t byfield on Thu, 24 Jul 2008 22:54:00 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Karadzic's website digest [x3: Spaink, Wilson, Young] |
It's good to see the diligence that's gone into 'debunking' the Dabic site, but it isn't clear why anyone would assume the site was "real" -- or what that would mean. That the HTML was hand-tweaked by a war criminal? Exciting maybe, but sort of beside the point. Anyone who grabbed (or wants to grab) the .zip archive I posted will find an extra file that wasn't in the website's file structure -- a text file of whois output for the domain. Since all the registration data is anonymized, the record is interesting for one, and only one, thing: the registration date. There's a reason I included it, and there's a reason (several, actually) that I didn't advertise my skepticism about the site -- beyond noting that archive.org had never heard of it. It's unfortunately that subsequent ~discussion got sucked directly into a real!/fake! dichotomy, which isn't very well suited to navigating the wilderness of mirrors that is Serbian politics -- especially in the context of a public charade like the government trading the declining utility of a war criminal for the inclining utility of EU membership. OK, let's go through this. The question isn't whether the site is a hoax -- of course it is -- but, rather *whose* hoax? The chronology so satisfying (I guess) to debunkers has to go something like this: after the arrest, some wag on the internet (1) registered the .com domain for his pseudonym, (2) hunted down remarkably high-res candid snapshots of an obscure Serbian new ager, (3) copied facts and/or text about him from sites that don't actually mention him (and hadn't yet been reported), (4) translated them in order to make the site seem more 'credible,' and (5) sorted out hosting details etc. And all of this went so quickly that the DNS entry for the brand-new domain propagated in time for the site to make it into the next news cycle around the world. The droll facts (domain registration, hosting) are hardly in dispute, but the interesting issues get paved over in the zeal to show that someone's been duped. Where did the images and bio factoids come from? The debunkers assume (I guess) that the Dabic site laundered images available elsewhere, but the chronology makes much more sense if you assume the opposite -- that the media laundered images first distributed through the Dabic site. I did quite a bit of searching and certainly saw some of these images on the Dabic site first; only later did they appear in mainstram outlets with the laughable credits to "AP" and "AFP/Getty Images." (Hey, and where did AFP get this one? http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/article-23519567-details/Beast+of+Bosnia%27s+secret+life+revealed:+Karadzic+had+a+mistress+and+drank+red+wine+in+The+Madhouse+bar/article.do It's in a series with one of the photos on the Dabic site, but aside from that its provenance is unknown.) It's good to be leery of post hoc ergo propter hoc arguments, but I'd be equally leery -- moreso, even -- of assuming that the Serbian government completely overlooked how to spin Karadzic's arrest. By which I mean: how to establish a seemingly credible story. It's one thing to merely say that he was hiding in plain sight, but how much more effective to *show* it: here's his website (two, actually, the "fake" one and the "real" one -- says who? AP! -- registered just a few months before), here's a parade of people duly swearing that if they passed him on the street they'd have NO IDEA who he was, here's the bar where -- it's strongly suggested -- that everyone had a very good idea who he was, etc, etc. The official story is awfully hard to swallow: one of the most recognizable people in the region grows a beard and kooky haircut, and suddenly no one -- not even the his far-rightist neighbors -- recognizes him: not his voice, not his mannerisms, not his posture. Pick your favorite political bogey (Bush or Cheney in the US, for example): a beard would totally throw you, right? When reports surfaced that foreign intelligence agencies (US and UK at least) were involved in tracking Karadzic down, the Serbian authorities -- which had insisted for years they had no idea where he was -- were quick to retort that they hadn't needed any help because "his whereabouts have been known for some time." No doubt. His arrest has been in the works for a long time now, and, like his hiding, many aspects of it were a hoax. DNS doesn't lie, but nor does it exactly tell the truth. Cheers, T -- http://b1ff.org # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org