Ken Auletta on Walt Mossberg

I’ve met Walt Mossberg (left), the technology columnist for The Wall Street Journal, a couple of times during the years I spent as a technology reporter. He’s a pretty regular guy — and a helluva tech writer. Mossberg, New York Times columnist David Pogue and Times reporter John Markoff are, in my view, the three top tech writers in the mainstream press. They ‘get’ computer and Internet technology and while I think they’re  optimists about technology adoption in general, they approach the subject with a great critical eye and with a strong sense that it’s the human beings who use this stuff that are the most important part of the story. Too often technology reporting gets caught up in techno-lust and a fascination with the gadget itself. But the best tech reporting — like any kind of reporting, in fact — is always about real, live people. Mossberg, Pogue and Markoff ‘get’ that, too.

The New Yorker’s media critic Ken Auletta has a neat piece in The New Yorker this week about Mossberg. If you’ve not been reading him regularly, I’d recommend him if you’re interested in computer use and Auletta’s profile is a good introduction to the man:

The opening sentence of [Mossberg’s] inaugural column, sixteen years ago, was “Personal computers are just too hard to use, and it’s not your fault,” a sentence that Mossberg has since described as his “mission statement.”

Mossberg’s influence was felt almost at once. ..

A week after Eric Schmidt became the C.E.O. of Google, six years ago, he went to see Mossberg. “He had just written an article about Google,” Schmidt says. “I wanted to get his insights. He was very gracious in saying, ‘This is what works. This is what doesn’t.’ He’s seen everything.” Schmidt says of him, as one might of a wine writer, “He has a good nose.”

Will the real Gord Brown stand up?

The Canadian Press just moved this story:

OTTAWA (CP) _ A red-faced Tory MP is apologizing after his assistant impersonated him _ and provided false information _ in an e-mail exchange with a constituent over the hot-button issue of Afghan detainees.

An e-mail from Gord Brown's parliamentary office, dated May 2, claimed that every alleged case of abuse involving Afghan detainees had been investigated and proven to be unfounded. That despite the fact the Afghan government has yet to finish an investigation into the torture claims.

The e-mail to Randi Davidson, obtained by The Canadian Press, was signed by Brown, the member for Leeds-Grenville. But Brown says the note was written by his assistant, Mark King, without his knowledge.

“Those are not my views. They don't reflect my view. That staff member has been reprimanded for sending that out,'' Brown (left) said in an interview.

“He shouldn't have sent it out to begin with and he shouldn't have sent it out with my name it on. I'm not very happy about it.''

And here is the letter Brown’s constituent received :

From: Brown, Gord – M.P. [mailto:Brown.G@parl.gc.ca]

Sent: May 2, 2007 11:32 AM

To: Randi Davidson’

Subject: RE: disgusting

Randi,

Thank you for this email.

My assistant Mark King showed me your previous correspondence along with his response and the only thing I can do is confirm what he has written to you.

Let me try to explain by responding to your latest email step by step.

Neither Mark nor the Prime Minister are in the habit of telling lies.

Every report of abuse, upon investigation, has been found to have originated with the Taliban. It may arrive here via different channels, but the originating source is always the same.

The key to this is that the complaints are investigated.

The second key to this is the fact that the people who are making the complaints to westerners are the same people who rape, kill and jail women and female children, who conscript male children into their “army” and who blow up aid workers and kill our soldiers. The soldiers and the aid workers have been invited to Afghanistan by the now democratically elected government to help the country recover from decades of abuse at the hands of these same people who are now saying they are being abused.

There are 60 countries involved in this UN sanctioned mission and every one of them is hearing the same thing from the Taliban. They have been hearing it from the very first day of the mission. The Liberals heard it when they were in government. We heard it when they were in government.

It has only been in the past three weeks that the Liberals have decided to bring this to the House of Commons – where they have privilege by the way – and make these allegations public. They are doing this strictly for political gain. If they truly believed any of these allegations they would have acted a long time ago. They, after all, publicly sent our soldiers and aid workers to Afghanistan in 2002.

The Maher Arar case did not occur under our watch. This was a Liberal issue.

The final issue you address is the Prime Minister's staff. The Prime Minister – and other government officials – are allotted a budget for staff each year. They are free to allocate it as they see fit. I will forward your comments to him.

Jennifer Ditchburn's story is what is called in journalism a “sidebar.” Journalists are trained to take any news story and stretch it out in as many ways as they possibly can. Think of a spider's web. The story is at the centre of the web and there are many spokes reaching out in many different directions. It can be like following a family tree. What is at the end can have little resemblance to the initial story.

