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Judge hits blogger with $US2.5 million charge for not being a journalist

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  • Judge hits blogger with $US2.5 million charge for not being a journalist

    http://www.theage.com.au/technology/...209-1om8r.html


    In a case that’s sending a frightening message to the blogger community, a US District Court judge ruled that a blogger must pay $US2.5 million ($2.45m) to an investment firm she wrote about — because she isn’t a real journalist.

    As reported by Seattle Weekly, Judge Marco A. Hernandez said Crystal Cox, who runs several blogs, wasn’t entitled to the protections afforded to journalists — specifically, Oregon’s media shield law for sources — because she wasn’t “affiliated with any newspaper, magazine, periodical, book, pamphlet, news service, wire service, news or feature syndicate, broadcast station or network, or cable television system”.

    The Obsidian Finance Group sued Cox in January for $US10 million for writing several blog posts critical of the company and its co-founder, Kevin Padrick. Obsidian argued that the writing was defamatory. Cox represented herself in court.

    The judge threw out all but one of the blog posts cited, focusing on just one (this one), which was more factual in tone than the rest of her writing. Cox said that was because she was being fed information from an inside source, whom she refused to name.

    Without the source, she couldn’t prove the information in the post was true — and thus, according to the judge, she didn’t qualify for Oregon’s media shield law since she wasn’t employed by a media establishment. In the court’s eyes, she was a blogger, not a journalist. The penalty: $US2.5 million.

    The debate over whether bloggers are journalists has been going on for years, but the consensus has been largely settled — on the opposite side of what Judge Hernandez has ruled. Attorney Bruce E. H. Johnson, who wrote the media shield laws in next-door Washington State, told Seattle Weekly that those laws would have protected Cox had her case been tried in Washington.

    In a more high-profile case, an editor from Gizmodo escaped criminal charges after revealing to the world an iPhone prototype lost in a bar. Although police raided the California home of editor Jason Chen in 2010, the case was cited as a test for that state’s media shield law, and the district attorney said publicly this year that no charges would be filed to anyone from the site.

    When discussing the case, Steve Jobs told The Wall Street Journal‘s Walt Mossberg that he believed Chen was “a guy”, not a journalist. Mossberg countered that he himself was a blogger, and that he thought bloggers were journalists.

  • #2
    Re: Judge hits blogger with $US2.5 million charge for not being a journalist

    this one will be very interesting to follow... esp since we've seen a sudden concern by the political class, with the blogosphere being deemed 'dangerous' ?

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    • #3
      Re: Judge hits blogger with $US2.5 million charge for not being a journalist

      I guess the philosophical question is, should "journalist" be narrowly defined, with official trappings, or can anyone be one?

      Most of the so-called news in the media makes me think the entire establishment should be sued for not being journalists.

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      • #4
        Re: Judge hits blogger with $US2.5 million charge for not being a journalist

        Originally posted by zoog View Post
        I guess the philosophical question is, should "journalist" be narrowly defined, with official trappings, or can anyone be one?

        Anyone can be one, like Thomas Paine, the pamphleteer.

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        • #5
          Re: Judge hits blogger with $US2.5 million charge for not being a journalist

          Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio View Post
          Anyone can be one, like Thomas Paine, the pamphleteer.
          Right. I missed the part in the Constitution where is said only "established media" get freedom of speech. But, to be expected, since our society is becoming more authoritarian.
          Greg

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          • #6
            Re: Judge hits blogger with $US2.5 million charge for not being a journalist

            Originally posted by BiscayneSunrise View Post
            Right. I missed the part in the Constitution where is said only "established media" get freedom of speech. But, to be expected, since our society is becoming more authoritarian.

            esp now, with the dawning of the age of the blogosphere, which has neatly sliced away the monopoly over the disemination of info/thought that the 'big media' once owned nearly exclusively - that now allows 2-way communication and a _discussion_ vs the prev oneway/topdown bullhorn that was used to control our thinking - and much to the chagrine of the liberals (the gatekeepers of the MSM), all of a sudden apparently, now that there's competition for the MSM in the battle for eyeballs - funny how this wasnt a problem, right up til more conservative viewpoints came to be in demand (witness fox news ascension over cnn/cnbc etc) - and downright hilarious that when the blogosphere was working _for_ them (the liberal 'intelligencia') and putting _their_ candidates into office, it was a good thing - but now the same phenom is challenging their prev monopoly over the discussion (the MSM)? and threatening their hold on the office(s)?

            now its a baaad thing...
            Last edited by lektrode; December 11, 2011, 08:09 AM.

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            • #7
              Re: Judge hits blogger with $US2.5 million charge for not being a journalist

              Originally posted by zoog View Post
              I guess the philosophical question is, should "journalist" be narrowly defined, with official trappings, or can anyone be one?

              Most of the so-called news in the media makes me think the entire establishment should be sued for not being journalists.

              +1
              sometimes it seems like there's only one source for all info deemed worthy of disemination (by the lamestreamers) and then they all copy n paste from one end of the country/infosphere, to the other...this gets particularly noticable out here, esp on the outer isles, where we dont see 'the news' until 3 days after the fact (and til the big city paper reads it in the usa today/nytimes, copy/pastes it into theirs the next and the smaller papers read it the following day and copy/paste into theirs, on the 3rd day... ;)

              and THEN, theres what passes for 'news'
              somehow i never did come to appreciate knowing every little detail of the vapid lives of the kardashians, lindsey lohan or the drama of the x-factor
              Last edited by lektrode; December 11, 2011, 08:22 AM.

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