Le Journal

Comment on CBS All Access: Is it worth your $6 a month? by myles schachter

Comment on CBS All Access: Is it worth your $6 a month? by acanthus

Comment on CBS All Access: Is it worth your $6 a month? by Pauline Ward
In reply to acanthus. Acanthus - I have Hulu Plus. No commercials. (And no cable or satellite for me = never any commercials.)

Comment on CBS All Access: Is it worth your $6 a month? by Vic Bailey

Comment on AT&T says it may refund customers for bad internet service by george.pattrick02

Comment on CBS All Access: Is it worth your $6 a month? by Mitchiepoo Girtski
In reply to acanthus. Yes YOU should pay for the commercials. I am gross and perverted, I'm obsessed and deranged, I have existed for years but very little has changed, I'm the tool of the government and industry too for I am destined to rule and regulate you. I am vile and pernicious but you can't look away. I'll make you think I'm delicious with the stuff that I say. I'm the best you can get. Have you guessed me yet? I'm the slime oozing out from your TV set. You will obey me while I lead you and eat the garbage that I feed you until the day that we don't need you. Don't run for help no one will heed you. Your mind will be controlled and stuffed into my mold until the rights to you are sold. You can't stop me. But I stopped it. I don't pay for commercials... EVER! It's a choice, believe it or not. It is just a matter of what you are willing to subject yourself to.

Comment on In defense of Jared Keller by Dan Mitchell
Good lord. I hadn't read this til now. It explains a lot! Why do you slough of the difference between attributed quotes and unattributed quotes as if it were nothing? It's the whole thing! It's the definition of plagiarism. If you didn't know that as of February of 2015, well, like I said: it explains a lot. The point is that he presented other people's words as his own. Like I said: that's plagiarism. Do you think readers (remember them?) that readers believed that because there was a link in a passage, that passage was pasted in verbatim, and wasn't written by the person whose name is at the top of the story? Of course they didn't -- they assumed he wrote it. This isn't some meaningless technical difference. The point is to be clear with readers (remember them?) about everything. What if someone quoted from the story and attributed that passage to Keller? That would be inaccurate. It would be incorrect. It's wrong information. It's the main thing we're supposed to avoid. The problem with aggregation isn't an ethical one, really. Journalists have "aggregated" from the beginning. Time magazine was *nothing but* aggregation over its first several years (mostly in the form of paraphrases of stories from lots of different sources.) Nobody was harmed, and few people, if any, complained. Newspapers and magazines have always rewritten news stories produced by others, including competitors. When they couldn't verify stuff, they quoted from the original story. Not ideal, and you try to avoid it (for reasons of professional pride, mainly), but not unethical. The problem with aggregation now is an economic one. Since we're all each getting our news from the same machine, it means that the "aggregation" often actually steals readers away from the publishers of the original stories. The ethical problem with this is new, born of the new economics of online publishing. It has nothing to do with plagiarism, which involves *deception*. This isn't a difficult concept. You don't pass other people's work off as your own. The fact that he linked (and didn't even do that much with three of the stories, so really this is a bullshit apologia for the guy right from the start) didn't negate the plagiarism. Passages that aren't set off as quotes are assumed to be written by the bylined writer, link or no. I know you're in prison right now (and I hope you're doing ok), so obviously if you respond it won't be for a while. But I was just so astonished to read this, even though it is, especially among the younger set, a bizarrely common bit of ... confusion, I guess. I mean, did it occur to you to *inquire* why people might think setting off and directly attributing quotes might be an important distinction? You just decided it wasn't and went from there. Yeesh.

Comment on Former British spy boss says text message collection “lawful” by disqus_USgueIdZco
In reply to bella. Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.

Comment on Iowa news crew verbally assaulted by distraught mother by mic56
Comment on A quick note about comments by Clork

Comment on CBS All Access: Is it worth your $6 a month? by carol

