US Spy Agencies See Bloggers as Journalists 77
Sniper223 writes with a link to ABC's Blotter blog. That site observes that at least in the realm of US intelligence gathering, the 'are bloggers journalists' question is already decided. "Despite the rap that bloggers simply 'bloviate' and 'don't try to find things out,' as conservative newspaper columnist Robert Novak once sniffed, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the National Security Agency (NSA) have altered policies to indicate they're taking blogs seriously, and a growing number of public offices are actively reaching out to the blogosphere. The CIA recently updated its policies on Freedom of Information Act requests to allow bloggers to qualify for special treatment once reserved for old-school reporters. And last August, the NSA issued a directive to its employees to report leaks of classified information to the media — "including blogs," the order said."
Re:Next up (Score:4, Insightful)
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Earlier slashdot story [slashdot.org]
Tor is secure to the extent that it will be known that you are using Tor.Though for what is unknown.
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Oh you mean the person using a machine with it's NIC's MAC address set to some arbitrary value and connected via an unsecure wireless access point not under his control? As intimated by the post you're replying to?
When the MIB are knocking on John Q. Lawabide's front door with rubber-gloves donned and electric truth-probes brandished, the real ne'er-do-well will have rolled further down the road, changed his MAC address and hijacked Sally P. Honestface's wireless access point.
The ex
So... (Score:2)
... is that a good thing or a bad thing?
I do know there are few bloggers worse than the vast majority of Croatian journalists; I can't say much about the rest of the world.
With more people there will be more quality stuff (Score:2)
My experience tells me that journalists are seldom better than the newpaper they work for, so I think you will find that it's the management that is lacking. Taking it futher it's probably the public that doesn't care about good news. But this is true all over, the quality of new papers sinks because there are less people that care about reading a couple of thousand words on a subject.
Though the quality of blogs just goes up, with
Re:With more people there will be more quality stu (Score:1, Insightful)
There will be more people writing quality stuff, sure... but there will be more people writing the same old my-boss-sucks-donkey-cock-why-is-life-unfair-never -buying-from-circuit-city-again-microsoft-equals-s atan-and-RMS-is-great-in-bed-i-hate-commuting-i-ne ed-coffee crap. Both will increase - it'll still be hard to find the good stuff in a sea of crap.
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Yeah, me neither.
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Very true, but IMO it's because he likes to think big. Much better than John "Why doesn't everybody capitulate to the MS monopoly already, dammit?" Dvorak.
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There is no "angle".
The "angle" is recognizing that some "bloggers" can also be legitimate "journalists". RTFA.
And treating bloggers, where appropriate, as journalists funnels official interaction with them through the normal channels for interacting with media, with its associated organization, controls, and so on.
I think it's funny that you open with "I bet in the long run it will be a bad thing" and "the government does do anything out of the good for the people", and you're th
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Re:So... BINGO (Score:2)
To many pet-rock managers ignoring real explicit and implicit knowledge/experience provided, and/or to little core knowledge on topics.
Re:So... another market-spin secret good one ... (Score:2)
Come on tell the
However, I do agree, why/who moded that one up?
Journalists need US visa (Score:3, Interesting)
Other countries might have similar laws. However, probably only running a 'blog counts (arguably even MySpace) because that's like having a regular newpaper column. You could probably argue successfully that posting to a 'blo
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No, it isnt. (Score:2, Insightful)
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Unless of course you are a anti-government Slashdot un-happy with most things capitalist, western and consumerist type.
In which case I'm probably wasting my keystrokes.
It's good and bad (Score:2, Insightful)
Bad because it only further validates that you can only be a journalist (and thus have those previously mentioned rights and protections) if the federal gov'ment says you are a journalist.
Not special (Score:5, Insightful)
The greatest strength of the web is that anyone can publish to a worldwide audience. The greatest weakness of the web is that anyone can publish to a worldwide audience. However, this is only a minor weakness. I'm not forced at gun point to read everybody else's blogs, I get to pick and choose what I read and when I read it.
And this is what the old media don't like about the rise of the blog. They no longer get to control content and the blogs are eating in to what used to be their advertising revenue.
A leak, however it happens, is a leak. I don't think the fact they mentioned blogs means much. If people started leaking by carrier pigeon I'm sure that would get included in such a directive as well.
Simon.
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With bloggers routinely tearing down marketing B$ being presented as true news, not only is that source of revenue drying up, the backlash from readers also kills future subscriptions.
As for 'foreign' to US bloggers, this means the will have to be extremely careful when they choose whether or not to travel to the US. Strip searched, probed, followed by exten
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I don't have to work in the intelligence community to tell you that a leaking carrier pigeon is never good.
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No, thanks.
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It's difficult but I try to spend some time reading from (decent) news sources on the other side of the spectrum from my own views. Ironically that just reinforces my view that trying to solve everything in the world by being only 'left-wing' or 'righ
I don't want to be taken serious... (Score:2)
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Boo fucking hoo (Score:1, Funny)
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If you want to be serious about it: my government does not feed me or pay for my meds. And it is not the US government. Even though US security agencies have the possibility to wiretap some of my calls [wikipedia.org].
