Are reporters doomed?

Thoughtful piece by David Leigh.

You can get junk food on every high street. And you can get junk journalism almost as easily. But just as there is now a Slow Food movement, I should also like to see more Slow Journalism. Slow Journalism would show greater respect for the reporter as a patient assembler of facts. A skilled craftsman who is independent and professionally reputable. A disentangler of lies and weasel words. And who is paid the rate for the job. Aren’t such people essential for probing the dodgy mechanisms of our imperfect democracy, and our very imperfect world?

But the power of reporting does not lie entirely — or even mostly — in the nobility of its practitioners, or their professional skills. Or their celebrity status. It also lies in the preservation of media outlets that are themselves powerful.

When I reflect on the investigations I have been involved in, I realise that the reporter does have influence. We have written about the scandal of tax-dodgers with private jets pretending to live in Monaco, but still working four days a week in a London office. The government now says it will close that loophole. We wrote some rather savage articles about plans to restrict use of the Freedom of Information Act. They dropped the plans. And Rob Evans and I have written scores of articles detailing the corrupting influence
of the defence ministry’s arms sales department. The government now says it will shut the department.

There is only one reason why these stories have an effect. I like to think, of course, it is down to our own personal brilliance. But it is not. It is because a story on the front page of the Guardian carries clout. So do reports on the BBC, for example — that’s why Andrew Gilligan’s stories about alleged sexed-up dossiers caused such panic and rage in Downing Street. That is perhaps one of the biggest dangers of the media revolution. When the media fragment — as they will — and splinter into a thousand websites, a thousand
digital channels, all weak financially, then we will see a severe reduction in the power of each individual media outlet. The reporter will struggle to be heard over the cacophony of a thousand other voices.

Politicians will no longer fear us. And if that day comes, I’m afraid it really will be the end of the reporter.

San Francisco

I love San Francisco (and might even go back sometime if the US electorate chooses someone sensible next November). This picture (by Dave Sifri) captures the essence of it for me.

Britain now has 4 million bloggers

From Bobbie Johnson

The survey was commissioned by the online company Garlik, which aims to give citizens more power over how their personal information is used digitally. It asked a representative sample of 2,000 internet users about their online habits. Of Britain’s web population of 26 million it found that 15% kept a blog. Of those running a personal website, almost one in five were blogging at least once a day – the high water mark for an internet phenomenon that is transforming the way people voice their opinions…

The Ferrari and the lawnmower

This morning’s Observer column

Until now, phones have been relatively primitive devices, so the corrupt absurdity of the closed systems operated by networks has not been obvious to most. The arrival of the iPhone lays it bare. Having an iPhone locked to a network which doesn’t provide 3G connectivity, and is unable to make VoIP calls despite having good wireless networking built in, is like buying a Ferrari and finding that the only thing you can do with it is power your lawnmower. It’s nuts – and our regulators have allowed it to happen….

StupidFilter

Here’s a neat idea — a filter for detecting stupidity in online communications and filtering it out.

StupidFilter was conceived out of necessity. Too long have we suffered in silence under the tyranny of idiocy. In the beginning, the internet was a place where one could communicate intelligently with similarly erudite people. Then, Eternal September hit and we were lost in the noise. The advent of user-driven web content has compounded the matter yet further, straining our tolerance to the breaking point.

It’s time to fight back.

The solution we’re creating is simple: an open-source filter software that can detect rampant stupidity in written English. This will be accomplished with weighted Bayesian analysis and some rules-based processing, similar to spam detection engines. The primary challenge inherent in our task is that stupidity is not a binary distinction, but rather a matter of degree. To this end, we’re collecting a ranked corpus of stupid text, gleaned from user comments on public websites and ranked on a five-point scale.

Eventually, once the research is completed, we plan to release core engine source code for incorporation into content management systems, blogs, wikis and the like. Additionally, we plan to develop a fully implemented Firefox plugin and a WordPress plugin.

More power to their elbows, as we say in Ireland. And if you’re puzzled by the reference to ‘eternal September’, see the helpful Wipipedia entry. Basically, it’s shorthand for what AOL did to online discourse.

What Apple does next…

This is why I love the Web. Evan DiBiase, an undergraduate in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, writes:

Before installing any iTunes upgrade, I dump the strings from the old iTunes binary. Once the new version has installed, I diff* the new version’s strings against the old’s, to see what shows up.

When I did this for the recent 7.5 upgrade, I found the following interesting (new) strings…

Such a simple idea. Such a smart idea. And guess what it reveals? Coming soon to an iTunes store near your screen: video rentals.

Evan also found this ad…

… and wondered what it might mean. The answer is simple: Microsoft’s Zune publicists don’t speak English. (Mind you, Apple’s are no better: remember the ‘Think Different’ slogan? Now if it had been ‘think differently’…)

*Footnote for non-techies: diff is the Unix/Linux which compares two files and lists the differences between them.

Blair to join Ratzinger’s army

Hmmm… Stryker McGuire writes:

It’s one of the best-trailed conversions in the history of the Roman Catholic Church. Former British prime minister Tony Blair, an Anglican, is to be formally received into the Church in the next few weeks, according to The Tablet, a London-based Catholic newspaper. Blair has regularly, though quietly, attended Catholic services over the years with his wife and four children, all of whom are Catholics, and his conversion was rumored for the 10 years he was in office…

Someone once observed that Blair and Margaret Thatcher had a lot in common in that both Prime Ministers always believed they were right about everything. The difference between the two, however, was that Blair also believed that he was ‘good’.