Tag Archives: journalismism

The National Security Agency Trains its Superspies at Shady Diploma Mills [Scams]

For-profit universities have come under some pretty intense heat lately, with Strayer University and others being accused by the feds of selling worthless educations to desperate people. So how come the National Security Agency pays them to educate its workers? More

American Apparel Confidential: A Million-Dollar Penalty for Whistleblowers [Exclusive]

Last week we brought you internal documents and employee testimony about American Apparel ‘s hiring practices and work environment. AA CEO Dov Charney wasn’t happy with our reporting! And for AA employees, leaking to us carries a $1 million penalty. Seriously. More

Larry King Still Has a Job and Other Reasons Why CNN Sucks [Cnn]

Today’s New York Times takes on the problem of Larry King . Specifically, the problem that no one is watching him. But that’s not just Larry King’s problem! His whole network has that problem. Because it is awful. More

First Guy In Line for iPad Is ‘Same Stupid Guy Who’s First In Line for Everything’ [Ipad]

The “first guy in line” story is usually pretty funny. These guys are wackos! But Greg Packer , who’s been waiting in line for an iPad at Apple’s Fifth Ave. store since Tuesday, is way more than a crazed Apple fan. More

Is the U.S. Government Spying on a Tiny Secret-Sharing Website? [Espionage]

Wikileaks.org is a website legendary in certain circles for posting documents people want hidden from the world. The Pentagon is not a fan. Now, Wikileaks is accusing the U.S. of spying on its editors. Tonight, Wikileaks tweeted that it was “currently under an aggressive US and Icelandic surveillance operation,” and provided a few creepy details: These might sound like the paranoid rantings of an Internet nutjob, but coming from Wikileaks we are inclined to the believe them: In 2008, the Pentagon commissioned a report on the site, which found that “‘WikiLeaks.org represents a potential force protection, counterintelligence, OPSEC and INFOSEC threat to the U.S. Army’ – or, in plain English, a threat to Army operations and information,” according to the Times . (Wikileaks posted the report to its site last week.) Wikileaks, which is run by a 9-person advisory board, has built a reputation based on its impressive record of posting secret documents like the ones that threaten the U.S. Army. These include emails hacked from Sarah Palin’s private account, 570,000 pager messages from 9/11 and the infamous climate change scientist emails. They have also posted sensitive U.S. military documents—most prominently the standard operating procedures for Guantanamo Bay. Judging from their tweets, Wikileaks believes the surveillance is related to an upcoming presentation where they will show unencrypted footage of a May 7 U.S. airstrike in Afghanistan which killed 97 civilians: The Pentagon had originally planned to show the video as proof that it had conducted the operation appropriately, despite having used airbursting bombs with civilians in the area. They later back-pedaled , likely because video was actually more incriminating than they first believed. Wikileaks obtained a copy of the encrypted video, and in January they tweeted “Have encrypted videos of US bomb strikes on civilians… we need super computer time.” They must have got that super computer time, and now U.S. authorities may be acting positively Chinese. Secret-sharing websites like Wikileaks have proven adept at dealing with legal challenges: When Cryptone.org was shut down by Microsoft earlier this year a mirror site was up within hours. But pissing off the government regarding national security matters is a whole other level. If anything happens to Wikileaks, you know who is responsible. (If you’re wondering what the editors were doing in Iceland: Wikileaks is currently helping draft legislation that would make the country a safe haven for investigative journalists. Ha!)

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Is the U.S. Government Spying on a Tiny Secret-Sharing Website? [Espionage]

Russian Newsweek EIC Loves Hookers, Blow [Drugs]

Just like angry former expat Matt Taibbi , the editor-in-chief of the Russian edition of Newsweek , Mikhail Fishman , likes to party the Moscow way. But it may all be a set up by the Kremlin. Or maybe not. Who knows? The Daily Beast’s Michael Idov recaps the titillating story that involves cops, political activists, models/prostitutes, sex and drugs. Says opposition activist Ilya Yashin: One night she called me up and asked me to come to her apartment right away. She said she had a surprise for me. The surprise was Nastya, and both of them dragged me into bed as soon as I came through the door. I’d be lying if I said I resisted. Everything was fine until Katya produced a whole pile of sex toys: dildos, whips, handcuffs, ball gags.” Is having a little fun with some pretty ladies and some party drugs such a bad thing? Not everyone thinks so: Let me get this straight,” wrote Ilya Krasilschik, the editor of Afisha magazine, commenting on a Facebook status update after the scandal broke and summing up much of the popular sentiment. “You fight the regime, and in exchange the regime brings you free chicks and blow? Duly noted.” Noted, indeed! The video, in Russian, shows Fishman chopping up a mysterious powder next to a half-naked woman. It gets good at 3:37, maybe NSFW: [ Image via ]