Journalists have also not been able to find any evidence of abuse so they are “growing” the story to keep it alive.

If you use the Arar story as a comparison, as Jennifer is doing, there they were able to find evidence of abuse. Here they can not.

My assistant Mark is a journalist by profession. He has many contacts in the industry including one of the international producers at CNN. He is in contact with him about what journalists in Afghanistan are turning up on this story. It is exactly the same information. The Taliban has a well-rehearsed on-going campaign directed at the westerners.

There is little else to say about this issue.

Gord

Gord Brown, Member of Parliament

Leeds-Grenville

810 Justi <<image001.jpg>> ce Building

Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6

Tel: 613-992-8756

Fax: 613-996-9171

The Black charges

Here, by the way, is the rather impressive list of charges — straight out of the court docket — Conrad Black is facing at his criminal trial underway in Chicago:

FRAUDS AND SWINDLES, 18:1346, and 18:2 AID AND ABET
(1)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES, 18:1346, AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(1s)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES, 1346 AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(1ss)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES AND 18:1346 AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(1sss)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES, 18:1346, and 18:2 AID AND ABET
(5-7)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES, 18:1346 AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(5s-7s)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES, 1346 AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(5ss-7ss)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES AND 18:1346 AND 18:2
(5sss-7sss)  
FRAUD BY WIRE, RADIO, OR TELEVISION, 18:1346, and 18:2 AID AND ABET
(8)  
FRAUD BY WIRE, RADIO, OR TELEVISION, 18:1346 AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(8s)  
FRAUD BY WIRE, RADIO, OR TELEVISION, 1346 AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(8ss)  
FRAUD BY WIRE, RADIO, OR TELEVISION AND 18:1346 AND 18:2
(8sss)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES, 18:1346, and 18:2 AID AND ABET
(9)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES, 18:1346, AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(9s)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES, 1346 AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(9ss)  
FRAUDS AND SWINDLES AND 18:1346 AND 18:2
(9sss)  
FRAUD BY WIRE, RADIO, OR TELEVISION, 18:1346, and 18:2 AID AND ABET
(10-11)  
FRAUD BY WIRE, RADIO, OR TELEVISION, 18:1346 AND 18:2
(10s-12s)  
FRAUD BY WIRE, RADIO, OR TELEVISION, 1346 AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(10ss-12ss)  
FRAUD BY WIRE, RADIO, OR TELEVISION AND 18:1346 AND 18:2
(10sss-12sss)  
ENGAGING IN MONETARY TRANSACTIONS
(13s)  
POSTAL, INTERSTATE WIRE, RADIO, ETC.
(13ss)  
POSTAL, INTERSTATE WIRE, RADIO, ETC.
(13sss)  
TAMPERING WITH A WITNESS, VICTIM OR INFORMANT AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(14s)  
TAMPERING WITH A WITNESS, VICTIM OR INFORMANT AND 18:2 AID AND ABET
(14ss)  
TAMPERING WITH A WITNESS, VICTIM OR INFORMANT AND 18:2
(14sss)  
INTERSTATE COMMERCE
(15s)  
POSTAL, INTERSTATE WIRE, RADIO, ETC.
(15ss)  
POSTAL, INTERSTATE WIRE, RADIO, ETC.
(15sss)  
FRAUD AND FALSE STATEMENTS
(16ss-17ss)  
FRAUD AND FALSE STATEMENTS
(16sss-17sss)

Radler V. Black

David RadlerI’m down in Chicago for a couple of days reporting on the Conrad Black trial for CTV Newsnet. This is a big week in the three-week old trial because David Radler — Black’s longtime number two — is on the witness stand providing evidence for the prosecution.

Yesterday, U.S. assistant district attorney Eric Sussman started walking Radler, (right) through some of the complex deals that are at the heart of the fraud charges levelled at Black and three of his associates: Peter Atkinson, Jack Boultbee and Mark Kipnis.

Radler, who faced several fraud charges himself, made a deal with U.S. attorneys and pleaded guilty to one count of fraud. In exchange for providing testimony for the government, the government will recommend he be sentenced to 29 months in prison and pay a $250,000 fine. If Radler wants to apply for a special program that would let him serve his sentence near Vancouver, where he lives, the U.S. attorneys say they will not object. But Radler has to impress the U.S. attorneys with his truthfulness and helpfulness or else, as the plea agreement says, all bets are off and Radler could face stiffer sanctions.

Naturally, the defence lawyers for Black believe Radler is motivated to tell something other than the truth — or at least that may be a line of defence they will take. The defence probably won’t get a chance to cross-examine Radler until later today or perhaps tomorrow.

