Mobs 2.0 and the AP
- The Web: The Networks
I've withheld writing before on the AP fooflah, primarily because writing counter to the Mob is about the same as throwing a sandbag on a levee that's already broken. Now the Mob is descending on the Media Bloggers Association because Rogers contacted that organization for legal advice, and the organization's lead knows the AP folks.
The noise is that the Media Bloggers Association doesn't represent the webloggers, which is something that the MBA has never claimed. What's really at stake, though, is discovering that, as I thought and wrote in comments to some of last week's posts, there is more to this story than first appeared with Rogers' initial posting. The concept of waiting to hear all the facts, though, seems to be anathema in this environment now. Report first and maybe fact check some other time seems to be the credo of a disappointing large number of A listers who actually call themselves "journalists".
What's particularly sad about this recent variation of the AP fooflah, isn't so much that the MBA is representing "all" bloggers so much, but that people like Jeff Jarvis, Michael Arrington, Matthew Ingram, and Teresa Nielsen Hayden, at Making Light, seem to be offended that Robert Cox is getting attention, which we assume, should be directed at Jeff Jarvis, Michael Arrington, Matthew Ingram, and Teresa Nielsen Hayden. This following digging up an old AP form, set up for businesses who want to incorporate AP content into their material, and making a breathless and astonishing leap of judgment that this is what the AP's answer to webloggers is going to be. Talk about manufacturing facts out of whole cloth— this, this is our newest form of journalism?
How much of this is really based on outrage and how much is based on wanting to generate attention is a difficult to separate at this time— a fact that should give us serious pause. The outrage is disproportionate to the event, until such time as the AP comes out with more information about what they feel is, or is not, fair use. Remember, it doesn't make the organization evil because it wants to provide clarification as to its interpretation of fair use. Also remember that just because you're a blogger doesn't mean you get to set all the rules. We're not six year olds, demanding our lollies.
Scott Rosenberg has a good point in that it is important to hear the AP's guidelines and interpretation of fair use, because both could have far reaching impact on how we write in these spaces. However, Rosenberg has not joined the "burn 'em first, ask questions later" war path; deciding to join with others, including Denise Howell at Lawgarithms, and the New York Time's Saul Hansell, in wanting to find out the facts, first, before taking match to the current effigy du jour.
What's chilling about this event is Michael Arrington's post deriding Hansell for his coverage of this event. Hansell's coverage has presented both sides of this issue, in a manner that is both thoughtful and level headed. In particular, he deplored the over the top reactions among some webloggers, including demands for AP boycotts, the benefit of which will only increase the exposure of a few at the expense of the many. To chastise him for what is nothing more than decent reporting is to chastise anyone daring to have a differing opinion from The Mob.
What I'm seeing with Arrington and the others is a demand for group think; an it's their way or the highway implicit directive that, to me, is a greater threat to truly free and open communication within weblogging than anything the AP can or will do.







Comments
Woe, man. I don't know how to thank you for pointing me to the post at ML, where yesterday morning (for me), like a springbok with her eyes pinned on a flaming copy of The Bonfires of the Vanities, I read every single comment (and a good portion of the links) on that particular post. I'm pretty sure I now have narcolepsy by proxy.
I stopped reading the links when I came to one about, well I don't even know what to call it. I am exhausted just thinking about all that was going on there. I was particularly interested by this one person who kept chiming in with completely off -topic nonsense and seemed to be a regular there. This person has no blog. I took the time to look. Imagine. Was impressed at Finkelstein's repeated attempts to clarify, but his comments didn't make a dent. I was having PTSD KC.Era flashbacks. And of course that old chestnut was brought up in the comments, predictably. TNH did not disemvowel one comment in that thread, but has no compunction about doing so to me at BoingBoring whenever I ask a direct question about whether or not they take product for posts. She chastises and tries to shame me, then incite a mob to back her up. Power corrupts and so on.
I can't (under)stand TNH or whatever her name is. I never go there. I have no interest in Science Fiction fan-fiction, BoingBoing's ridiculous obsession with "steampunk" anything since The Difference Engine or A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer, which I read when they were released and only talk about when one or two of my daughters pick them up, dust them off and read them - plus it's a rose is a rose is a rose of a garden of insider jokes that I don't understand - and I would make a horrible cult member or loyal subject. I never understood "little girl politics" and there seems to be some newer version of that same code of conduct for older people going on there that I just have no interest or ability in cracking.
That said, I have no more understanding of the facts of the original point. The AP C&D. But it did make me wonder if it was "legal" or "fair use" by these same standards for someone like Scoble to be rotating random AP photos on his 60" interspersed with his flickr photos of his baby at a cocktail party in his living room and putting out the video of it. My favourite part of that video is when all the guests are looking at the HiDef and saying: Ooh, who is that? - I have no idea... respond the chorus while looking at a photograph of Sarkozy and Kadaffi. Then up comes another AP photo of an Iraqui child with limbs blown off by a landmine. No comment. Everyone drinks. Then a picture of their own cute little baby and much oohing and ahhing from the cocktail guests; Scoble saying: This is so cool.