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Russian Newsweek EIC Loves Hookers, Blow [Drugs]

How Blogs Are Becoming More Like Newspapers [Media]

The LA Times today examines how the Seattle Post-Intelligencer segued from print to exclusively online journalism . But blogging — how and why we cover the stories we cover — is going the other way and coming to resemble… newspapers. A year ago online journalism was the ‘online journalism’ that old-school reporters and J-school professors still ponder. It was measured in hours, not the daily news cycle of a paper. It was a different beast where corrections were fluid, where whimsy and opinion mattered as much as content. People visited a homepage, scrolled down and clicked on whatever caught their eye. Now blogs compete aggressively for audience. Politico , Deadline Hollywood and everyone else seeks to break news to differentiate them from their competition. To do so they, and we, must also now write tight, concise headlines, choose decent pictures or art, and provide readers with more evidence of their journalism (pics, or documents, or it didn’t happen). Opinion pieces and rants cannot rely on raw snark — the ones that get read will hold together, under immediate comment scrutiny, like a traditional op-ed. In short, blogs must now compete for readers’ attention like a newspaper on a stand does (or did). The reason why is a cliche — the kind of cliche that gets articles like this one thrown on the scrapheap, read by dozens not thousands, or millions: Twitter and Facebook. Because more people now pluck most of their news from their social networks, blog time is measured in minutes not hours — you’re either first or definitive or funniest or most provocative or someone else will have the link that gets tweeted and posted on walls. If you are first (and it doesn’t have to be Watergate) a vague headline will not work as it once might have. Because whimsy does not retweet well. So if, to Gawker-promote, you find out that Wyclef Jean paid his mistress $105,000 through his Haiti charity, the headline should probably be Wyclef Jean Paid His Mistress $105,000 Through His Haiti Charity . Like a newspaper headline. John Cook, who wrote that story, also uncovered Nikki Finke’s habit of changing her stories to suit emerging facts . But now if a story, with its headline and probably the first few lines, is immediately spread around, secret corrections will be exposed anyway. Correcting like a newspaper — explaining clearly precisely the fuck-up, and how it was amended — is not just good practice online. It’s about to become the only option. Blogs, like this one, used to get away with quickly repackaging content and adding a penis joke. But, as our proprietor Nick Denton explained in an internal email, “any treatment [of a story] can work, really, except for the old-school blog item, that rehashed news story with a dash of puerile snark. Nobody links to that.” Nobody links to stories with dull pictures, or lots of typos, or tenuous premises either. In the same way people skip over them in their newspapers. It’s a quick change, and nobody is perfect (before you seek examples on this site). Which is probably why Cynthia Shannon, of San Francisco, tweeted at 11.02 on Friday, that “there’s something seriously wrong when DRUDGE and GAWKER are my primary sources of news.” If we want Cynthia to move from grudging appreciation to something more fulsome, we’ll have to become more like the institutions we seek to replace. (Also: please link to this. Thanks.)

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How Blogs Are Becoming More Like Newspapers [Media]

Mean Martha Stewart Book Excerpts: Celebrity Edition [Books]

It’s time for more excerpts from 2010’s most backstabbing tell-all book , The Best of Friends [sarcasm!]: Martha and Me by Mariana Pasternak . Today: Martha’s frenemy mocks Martha’s calculating interactions with Anthony Hopkins, Richard Meier, and Billy Tauzin. Mariana Pasternak does not approve of Martha’s humorous insinuation that she would bone Anthony Hopkins only if she enjoyed the cock of serial killers: Mariana Pasternak does not approve of Martha’s jealous behavior when celebrity architect Richard Meier is trying to finger Mariana under the table! Mariana Pasternak does not approve of Martha’s sly political manipulations, either: [Martha, we must reiterate our insistence that you email us your side of the story at once . This lady is actually making us sympathize with you, which is detrimental to our sworn feud .]