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So there is the real reason (Score:4, Insightful)
The reason is simply that they want people to tell when they have inside knowledge. Without protection, people would beat around the bush until someone from law enforcement picks it up and starts looking into it, all without the blogger actually being responsible for it. He just posted hints and allegations.
With protection, he'll simply state the fact that something's going wrong in a company. This allows more efficiency. To prosecure or to cover up, depending on circumstances...
Perhaps the real reason ... (Score:2, Interesting)
... for this is something along the lines of: "Hey, if we recognise them as journalists, and give them equal access, maybe they'll regurgitate the same junk we feed the mass media."
Please excuse my cynicism of an organisation (i.e. the CIA) that relies [educate-yourself.org] on disinformation [csmonitor.com], propaganda [commondreams.org], and psychological warfare [kimsoft.com], and uses the mass media [amazon.co.uk] and journalists [wikipedia.org] to spread it.
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Ummmm......Aren't those the same type of tactics all other countries spook agencies employ?
Intelligence agencies, regardless of country, regularly employ dirty tricks to get the information or outcome they desire. What makes people think the CIA have to be above these types of things?
In the spy world there are nasty, dirty t
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a web log is a kind of journal (Score:1)
No compliment (Score:2)
Re:No compliment (Score:4, Insightful)
These days, you flunk out of calculus, decide you can't be an engineer, and the English department is too snooty (you'd have to READ BOOKS and all that awful stuff), so you transfer to J-School. And become part of the 'News Elite.'
Thank goodness that whole sheen is melting away.
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And wouldn't the original meaning of "journalist" be more akin to "blogger" than "reporter" anyway. I could see "reporter" or "investigative reporter" being a label for someone who actually fact checks and takes an unbiased tone in their reporting of stories, but to write in a "journal" which is the word at the root of "journalist" is no different that to write in a log, which is at the root of "blog" (being a contraction of "web log"). Journalism and blogging should contain some personal viewpoin
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Same as the concept of the "real biologist" or the "real computer scientist"
I know a lot of people at the Medill school of journalism, and I can assure you the vast majority of these people could handle a yea
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Loud Knocking On Door
Sir! May we see your credentials??
leaks don't define journalists (Score:1)
And last August, the NSA issued a directive to its employees to report leaks of classified information to the media -- "including blogs," the order said
The NSA cares when the information leaks and becomes publicly known. I don't think they really care what credentials the person that published the information has. They don't define bloggers as journalists,but rather define bloggers as another group that might disseminate classified information, and therefore should be watched.
Bloviate? (Score:5, Funny)
You learn something every day.
Bloggers will be journalists when... (Score:1)
"Any idiot with a computer" is NOT a journalist.
If a blogger is willing to go to jail to protect his sources, he might be a journalist. If a blogger makes sure he has corroboration of a story from more than one independent source before publishing it, he might be a journalist. If a blogger refuses to publish innuendo ("how do we know he's not a child-molester?"), he might be a journalist.
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Or do you really think that papers like The Sun or the New York Post are fact-checked?
Correction:Bloggers will be journalists when... (Score:2)
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Journalists are only journalists if they are approved and licensed [slashdot.org] according to state and national registry laws that make them immune from prosecution from certain crimes that would be illegal in us "citizens".
Hmm... State "ok"ed journalism. Where does that sound like?
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When "fake but accurate" is OK for the top end... (Score:2, Insightful)
Because your standards for a blogger to be a journalist are higher than Dan Rather could meet, are higher than the the reporters who caved and revealed their sources in the Plame affair, and they're higher than those "journalists" at The New Republic who swallowed Scott Thomas Beauchamp's fantasies hook, line, and sinker, never bothering to cor
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Men in Black all over again (Score:3, Funny)
Grabs a tabloid
JAY: These are the hot sheets?
KAY:Best damn investigative reporting on the planet.
Now how can I make use of this? (Score:3, Funny)
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A filter is ... what it filters ... secret sources (Score:2)
Keeping track of journalists' content is (I suspect) legal under the USA Constitution, but I wounder if some agencies will try to recruit/track or spy on some individuals under this new "journalists" ploy.
Some blogs, wikis, portals
Righto.... (Score:2)
(The US being one of a handful of countries requiring it, the others being Iran, North Korea, Zimbabwe, and Cube)
Source: Guardian [guardian.co.uk]
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Could have (and DID) told ya this 6 months ago.... (Score:2)
Re:Could have (and DID) told ya this 6 months ago. (Score:2)
That would be a pretty dumb thing to do for a federal agency. Normally, they'd use IPs mapped to innocuous .com addresses. If they're using their "real" (as in: official) DNS PTRs, it's probably NOT meant as surveillance, but as random noise like we get from everywhere... unlikely something targetted.
If you have detailed logs (not just summaries), you may be able to analyze where this bot came from, and what pages it started crawling.
Not really .. (Score:2)
I'd say "US Spy Agencies See Bloggers as Occasionally-Useful Sources of Intel(ligence.)"
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Let them use the word 'journalist' for to them it is a code word. Slashdotters know better. This sort of thing involves first principles of civic order. To any government, a person who speak
No. (Score:1)