones-about-it correction, and the New York Times [nytimes.com] could actually take a lesson from Fox News on this one.
Of course, the best thing would have been to get it right in the first place.
Re:Nice job, but yer playin' with fire! (Score:4, Funny)
At any rate, to go and point out that FoxNews corrected the actual news article in question and took full responsibility while also posting dissenting views flies in the face of all the posts above yours. Never mess with groupthink, man. Groupthink still holds to the belief that conservatives believe Sadam Hussein bombed the WTC. You go and confront groupthink with actual facts and you'll get it all grumpy and everything...
Pot, meet Kettle (Score:3, Insightful)
Facts [usatoday.com] are funny [harrisinteractive.com] things.
It may not be the majority anymore, but it's still almost half of Americans (could that be the *conservative* half?), and considering that George W. Bush himself promoted the idea that Hussein was behind the 9/11 attacks, it's no wonder the rest of the country consid
Headline? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm probably misreading the headline, but it seems to imply Microsoft is somehow doing something here. Spinning the OpenDocument using FOX, for instance. The article doesn't seem to have anything to do with that; even the text of the slashdot summary. Am I grossly misreading something, or what?
Re:Headline? (Score:5, Informative)
Yes.
That is the whole point of the organization. To add the false imprimatur of impartiality to Microsoft's propaganda.
Conservative != Pro-Microsoft (Score:5, Informative)
This is, plainly spoken, bullshit.
Go to a place like FreeRepublic, and you'll find a good deal of Linux advocacy and Microsoft distrust.
The most prominent popular culture conservatives don't run Windows, nor are Microsoft cheerleaders. Rush Limbaugh and Tom Clancy are OSX users, and Clancy is a longtime critic of MS software.
Re:Conservative != Pro-Microsoft (Score:3, Insightful)
The source of the confusion is Neo-Cons referring to themselves as "Conservatives", which they're anything but.
Re:Conservative != Pro-Microsoft (Score:3, Interesting)
It's probably part of the misconception that there is only one kind of Conservative. The news story in question will cause rankles between at least two sub-species of Conservatives: Idealogues and Corporate Whores.
Idealogues favor a free-market capitalistic approach in which a minimal government acquires its services from the free market at minimal cost. Being locked int
Fox Running From the Henhouse (Score:2, Flamebait)
1 Equals Many (Score:5, Insightful)
Government employees will be exposed to Open Standards formats and likely Open Source software. This will have a spinoff effect in the buying decisions of some govt employees.
Likely, govt contractors, seeking uniformity with their potential employers, will adopt Open Standards in submission of their bids. Again, this will have a multiplier like effect in terms of employess and business associates.
Closed Source advocates are fighting to keep the stopper in genie's bottle.If she gets out the outcome is more likely to be a closed source nightmare.
In Canada there is, if IIRC, a principle of government that requires govt agencies to use the most widely available, least expensive format for it's citizens to interact with govt. There may even be some case law on this. Is it possible legal action could be launched in a effort to force govts to adopt the most open, least expensive venue?
Fox news got the story wrong? (Score:2)
At least Fox News is free (Score:2, Funny)
This was not an article (Score:4, Insightful)
More junk food for the brain than news (Score:3, Insightful)
A study by the Program on International Policy Attitudes, in the Winter 2003-2004 issue of Political Science Quarterly, reported that viewers of the Fox Network local affiliates or Fox News were more likely than viewers of other news networks to hold three views which the authors labeled as misperceptions.
67% of FOX viewers believed that the "US has found clear evidence in Iraq that Saddam Hussein was working closely with the al Qaeda terrorist organization" (Compared with 56% for CBS, 49% for NBC, 48% for CNN, 45% for ABC, 16% for both NPR and PBS). However, the belief that "Iraq was directly involved in September 11" was held by 33% of CBS viewers and only 24% of FOX viewers.
33% of FOX viewers believed that the "US has found Iraqi weapons of mass destruction" "since the war ended". (Compared with 23% for CBS, 20% for both CNN and NBC, 19% for ABC and 11% for both NPR and PBS)
35% of FOX viewers believed that "the majority of people [in the world] favour the US having gone to war" with Iraq. (Compared with 28% for CBS, 27% for ABC, 24% for CNN, 20% for NBC, 5% for both NPR and PBS)
Fox viewers were unique in that those who paid greater attention to news were moderately more likely to have these misperceptions than those who paid less or no attention to news.