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Mean Martha Stewart Book Excerpts: Celebrity Edition [Books]

Toyota Demands Retraction and Apology From ABC News Over Manufactured Death Ride [Threats]

Toyota’s general counsel is calling on ABC News president David Westin to retract and apologize for a cocked-up story by America’s Wrongest Reporter, Brian Ross . Last month, Ross filed a report featuring a test conducted by David Gilbert, an Illinois professor who claimed to have found a way to induce unintended acceleration in Toyotas without triggering an error code that would allow mechanics to diagnose the problem. The exercise was supposed to prove that it’s theoretically possible for Toyotas to accelerate without command and then show no sign of having done so later on. Ross himself took a little on-camera death ride. And to make it seem even scarier, he took a staged shot of a surging tachometer taken while the car was parked and stitched it in to the piece to make it look like it was happening while he was driving . ABC News later changed the online version of the story after we asked them about the fakery. The story had other problems, according to Toyota: As the company demonstrated in a lengthy online rebuttal, Gilbert’s test almost certainly can’t be replicated under real-world conditions . He essentially rewired a Toyota to do what he wanted it to do—accelerate without command and without generating an error code—which is kind of like leaving the gas on a stove on for a few hours and lighting a match to prove that America’s kitchens are littered with millions of ticking timebombs. Engineers from Stanford working on Toyota’s behalf were able to rewire a Subarus, Honda, Chevrolet, and Ford in the same manner. And Ross didn’t disclose in his report that Gilbert had previously been paid as a consultant by Sean Kane, an investigator working for plaintiff’s lawyers in lawsuits against Toyota, and has an agreement with Kane paying him $150 an hour for work “going forward.” In the March 11 letter, a copy of which was provided to Gawker by a source close to Toyota, the company says Ross “singularly failed in his basic duty as a journalist to disclose material information about Professor Gilbert that would have directly influenced his credibility with the audience.” It also accuses him of “rush[ing] out his report on the eve of important congressional hearings concerning Toyota” and failing to offer the company an opportunity to examine Gilbert’s test before responding. Indeed, on February 23, the day after Ross’ story aired, Gilbert testified before the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, and the death-ride came up. Read the full letter, which ends with the veiled boilerplate threat that “Toyota reserves the right to take any and every appropriate step to protect and defend the reputation of our company and its products from irresponsible and inaccurate claims,” below. A good reporter knows when he gets letters like this that he’s doing his job. Unfortunately, Brian Ross is not a good reporter. And he’s been off the radar at a particularly sensitive time—Ross hasn’t covered Toyota since the furor over his report erupted. An ABC News spokesman says he’s in the midst of a “long-planned vacation,” and that ABC is “in receipt of Toyota’s letter. Our lawyers are looking at it, and we will respond.”

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Toyota Demands Retraction and Apology From ABC News Over Manufactured Death Ride [Threats]

The Spy Who Wronged Me: The New York Times’ Messy Entanglement With an Ex-CIA Operative [Spooks]