For the jurors in this case, credibility is likely to be a key issue. On the one hand, a key witness — Radler — is a self-confessed swindler, someone who lied and deceived others in order to line his own pockets.

The attorneys will try to convince the jurors that Black is of the same ilk. At this point, we don’t know if Black will take the stand. CTV’s legal analyst Steve Skurka says if Radler does well for the prosecution, the defence may have no choice but to put Black on the stand. (Skurka also has a nice summation of Radler’s first day in court yesterday)

Then, it will be up to assistant D.A. Sussman to get the jurors in this case to come to the same conclusiion that Delaware Chancery Court Judge Leo Strine did after Black took the stand in his own defence in a 2004 civil suit. Strine ruled against Black and had this to say about Black’s performance on the witness stand:

“It became almost impossible for me to credit his word. I found Black evasive and unreliable. His explanations of key events and of his own motivations do not have the ring of truth.”

Black’s criminal trial continues today with Radler in the box.

Conservatives and Liberals in dead heat: SES Research

The latest voter intentions survey from Nik Nanos’ firm SES Research has the federal Conservatives and Liberals in a dead heat with the Green Party gaining ground. In fact, for the first time in the polling history of SES, the Green Party has more “national” support than the Bloc Quebecois.

“A combination of factors have been at play in the past month including focus on the new Conservative Environmental Plan and a greater focus on the Afghanistan Mission. This all adds up to a political stalement. What has also been interesting in the past few months is the steady decline of the BQ and the major voter swings in Quebec between the Liberals and the Conservatives,” Nanos says on his blog.

Here’s the numbers (the number in brackets is the percentage point change from the pollsters’s last foray in the field with this question, on April 5)  :

For those parties you would consider voting for federally, could you please rank your top two current local preferences? (Committed Voters Only – First Choice)

  1. Liberal 33% (0)
  2. Conservative Party 32% (-4)
  3. NDP 17% (+1)
  4. Green Party 10% (+4)
  5. BQ 9%(-1)

The survey of 1,000 voters was done between April 26 and May 1. The pollster says the results are accurate to within 3.4 percentage points 19 times out of 20.

 

 

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Harper's Afghanistan problem

Pollster Nik Nanos says that the problem with Afghanistan for the Conservatives is that it might be the issue that prevents Stephen Harper from winning a majority government.

The latest data from Nanos’ polling firm, SES Research, suggests that whenever Afghanistan issues are in the news, support for the Conservatives tends to drop, particularly in Quebec.

Nanos writes:

Although the mission may be good at consolidating core Tory support it basically throws a wrench in any effort for the Tories to build a majority coalition (even 40% of committed Conservative supporters think the government should pull out if the casualties continue).

Some highlights from the poll of a 1,000 Canadians, conducted between April 26 and May 1. The pollster says the results are accurate to within 3.1 per centage points, 19 times out of 20.

  • 67 per cent of those polled say the Afghanistan mission makes Canada more vulnerable to a terrorist attack
  • 54.6 per cent say they agree with the statement that Canada and NATO together have not deployed the necessary resources to Afghanistan to succeed.
  • 54.6 per cent also say Canada should pull out of Afghanistan if the casualties continue.

New study links political activity to judges

This just in from the University of Guelph:

New U of G Study Shows Politics Affects Judicial Appointments

When it comes to judicial appointments, politics appear to be influencing selection, according to new research by a University of Guelph political scientist.

Troy Riddell examined 978 judicial appointments between 1988 and 2003 and found at least 30 per cent of judges appointed during the Brian Mulroney and Jean Chretien years made donations to the political party in power.

“That seems high, especially when you consider that less than one per cent of Canadians donate to federal political parties,” Riddell said. “Although individuals with political ties can be very fine judges, it does raise concerns that sometimes weaker candidates are appointed because of patronage.” <>

The study, which is scheduled to be published in the University of Toronto Law Journal in 2008, also shows that most of those judges made a donation within two years of being appointed to the bench.

These results raise larger concerns about the legitimacy of the judicial process, said Riddell.

“Every once in a while you hear stories about people appointed as judges as a reward for their political service,” said Riddell, who worked on the project with Lori Hausegger of Boise State University and Matthew Hennigar of Brock University. “So we wanted to test that out systematically and try to figure out how the selection committees were actually working.”

In response to accusations of partisan influence, the federal government changed the judicial appointment process in 1988 by setting up screening committees, said Riddell. These committees are supposed to objectively evaluate the applications and recommend to the minister of justice who should and who shouldn’t be appointed.

