“Irrational Exuberance 2.0”

April 16, 2007

Steve’s been writing rather a lot about irrational exuberance in Web 2.0 these days. Is it a coincidence that his “Irrational Exuberance 2.0” post appears on the day the TechCrunch20 site goes live? I think the TC20 format is a great idea, but Steve does have a point.

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No More Adjectives

April 16, 2007

When does America run out of adjectives to describe its ever-escalating spiral of gun violence?

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Get Your News On at The Daily Show

April 16, 2007

Bewildering and hilarious results from the latest Pew survey: “Other details are equally eye-opening. Pew judged the levels of knowledgeability (correct answers) among those surveyed and found that those who scored the highest were regular watchers of Comedy Central’s The Daily Show and Colbert Report. They tied with regular readers of major newspapers in the top spot — with 54% of them getting 2 out of 3 questions correct. Watchers of the Lehrer News Hour on PBS followed just behind.

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Why Canadian Telecom Deregulation Will Send Prices Up

April 15, 2007

The Globe on why Maxime Bernier is Canadian Telecom’s bestest-ever friend. This on the heels of Tom’s post on Canadian mobile data rates…. If this situation weren’t so sad, I’d still be chuckling at the articles that the Globe has run in recent years describing Canadian telecom as “fiercely competitive”…. And the centrality of Rogers and the other cableco’s to all telecom in Canada, when paired with a regulator who would rather be sailing, is beginning to feel dangerous.

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More Blog Trouble from Katie Couric

April 14, 2007

Rachel Sklar’s eagle eye picks up a bizarre repetition on Katie Couric’s blog of the debunked Obama madrassa smear, and more generally, a troubling detachment from both objectivity and reality in its description of Obama’s religious background. Go Rachel Go. (And yes, Rachel is coming to mesh.)

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Kathy Sierra, O’Reilly’s Code of Conduct and the Political Blogosphere

April 14, 2007

This issue captured the attention of the political blogosphere recently, and it’s probably worth noting that the quality of the discussion in that ‘sphere was profoundly better than the discussion in this one. The tech ‘sphere’s commentary was pretty much what you’d expect from a bunch of mostly guys who grew up mostly privileged getting mostly what they wanted saying mostly what they wanted to being mostly the centre of attention.Folks in the poli-sphere are well-versed, I suppose, in the vocabulary of speech issues, living as they do in what’s effectively a crucible for the new dynamics of media. Threee posts are good leads into that discussion – one by Markos Moulitsas Zuniga, aka “Kos” (who gets between 16 and 25 million pageviews a month), and another by an avid critic of Kos’ on this issue, who posts a boatload of links (my favourite: the link to “Bitch, PhD” – best banner ever) to other discussions in that ‘sphere on the issue.

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Google and DoubleClick – How Times Change

April 14, 2007

Owen Thomas picks up the same point that occurred to me when I heard of the acquisition (wow – a tech acquisition story that wasn’t broken by Mike Arrington) – it wasn’t that long ago that their roles were reversed.

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Defamation Threatened Against TechCrunch

April 14, 2007

Mike Arrington has been threatened with a lawsuit over a recent post. Defamation suits don’t seem to be exploding in tandem with the explosive growth of user-generated media, but there is a steady trickle. For my part, I just don’t know why anyone would bother.First, as popular as blogs are, particularly TechCrunch, they’re still in media oblivion, read by comparatively few, and by even fewer of the readers who (one would think) would matter to the plaintiff in a defamation suit.Second, to borrow from James Carville on the Imus story, these days media moves like a brushfire, and sending a demand letter is like lighting a match – it’s a guarantee that (i) all of the people you didn’t want to see the allegedly defamatory comments are going to see them, and (iii) an entirely new audience – those not interested in the original story but attracted by the controversy – is going to find those comments.Third, in this day of personal soapboxes, responding to blog defamation with a demand letter instead of with a comment (notably, Mike has invited a comment from the complainant in his case) or your own blog post is – at least in this world – virtually an admission that some elements of the original story are true. Fair or unfair, it’s a gotcha moment – these days, it’s easy to answer a lie with the truth, and when a plaintiff doesn’t bother to do even that, folks are going to wonder why.

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Riding Bloggers

April 14, 2007

No, this isn’t a call to strap on a saddle. DemocraticSPACE.com has issued a call for bloggers from every riding in the next federal election, from across the political spectrum, and applications are invited. Get your political blog on, Canada. Oh, and after you do, come out and join us for a mesh political blogger meetup on May 9 in Toronto.

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The Morning News

April 13, 2007

And while I’m on the topic of favourite media, I’ve been getting a genuine kick lately out of the morning local news on BlogTO. Funny, irreverent and local. It’s a great way to digest what’s going on close to home.

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Thank Heavens for Slate

April 13, 2007

Not as a roofing material, or even for your floors – no, Slate for your brain. After a recent spate of particularly smart, funny and enjoyable reading it’s occurred to me that over a matter of years Slate has become my single favourite source of media – it’s now at the top of my indispensable list.

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Apple Option-Backdating Prosecutor: “He’s an Animal”

April 13, 2007

An interesting (and admiring) portrait in Law.com of Michael Wang, a U.S. Attorney said to be involved in the Apple option backdating case. Gist is a particularly compelling visual that will perhaps haunt Steve Jobs for a while: “”Mike was able to use [an expert witness’s] information against her,” Bessette said, by checking the expert’s data for inconsistencies. He was polite to the witness, Bessette said, but the information he threw at her was damning…. “The jury just started laughing, and the defense attorney just walked out of the room, leaving his witness on the stand.”

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