IN
THE PAST six weeks, the Washington Post published two blockbuster
stories about the Russian threat that went viral: one on how Russia is
behind a massive explosion of “fake news,” the other on how it invaded
the U.S. electric grid. Both articles were fundamentally false. Each
now bears a humiliating editor’s note grudgingly acknowledging that the
core claims of the story were fiction:
The
first [Whoops] note was posted a full two weeks later to the top of the
original article; the other was buried the following day at the bottom.
But while these debacles are embarrassing for the paper, they are also
richly rewarding. That’s because journalists — including those at the
Post — aggressively hype and promote the original, sensationalistic
false stories, ensuring that they go viral, generating massive traffic
for the Post (the paper’s executive editor, Marty Baron,
recently
boasted about how profitable the paper has become).
[...]
After spreading the falsehoods far and wide, raising fear levels and
manipulating U.S. political discourse in the process (both Russia
stories were widely hyped on cable news), journalists who spread the
false claims subsequently note the retraction or corrections only in
the most muted way possible, and often not at all. As a result, only a
tiny fraction of people who were exposed to the original false story
end up learning of the retractions.
But after that story faced a barrage of intense criticism — from Adrian
Chen in the New Yorker (“propaganda about Russia propaganda”), Matt
Taibbi in Rolling Stone (“shameful, disgusting”), my own article, and
many others — including legal threats from the sites smeared as Russian
propaganda outlets by the Post’s “independent researchers” — the Post
finally added its lengthy editor’s note distancing itself from the
anonymous group that provided the key claims of its story (“The Post …
does not itself vouch for the validity of PropOrNot’s findings” and
“since publication of the Post’s story, PropOrNot has removed some
sites from its list”).
[FULL]
* Disclosure: I owned
1000
shares of Amazon, purchased at about $8 a share, and dumped it during
the dot.com when it fell from $107 to $7 almost over night. It's
now
in the $700. share neighborhood. But kept my AOL stock. *spit*
Ever notice that Bezos always looks like if he sneezed hard is eyeballs would pop out?
ReplyDeleteAmazon and Google could end up having to sell off parts due to anti-trust actions. I could see Gmail split off from Google.
ReplyDeleteAmazon video split off from Kindle books, and etc.
I think he has more than a passing resemblance to Lex Luthor, in more ways than one....
ReplyDelete