“Patronage appointments were supposed to be addressed with the creation of the screening committees, but that obviously hasn’t happened to a satisfactory degree,” he said.

One possible reason is that, under the current appointment process, the committees screen names provided by the government rather than collect the names of candidates independently, he said.

The issue of patronage appointments is becoming increasingly important as Canadian judges continue to gain more legal authority, he said. Judges now have the power to create policies and strike down laws under the Charter of Rights.

“They have the power to decide on issues ranging from the legalization of marijuana to abortion to healthcare and anti-terrorism. Even in non-charter cases, they make decisions that impact people’s lives.”

 

Canadian Journalist :: Citizen Media criticized

A new book, The Cult of the Amateur: How Today's Internet is Killing Our Culture and Assaulting Our Economy by Andrew Keen challenges blogs, citizen journalism and social networking sites, saying that they destroy culture and create “digital narcissism.” It's briefly discussed today on Editor's Weblog. An excerpt:

Keen, who works in technology, thinks that if web 2.0 continues to grow, newspapers will collapse under online advertising and users will edit news sites as they now edit Wikipedia. He sees networking sites like MySpace as places for like-minded people to stick together and confirm their own likes and desires, not to network with those with different views.

Read this post at: Canadian Journalist :: Citizen Media criticized.

Sounds like something Cass Sunstein was talking about in his 2001 book Republic.com.

And here’s a section from a two-year-old longish essay by Nicholas Carr which touches on this issue:

I'm all for blogs and blogging. But I'm not blind to the limitations and the flaws of the blogosphere – its superficiality, its emphasis on opinion over reporting, its echolalia, its tendency to reinforce rather than challenge ideological extremism and segregation. Now, all the same criticisms can (and should) be hurled at segments of the mainstream media. And yet, at its best, the mainstream media is able to do things that are different from – and, yes, more important than – what bloggers can do. Those despised “people in a back room” can fund in-depth reporting and research. They can underwrite projects that can take months or years to reach fruition – or that may fail altogether. They can hire and pay talented people who would not be able to survive as sole proprietors on the Internet. They can employ editors and proofreaders and other unsung protectors of quality work. They can place, with equal weight, opposing ideologies on the same page. Forced to choose between reading blogs and subscribing to, say, the New York Times, the Financial Times, the Atlantic, and the Economist, I will choose the latter. I will take the professionals over the amateurs.

But I don't want to be forced to make that choice.

 

Media gets it right in Quebec

A quartet of Quebec-based academics took a look at the coverage of four newspapers during the most recent Quebec provincial election campaign and found no evidence of bias:

Quebec voters who selected their election season newspapers based on the expectation that their
paper’s news coverage would be tilted toward favoured candidates were disappointed, according to a campaign news analysis conducted by McGill University’s Observatory of Media and Public Policy.

The study took a look at coverage in Le Devoir, The Gazette, La Presse, and Le Soleil .  While the study’s authors praised the neutral tone of coverage, they felt that the newspapers they studied focused too much on the “horse race” aspect of the election and not enough on some of the policy issues debated during the election.

Voters reading any one of the four papers throughout March learned a lot more about the polls than they did about where any of the candidates wanted to take Quebec if they won the election. Vital issues like education, immigration, the environment and national unity were all given short shrift in favour of an overemphasis on daily poll standings. . . .[but] The results of our study suggest that Quebec’s leading newspapers deserve high marks on the fairness of campaign news coverage, but far lower marks for their treatment of policy matters.

 

May says sorry, sort of …

Green Party leader Elizabeth May just put out the following statement in response to reaction to her comments in which she compared the Harper government’s Green Plan to British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain’s policy of Nazi appeasement in the 1930s.

Statement by Elizabeth May, Leader, Green Party of Canada

“I am dismayed that members of the Harper government have chosen to distort my comments to create a firestorm of controversy designed to distract attention from their failure to live up to Canada's Kyoto commitments.

“I can assure the Canadian Jewish Congress and all Canadians that I did not compare Nazi Germany and the Holocaust to any current issue. The evil of the Nazi regime is without parallel and stands alone for its deliberate, systematic and inhuman genocide.

“George Monbiot, best-selling author of HEAT and respected journalist at The Guardian, echoed the views of many people around the world when he expressed his deep distress at Canada's abdication of responsibility in the current climate crisis. As a failure of leadership and moral courage, he compared it to the appeasement efforts of Neville Chamberlain.

“I made reference to Mr. Monbiot’s statement to highlight the damage being done to Canada’s international reputation, something that should concern all Canadians.

“I deeply regret that the inflamed rhetoric around this issue has caused pain or offence.”

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