More Blogger Crackdowns

Its not just the FEC anymore. Apple joins the fray:A tentative ruling yesterday by Superior Court judge James Kleinberg is likely to have serious implications for the online publishing industry. In a preliminary ruling on a case filed by Apple Computer against three website publishers, the judge said Apple can force the three website publishers to surrender the names of their sources who disclosed confidential information about the company's upcoming products.

Apple's attorney George Riley, argued earlier in the trial that journalists, whether or not belonging to traditional media like press and broadcast were never entitled to the leaked information. Company trade secrets are vital to the survival of any company, and the lifeblood of the industry, he had said.

I'm with Jerome: public policy is neither my forte nor my desired interface with the political process. However, it is pretty clear that we are going to have to create some sort of blogger defense organization that protects our rights as political activists and as journalists. A blogger lobby is now a necessity. Let the organizing in our self-defense begin.

Tags: Blogosphere (all tags)

Comments

13 Comments

don't calm down, but do read closely
Don't let me do anything to stop anyone here from contacting their Congresscritters or organizing a bipartisan netroots lobbying effort to protect netroots activity.

Don't let me reduce the importance this post and many others place on the EFF and its continuing efforts on behalf of digital free speech. The EFF is doing important and necessary work.

Do, though, read the article closely. Apple made two arguments-- first, that bloggers weren't real journalists, and second, that Apple ought to be able to go after people who disclose its trade secrets no matter whether they disclose those secrets to journalists (however defined) or to other kinds of folks.

The judge ruled for Apple, but the article doesn't say which one of Apple's two arguments he bought. Other recent cases (there's one in Rhode Island) have limited traditional newsprint journalists' ability to resist subpoenas on First Amendment grounds. This case may not be about bloggers' status so much as about what all journalists (digital or old-media) can and can't do.

by accommodatingly 2005-03-06 07:06AM | 0 recs
Apple
There's a couple of with this Apple case that come to mind. First, it's certainly not the first time a court has ruled in favor of a business when it comes to internet postings; first time for a blog maybe, but there are many precedents for this on message boards for stocks and companies. But what's ironic about it is that Apple is attacking the base of its' brand in going forward with this attack on bloggers. I don't think they realize the negative value they are creating.
by Jerome Armstrong 2005-03-06 07:09AM | 0 recs
There Is--The Electronic Freedom Foundation
Hi Jerome,

Re: "...we are going to have to create some sort of blogger defense organization that protects our rights as political activists and as journalists."

The Electronic Freedom Foundation (EFF) is that organization. It would make huge sense for the blogosphere to mount a major push to shore up the EFF defense funds and their ranks of committed volunteers. They've been incredibly strong on First Amendment rights, on open source protections and on raising serious questions about the reliability of electronic voting machines. Check them out at http://www.eff.org

Steve
OperationEnduringVote.org

by Hoomai29 2005-03-06 07:13AM | 0 recs
Re: There Is--The Electronic Freedom Foundation
Yes, that makes sense.
by Bean 2005-03-06 12:46PM | 0 recs
This was inevitable
Right wing control depends on corporate monopolization of media. The internets must be stopped. This is the most important political battle that will be fought.
by miasmo 2005-03-06 08:03AM | 0 recs
Throw my hat into the ring...
I just posted a diary yesterday at Kos, and on my own blog on this.

Bloggers need to make their own lobbying group, asap. Multipartisan, lots of big sharp teeth, and backed by an angry horde of nasty grassroots-types with itchy trigger fingers. If we made a group that included MyDD, Kos, Instapundit, LGF and more it would be the 1600 lb gorilla on the playground.

If we don't get something up and running in the next couple of months I really, really have an intuitive feeling that it's not going to be good. I can't lead the charge single-handedly but I can definitely sign up to help out, etc.

Will monitor this thread and see what/who pops up over the next while.

Political Physics
by cgilbert01 2005-03-06 08:57AM | 0 recs
Re: Throw my hat into the ring...
The EFF is a great ally. They've been an important force on the Internet since at least 1990. They know more about this issue than any of today's political bloggers might know. Joining EFF and starting your own organization are not mutually exclusive alternatives -- do both.

