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| Eveline Lubbers on Fri, 2 Nov 2001 09:19:01 +0100 (CET) |
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| [Nettime-nl] CNN en Indymedia |
als follow-up op de controverse over de beelden
van juigende palestijnen een maand geleden, dit
opmerkelijke bericht uit Wired. Het woord Indymedia
is in de chatrooms van CNN verboden.
eveline
http://www.indymedia.org:8081/front.php3?article_id=82064
CNN / INDY Dispute Festers At Wired.News (english)
by Randy Reprint 4:13pm Thu Nov 1 '01
reprinted from wired news at:
http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48058,00.html
IndyMedia in a Snit With CNN By Farhad Manjoo
2:00 a.m. Nov. 1, 2001 PST
To listen to Aaron Schlosser, a high school student in Andover, New
Hampshire, the whole thing began very innocently a couple weeks ago: A
few
people were hanging out in an online chat room on CNN's website, and
when
one of them happened to type in the word "indymedia" -- referring to the
news website run by the Independent Media Center -- the message didn't go
through.
Schlosser heard about this apparent ban, and he decided to see if it was
true. Using two browser windows, he logged in to CNN's chat room with two
different nicknames. Schlosser wrote messages into one window and
monitored what showed up in the other. And sure enough, when he typed in
"indymedia" -- or "indy media" or even "1ndym3d14" -- he noticed that his
messages weren't being sent to everyone. Apparently, CNN was "censoring"
its chat rooms, Schlosser decided, because -- as he later wrote in an
article that appeared on the Indymedia
site (http://www.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=79356) -- the cable
channel wanted to "protect its interests from the likes of nasty,
decentralized, non-profit organizations like the Independent Media Center
that are composed of regular, working people."
To hear CNN tell the story, however, the folks at Indymedia are throwing
around dangerous words like "censorship" and "bias" without being entirely
truthful. Yes, CNN has banned the word "indymedia" from its chat room,
according to Edna Johnson, a representative for the company. But that's
because Indymedia fans were spamming other people in the chat rooms,
constantly telling chatters that they should get their news from the
independent site. "We did it after many, many, many incidents of
advertising," Johnson said. "CNN (chat rooms) do not permit any
advertising -- so that means if users repeatedly try to advertise in
our chat rooms, we will block that, and the warning is posted on our site."
The notice Johnson is talking about is pretty plain. "No advertising of any
kind, including nonprofit organizations, is permitted," it said. But she
said it is generally enforced only when the advertisers are egregious
in their plugs -- when their comments add nothing to the conversation,
when they become an annoyance, when the messages smell like spam.
"For example, if you were in a CNN chat room and you said, 'Go to Wired
News and read all the latest Internet information' -- that's advertising,
right?" she said. "And if you began doing that repeatedly, or if everyone
at Wired did that, we would definitely block it."
"Now, let's say someone said, 'Did you read such and such article in Wired
News?' And someone else said, 'Yes, that was interesting," or, 'I loved
that.' Now, that's not advertising, obviously, that's a discussion."
So did Indymedia spam CNN?
Not in any organized way, according to Ryan Giuliani, a member of the
organization in San Francisco: "We don't have time for that. If you want
to say that people who are core organizers ever have the time to go to the
CNN website chat room and put ads on there, that's not possible."
He allows that, perhaps, people who are fans of Indymedia have talked up
the site on CNN. But even if that did occur, Giuliani still thinks that
what CNN is doing now amounts to censorship.
"CNN is running an open political forum," he said, "and on an open forum on
the Web, the whole point is linking. On Indymedia, we don't have any
problem with linking to CNN stories. We think that the information should
be free. CNN doesn't think that. Their profit model is based on the fact
that they control information and control the flow of it."
This is not the first dust-up between CNN and Indymedia. When CNN
showed
footage of some Palestinians celebrating the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
soon after they occurred, an Indymedia reader posted a message to the
site alleging that the video had actually been shot in 1991, and that CNN
was being unfair to Palestinians. (Indymedia allows anyone to post to its
site.)
Though it was vehemently denied by CNN, that allegation seemed at least
plausible to many people who -- for whatever reason -- distrust the
channel, and all over the world, people began quoting it as fact.
Understandably, CNN wasn't pleased with Indymedia. Their head of public
relations, in fact, sent several foaming-mouthed letters to Giuliani about
the incident -- which leads Giuliani to believe that the chat ban is due
in part to the Palestinian-footage incident. "(Nigel Pritchard, CNN's
spokesman) sends us harassing e-mail yelling at us in these completely
broken sentences," Giuliani said. "In addition, he continually called
my house at 7 a.m. and he was just going crazy yelling at us. So CNN and
Indymedia, it's not like we've never heard of each other before -- and
that's why to us it seems wild that this is a coincidence."
But CNN's Johnson flatly denied the connection. "That's not accurate," she
said, explaining that it was a routine thing to ban people who solicited
in the chat rooms. "We would do it with any product or organization," she
said.
And indeed, it appears they have: After Schlosser mentioned in his
Indymedia article that it was permissible to name other media sites in the
CNN's chat rooms, CNN seems to have banned mention of those sites as
well.
Though Johnson could not confirm this had occurred, a test by Wired News
showed that both "ABCnews" and "Foxnews" were also verboten.
Schlosser thinks this occurred because these other companies represent
CNN's competition. But he said he doubts that mention of other
corporations would ever be banned by an advertiser-hungry site like CNN.
"Something tells me that CNN wouldn't be so quick to ban such a major
corporation as ExxonMobil," he said.
www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48058...
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