----------
I had to cut out some of the stats because of the lameness filter
Further proof that there is a direct correlation between the amount of FOX 'News' programming you watch and your level of ignorance. FOX News succeeds in the ratings because it tells people what they want to hear, it does not challenge the mindset of its viewers with facts or differing opinions. It merely presents a proverbial warm cozy blanket of facts blended seamlessly with opinion and outright fabrication.
CNN, CBS, ABC, et al are often accused of downplaying or not reporting stories because they are deathly afraid of losing access to the sources of information that they rely on. In recent years they have moved to emulate their 300lb gorilla competitor by simply swallowing the information they receive from the government and playing along with whatever policy directive has come down from the White House. The remarkable lack of investigative spirit and widespread complacency during the run up to the Iraq War was simply amazing - and utterly gutting - to witness.
None of them, however, have adopted the perfected formula devoid of credibility and objectivity that FOX News has. They are merely wannabes, as FOX has seemingly nailed it down to a science all its own.
While I Like Fox News... (Score:3)
A report from within the media (Score:5, Insightful)
I work for a national news service that "competes" with Fox. There is an understanding that if you work for Murdoch, you have sold out any attempt at integrity for cash. Fox does not deliver news, they deliver opinion (and I'm risking flames here). Their standards are set so low and their "spinners" are part of the report that one cannot truly expect that their material is free enough of bias to allow the viewer or reader to come to any meaningful conclusion.
Fox reports on the national events just like everyone and that is why they are insidious. You'll see coverage of Katrina, of the horrible earthquake in Pakistan and India. You'll see sports scores and weather on the local Fox channels. But the spin cycle is fully on for political coverage and for coverage of big business. At Fox, big corporations can do no wrong and if they make a claim to a Fox reporter, those claims (and all the spin inherent in those claims) are never fact-checked. They're reported as if they were truth. Up until the very end, Fox did no reporting that questioned the accountability of the Enron chiefs, while ABC, CBS, NBC and PBS (yeah, those Commies) reported questionable bookkeeping and deals that were pretty nigh illegal on the surface on their books. Enron was sued by the State of California for artificially raising energy prices to "create a crisis." Fox did not report on those suits. Everyone else did.
Instead, Fox began an attack on then-Governor Gray Davis and how he was incorrectly handling an energy crisis that was probably not of his own making. I believe the Fox television network (at least) was partially responsible for the recall election and the subsequent replacement of Gray Davis with Arnold Schwarzenegger. If the court cases finally decide that this was all Enron's making, I'd have to say that this kind of manipulation is pretty insidious.
Of course, when Enron declared bankruptcy and was called to question, Fox joined the bandwagon and launched "investigative reports." But even now, they hold Kenneth Lay blameless. Why? Because Fox is the "pro-Bush network" and any friend of the Bush family is a friend of Murdoch and his network.
I have read extensively the history of our country, which started off on the premise that the Press should be free. I have read diatribes against our founding fathers, aspersions to the characters of George Washington, Ben Franklin, James Monroe, Mrs. Adams and her "pet President John," and so on. I defend Murdoch's right to broadcast and print opinion. He has a right to do so and he has created a media empire for that purpose.
But understand that what he does with his empire is not necessarily tell you the truth. Almost everything of consequence is spun. And what I find unfortunate is that the other networks and news outlets think that they have to "chase Fox" and be more like them. Which means, increasingly, almost all of the news you receive has bias and spin. Don't believe everything you read in the papers and don't believe most of what you see on television.
This is a report from inside a media giant.
Re:A report from within the media (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course I am biased.
The environment in which I was trained to work in media was one in which television stations in the US were required to "serve the public need, necessity and demand." As a part of that requirement, stations were required to broadcast "public affairs and educational programs."
News was considered a part of the public affairs segment of what local stations broadcast, and stations had to produce a certain amount of that weekly. Stations typically "took a loss" on news and public affairs
Re:Government != Role Model (Score:5, Informative)
While I agree that a government is not equal to a role model, saying that the OpenDocument standard is virtually ignored by the constituents of Massachusetts is ill-informed. Many of the individual communities in Massachusetts made the switch in advance of the Commonwealth itself; Saugus [saugus.net] is probably the best example as it probably made the switch first and has a lot of info online:
There's more info buried within the various Saugus sites, too. This isn't a change decreed from on-high, it's got quite a bit of grassroots support as well.
Re:Government != Role Model (Score:5, Insightful)
They're not customers. Most everyone the state deals with wants something for free or wants to sell them something. They can use the format the state specifies or take a hike.
When the project required changes to our customers' standards, by State Decree, the costs ballooned.