To be as discrete as possible here, I don't see how any federal legislation could possibly stop an individual blogger from doing whatever he/she wants to do, and this includes associating with other individual bloggers.  I suspect that political bloggers either don't know, or have simply forgotten that anonymity and privacy rights are important long-standing internet issues. These issues have attracted bright minds who have developed ingenius technical and social answers to this kind of censorship.

I also propose that today's American political bloggers need to learn what political activists in less Democratic countries have learned long ago, about setting up descrete informal communications networks and using alternative (foreign-based) means of communication with their listeners and readers.  In fact, I would say that political bloggers are just about six years late in taking some of these steps.  

I am sorry if I am vague here, but I agree with you that this effort spells trouble -- I just think that lobbying openly against Bush (or Apple, Computers, or Microsoft) is as foolish as lobbying against any Dictator who has already made up his mind.  How on earth do you think you are going to win, doing that?

sc

by scribble 2005-03-06 01:11PM | 0 recs
The Bloogeyman sayz...
The Bloogeyman would definitely be up to help...especially given some of the things he says, he might get a knocking on his door soon...
by QuasiMotive 2005-03-06 11:00AM | 0 recs
Be careful, folks

The three Web sites in question are not "blogs." They've all been around for 7-8 years, selling tons of advertising to Macintosh owners, and reeling them in through rumors and speculation. The sites never called themselves "blogs" until the subpoenas came down, have never advertised themselves as "blogs," don't use blogging software, don't act like blogs, and don't function like blogs.

EFF was quick to use the word, though, because it generates lots of sympathy, as this thread plainly shows. Now, if we want to have the debate about whether Web journalists deserve protection when reporting on matters that are only questionably of public concern (like a company's trade secrets that have no policy impact whatsoever), that's cool. Bring it on. It'll have to happen sooner or later.

Let's just, please, get the terms right, and not indignantly rush to defend "bloggers" when that's not what the court is considering.

(Caveat: I have written on this issue before outside of my work.)

by mdeatherage 2005-03-06 11:05AM | 0 recs
FYI, the AP got it right...

...this time, in its own lede on the story:

SAN JOSE, Calif. - Free speech advocates asked a state judge Friday to grant the same protections mainstream journalists enjoy to three independent Web publishers embroiled in a lawsuit that Apple Computer Inc. filed over company trade secrets they obtained.

That is, in fact, the issue in question.

by mdeatherage 2005-03-06 11:52AM | 0 recs
And, actually, so did the EFF

Although early EFF press releases talked about "bloggers," and the EFF staff repeated the word like a mantra in some interviews I read, the group's latest press release on hearings in this subpoena case correctly said "online journalists" or "online reporters."

Read it here. Sorry for all the posts, but I'm coming across this stuff as I work, and there's no facility to edit past comments that I can see.

by mdeatherage 2005-03-06 12:14PM | 0 recs
Stirring things up
From the get-go, the right wing has been very clever about getting us all hot and sweaty about an issue, diverting our attention from other potentially more important administrative or legislative moves.  This may be another attempt.  Let's keep our peripheral vision active even as we work on this!

In fact, if I were to suggest any kind of organizing effort in blogosphere, I'd tend to look for a way of making sure that no opposition activity, no matter how benign it may appear, lacks for attention from one blogger or another.  The right wing is much, much better organized that we are.  They love to send us skittering off in en masse after Gannons and Decalogues.

by Bean 2005-03-06 12:54PM | 0 recs
Apple has a point...
Trade secrets are indeed essential to the survival of any company and there are NDAs that are supposed to ensure employees don't communicate them from within the company or without.

However they are wrong to state that the freedoms of speech and the press do not cover blogs because "they aren't conventional media". Oh in that case, we should consider restraining the 2nd amendment freedom to bear arms to only flint and powder muskets, since that's what was available for personal arms back in the day of the founding fathers!

Oh, and Apple sucks.

by Vote Hillary 2008 2005-03-07 02:28AM | 0 recs

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