The New York Times reported this morning that an off-the-books intelligence operation may be assassinating people in Pakistan with the help of a sketchy former spook—the same guy that the Times hired to save reporter David Rohde ‘s life. Dexter Filkins and Mark Mazzetti’s Page One story on a secret contractor-run intelligence program in Afghanistan and Pakistan offers a weird view into the intersection of the media business and the world of spycraft, not to mention the hazards of a newspaper like the Times hiring a private army led by an arguably crazy ex-spy. The story recounts the development of a “network of private contractors in Afghanistan and Pakistan to help track and kill suspected militants” that operated under the cover of “a benign government information-gathering program,” and Mazzetti and Filkins refer darkly to the involvement a legendary former CIA operative named Duane “Dewey” Clarridge as evidence that something was fishy about the whole thing. They describe Clarridge as “a former top C.I.A. official who has been linked to a generation of C.I.A. adventures, including the Iran-Contra scandal,” which is a nicer way of saying Clarridge was involved in the illegal mining of Nicaraguan harbors and indicted in 1991 for lying to Congress about arms shipments to Iran (he was pardoned by President George H.W. Bush in 1992 ). Clarridge is a legendary old spook in intelligence circles, and the Times says the Defense Department official who ran the program “would occasionally brag to his superiors about having Mr. Clarridge’s services at his disposal.” As the story discloses, the Times once also had Clarridge’s services at its disposal. He was hired, through his employer American International Security Corporation, in 2008 to secure the release of kidnapped Times reporter David Rohde from his Taliban captors in Pakistan. When Rohde was first kidnapped, the Times and its insurer AIG sought out a security firm called Clayton Consultants to handle the case. Clayton’s strategy, and expertise from prior cases it had worked on, was to negotiate a ransom. But after negotiations stalled, Rohde’s family became anxious and insisted that the Times pursue a dual-track approach: Clayton would continue the ransom route, but the Times also hired AISC and Clarridge to prepare a paramilitary snatch-and-grab operation. A team assembled by Clarridge was at one point suited up and ready to assault a location where they believed Rohde was being held, according to New York magazine , but the operation was called off at the last minute. Rohde and his translator Tahir Ludin eventually escaped on their own in June of last year. But Clarridge soon began causing headaches for the Times . He freely talked to reporters off the record—ABC News’ Brian Ross is said to be in regular contact with him—and began spreading rumors that the story of Rohde’s escape was a sham. Ross and New York both reported that contractors hired by the Times had paid bribes to Rohde’s guards , contradicting the Times ‘ claims that it had paid no ransom and suggesting that Rohde’s escape was a planned operation. According to one contractor who worked on Rohde’s case, Clarridge was inflating his role in facilitating Rohde’s escape in an effort to justify AISC’s enormous fees. The contractor says Clarridge routinely supplied inaccurate intelligence about Rohde’s whereabouts—on the day Rohde escaped from a safehouse in Miram Shah, Waziristan, the source said, Clarridge was claiming that he was being held in an entirely different location. The rumor campaign against the Times culminated in a series of Twitter posts by independent warblogger Michael Yon, who caused a stir in November by writing that “ex-CIA officers helped pay off release for Rohde” to the tune of “millions” of dollars. Yon’s claims attracted a flurry of attention, and Rohde responded that he would “never have written a five-part series [detailing his captivity and escape] based on a lie.” In December, in response to inquiries from Gawker, Rohde wrote that “money was paid to individuals who claimed to know our whereabouts, but I do not believe that the guards who lived with us were bribed. As I have repeatedly said, our guards did not help us during our escape. In addition, no one has been able to name the guards who lived with us.” According to one Times insider, the paper suspected Clarridge was behind the rumors and confronted him, but took him at his word when he denied it. “There’s no ill will toward Clarridge,” the insider says. “Getting accurate information out of the tribal areas is extraordinarily difficult.” But another source familiar with Clarridge’s involvement in the Rohde episode says the Times was furious, and threatened in December to withhold payment from AISC, claiming that the leaks and rumors constituted a violation of the contract. AISC, the source says, was considering legal action against the paper. The tension seems to have defused, however. Reached at his home in California, Clarridge told Gawker that the Times and AISC “came to some sort of a negotiated settlement,” before declining to answer further questions for the record. A Times spokesman says “We have no billing dispute with AISC, and AISC has no billing dispute with us.” And the Times insider insists that the dispute was “about money and hours,” not any involvement Clarridge may have had with the bribery rumors. Clarridge, who is in his late 70s, is a strange man, and has a reputation among reporters who have spoken to him of making outrageous and contradictory statements. In September 2009, he sent a political screed via e-mail to a wide contact list under the subject heading “Senator McCarthy Was Right.” In it, he complained of the influence of “far left vermin (FLV) as they are known in the bug business” and hailed the imminent right-wing insurrection: “We won the Cold War; now we will win The War of the Authoritarians, which will be a civil war in the USA and such catastrophes are always exquisitely nasty.” The prospect of the Department of Defense hiring an indicted perjurer who advocates “civil war in the USA” to run an off-the-books intelligence operation is strange enough without adding in his prior ugly entanglement with the New York Times . The fact that it was the Times itself who blew the lid off his involvement makes the whole thing unbelievably incestuous. (The Times insider, for what it’s worth, says the story was not motivated by a vendetta against Clarridge: “He came up very late in the reporting, and once he did, we had to put him in there with a disclosure of his previous involvement with the Times.”) The program started with an idea from, of all people, former CNN executive and Sharon Stone-dater Eason Jordan . He proposed a DOD-funded web site, similar to his post-CNN project Iraq Slogger, that would cover Afghanistan and Pakistan. The DOD loved the idea and funded it to the tune of $22 million, but the money was diverted, the Times says, to the secret intelligence network by Michael Furlong, a DOD official and former Air Force officer with “extensive experience in psychological operations.” Jordan’s web site, Afpax, did get off the ground, but he says he only received two slight payments from the DOD funding the work. The rest of the money allocated for the project went somewhere else—presumably to the secret network. It wasn’t Jordan’s first run-in with psy-ops. While he was in charge of newsgathering for CNN, he invited active duty psy-ops operatives with the Army to intern in CNN’s Atlanta headquarters . “Psyops personnel, soldiers, and officers, have been working in CNN’s headquarters in Atlanta through our program ‘Training With Industry,'” an Army spokesperson admitted in 2000. The program was immediately discontinued once people figured out that it’s not such a good idea to invite professional liars to help deliver cable news and study how to better lie to news organizations. So he probably should have known better.

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The Spy Who Wronged Me: The New York Times’ Messy Entanglement With an Ex-CIA Operative [Spooks]