It's a one-time cost. After the conversion is complete, everyone will save money because they can buy tools to work on documents on the free market, not from a single-source vendor.
OpenOffice.org can write to MSWord format as well. (Score:5, Informative)
In this case, it would appear that someone in Massachusetts state government is trying to do the "right thing".
For another example of someone in MA state government with a clue, surf on over to http://www.mass.gov/mgis/mapping.htm [mass.gov] and check out the free online mapping resources. I can't believe it. Usually you have to pay through the nose for current high resolution geo-referenced aerial photography. Here, MA has put it all online for free. Nice going!
Re:Government != Role Model (Score:4, Insightful)
AFAIK, PDF is well supported, and the number ONE format for document interchange.
Oh, you mean vendors/interdeparment stuff/contractors?
Well, you're working of the state. Guess what; you play by their rules.
The state will interact with its consitutents, the public, in an extremely well supported format.
The state will handle its own affairs in an open format, so that these constituents will have access to the end of time. It's a record keep issue, and its done for their benefit.
Also, consider that you have to change formats anyways. It's either MS XML or OpenDocument XML.
OpenDocument is the better choice for a government.
dada21.... hmm... suspiscious, I suspect you of being a troll.
Re:Government != Role Model (Score:2)
Can't one government be a role model for other governments? Whether or not the intent is to create a role model, governments are often role models.
The state should not necessarily be a reflection of the people governed. I'm not even going to bother mentioning all the terrible things that have been supported by government just becaus
Re:Government != Role Model (Score:2)
So you'd rather the costs balloon because of Market Decree? (and by "Market" I mean Monopoly, and by "Monopoly" I mean Microsoft)
The difference here is that the state is saying you must use a format that you can control and understand. Imagine that, the evil State is giving you more control! Whoda thunk it?
So go take your "I ain't gonna be controlled by the State" argument back to the hills, bubba. It does
Re:Government != Role Model (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, the sad thing is, when shifts in something as large as document file formats, the Government almost has to be a role model.
For the past 3 years I have been using OpenOffice.org, and I switched to version 2.0 as soon as the beta was released. Guess how much that impacted the way society, the society I am a member of, views documents? Not at all. But, when a government body offering documents to the public shifts to a different file format, people are forced to change. While this would normally seem bad, this change is in a positive direction. This change brings equality to the table. I cannot afford, nor would I purchase if I could afford, Microsoft Office. On top of that, it does not run on my Operating System. By switching to something that makes electronic documents available to everyone with a computer, we are bringing society one step closer to the government, making the government less of a tryant capable of offering us documents we are entitled to with a large $300 string attached.
Now that they have decided on OpenDocument, any user can use any software that supports it. This is one of the few cases the government being a role model for society is going to benefit everyone (except Microsoft). It will only be a matter of time before OpenDocument format is viewable with a simple browser plugin, and I wouldn't be surprised to see an AJAX powered OpenDocument editor pop up on the web soon either.
I am currently working to change my university to OpenDocument, so we can become a role model to our community. Imagine trying to fill out a form for Financial Aid, or to apply for a job, but having that form require a piece of software that you can't afford. I understand OOo can read .doc files, as can other office suites, but what happens when Microsoft finally gets their patent on their file formats and does not allow 3rd party companies to reverse engineer their filetype? I for one would rather tie myself to a standard offered and accepted to the global community that is freely available to anyone than to tie myself to a format that is offered by a single company that is notorious for suing its customers and requiring new software to view new versions of its documents.
If governmental role models are required to shift us from .doc to .odt, then I welcome it with open arms. But I think we miss the point to say the government is trying to be a role model here, I think they are doing the exact opposite. They have realized they were being a role model, and imposing restrictions on the use of documents that are public domain, and they are now cutting those strings, meaning it is up to us, the end user, to choose what software to use.
If your software doesn't support the new format, then that isn't the government's fault, that is the software manufacturer's fault. Every developer is free to use the OpenDocument standard, including Microsoft. So why don't we yell at Microsoft for trying to be a role model instead?
Re:Government != Role Model (Score:3, Interesting)
from the article
Comments made by the IT chief for the state said there would be costs to convert from the current office suite regardless of what was replacing it. The costs to convert to OpenDocument were estimated at $5 million; upgrading the current vendor's product would cost $50 million, both in license fees and u
Re:OpenDoc (Score:2)
Geez, Apple killed off OpenDoc years ago. Give it up Microsoft.
That's a neat trick, seeing as it was only made a standard last May! [eweek.com]
Do they rent out their time-machine?
Re:tidbit at the bottom of article (Score:2, Insightful)