Archive for the 'politics' Category

Jul 25 2007

Google and Newspapers

Published by Chris McAvoy under politics

From last night’s Marketplace,

It’s hard for me not to wonder if corporations like Google feel any tug of civic responsibility. After all, their breathtaking success as news aggregators has sprung indirectly from the fruit of professional journalism.

From Andrew Carnegie on down, rich philanthropists who rose from rags have sought ways to give back to America by investing in civic endeavors vital to a healthy democracy.

Few things to me are more vital than journalism practiced according to high standards. Simply put, Google could do much more to protect this public trust: Offer support to journalism education and professional groups dedicated to truth seeking and time-honored ethical values. And assist newspapers directly, just as I think it’s time for newspapers to band together to sue to protect content.

We are experiencing a tragedy that transcends dollars, cents and jobs lost. The truth is this: If newspapers keep bleeding and dying, one day soon we may find on Google News no news at all.

I read a couple of newspapers every morning, none of which I actually pay for, other than looking at advertisements. According to Frontline, the majority of on the ground reporting is done by newspapers, most news reports just regurgitate what was first reported by newspapers. If the newspapers go away, all news goes away. It’s in Google’s own best interest to preserve the sources of one of their big draws, right?

UPDATED: Over on my facebook page, Fuzzyman pointed out that on Google News they don’t provide the full content of the article, just an excerpt. They then link back to the original article. That seems like a good way to actually help out the original content providers…so, really, the above comment, and my reaction to it…not really grounded in reality.

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Jul 05 2007

Gravel

Published by Chris McAvoy under politics

Let’s be clear, I’m an Obama backer. Yet…this blows my mind.

This guy agrees:

American politicians expend untold billions of dollars on campaign commercials. Not only do these ads all appear to have been produced by the same vicious idiot, it appears that this vicious idiot has been lobotomized and then repeatedly, thoroughly concussed.

That is why as Americans we all owe a debt of aesthetic gratitude to the genius of former senator and current Democratic presidential candidate Mike Gravel, who has taken the pabulum and kitsch that is our political art and transcended it — swept it up, summarized it and broken through it into a new range of possibilities. Mike Gravel is to political advertising what Ralph Waldo Emerson is to the essay, Walt Whitman to poetry, Jackson Pollock to painting, 50 Cent to bullet wounds. He is the avant garde of the new artpolitical era.

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