Corante

About this Author
Dana Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for over 25 years and has covered the online world professionally since 1985. He founded the "Interactive Age Daily" for CMP Media, and has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age, and dozens of other publications over the years.
About this Site
Moore’s Law defines the history of technology. It held that the number of circuits etched on a given piece of silicon could double every 18 months as far as its author, Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, could see. Moore’s Law has spawned constant revolutions since then, not just in computing but in communications, in science, in a host of areas. Moore’s Law applies to radios, and to optical fiber, but there are some areas where it doesn’t apply. In this blog we’ll take a daily look at new implications of Moore’s Law in real time, as it rolls forward to create our future.
Media Bloggers
In the Boston area?: Join us on June 11 for Startups and the Cloud, a free event on cloud computing with insights from Intuit founder Scott Cook and others

Moore's Lore

« The Crazy Frog Scandal | Main | Comdex Lives in Taiwan »

June 30, 2005

Media Anarchy

Email This Entry

Posted by Dana Blankenhorn

MBA logoFor the last few months I’ve been trying to help the Media Bloggers Association, mainly via e-mail.

I’ve been appointed to three committees, none of which I’ve been much use to. I started in publicity, moved over to membership, and I’m now on ethics.

Publicity they had in hand. Membership passed over a list of prospective members, but I had no basis on which to judge them so I just approved the list. This got me interested in ethics.

Do bloggers need an ethical standard? Probably not, for cat blogging or talking about what a hard day we’ve had. But when we’re doing journalism, when we’re researching and writing about other people, then I think we do.

I would like a simple, straightforward set of ethical guidelines. Those of the Society of Professional Journalists represent a good start:

The page goes into more detail, but those are the headlines.

The problem with the SPJ code is that it’s unenforceable. Journalists have no say in deciding who a journalist is. Employers have all the say, and they don’t have to subscribe to this ethic in their hiring, firing or promotion policies.

I figure a group like the MBA could at least enforce simple rules by creating valuable member benefits and kicking out those who refuse to conform, following some objective process.

Jeff JarvisBut that’s not how it’s going down, mainly due to one person, Jeff Jarvis (right).

Jarvis wants no standards, and certainly no policing. Might as well disband the committee.

“Why pledge to be honest? Only if you're assumed to be dishonest.
Used car salesmen should take the pledge. My blog friends do not need to.”

No objective measures of ethics, thus anything goes. Want to lie, misrepresent, ignore facts, engage in personal destruction for the sheer fun-raising hell of it? Heck, there’s no such thing as truth. We define what’s truth based on who yells the loudest.

Well, pardon my language but bullshit. There’s a fine line between libertarian and anarchist, and Jeff Jarvis just crossed it.

The state should not license journalists, but if journalists themselves have no standards then they have no credibility. There is nothing on which to judge what they say, no reason for them to claim any privilege. Jeff Jarvis likes the standards of mob rule because, frankly, he has a big megaphone and right now he has a mob behind him.

That may not always be the case.

If you just want to have a Blogging Club then, yes, anyone with a blog gets in, anything they want to do is fine, and maybe if enough of us get together we can get a better deal on our car insurance. Or buy some neat baseball hats.

But if you’re going to claim to be a Media Blogger, if you’re going to enter the marketplace of ideas and tear people down, build others up, report on facts and claim credibility, then, yes, we have to define what that means among ourselves and hold all members’ feet to that standard. The only thing we can withhold is our endorsement and maybe that doesn’t mean much, but if we work on building the credibility of the ethics rules, and the ethics process, it might mean something in time.

It makes no sense to try and educate potential bloggers in the best journalism practices and then say, oh by the way this doesn’t mean anything go do what you want, we’re not going to stand for anything and we’re not going to be outraged if you ignore everything we’ve said.

If there are no objective ethical standards, and no way to enforce them, because Jeff Jarvis thinks it’s institutional-media-think, why bother with the course. “I'll take a course. I won't take an oath,” he writes.

I’ll sit in the room but I won’t be tested. So how do I know you know anything? I’m supposed to take your word for it.

That’s anarchism.

Comments (3) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Journalism | blogging | ethics | personal


COMMENTS

1. Richard Bennett on June 30, 2005 05:50 PM writes...

Help me out here, dude. Last week we had a discussion about Jack Kilby's death and whether it was appropriate to use it as a rallying point for criticism of chip makers' use of potentially carcinogenic chemicals when we didn't actually know if his cancer was chip-related. You insisted that the facts of his cancer didn't matter because there was hay to be made.

Now that didn't strike me as ethical, even if it was sortof defensible in terms of some concept of a greater good beyond accuracy in reporting. And now you're calling Jarvis an a-hole for saying he doesn't think it's meaningful to sign an accuracy pledge.

So which side on you on, Dana, accuracy or some other cause that's comfortable with trampling the facts to make a point?

Permalink to Comment

2. John Dowdell on June 30, 2005 08:03 PM writes...

Leading by example might be a viable path...?

Permalink to Comment

3. Seth Finkelstein on June 30, 2005 09:32 PM writes...

"I figure a group like the MBA could at least enforce simple rules by creating valuable member benefits and kicking out those who refuse to conform, following some objective process."

As a statement of fact, unfortunately, I don't think this is true. The organization can't kick out A-listers, in practice, due to sheer power issues. Moreover, I'd worry more about A-listers being able to define the "objective process", as opposed to it ever being useful against one of them.

So I'd say don't bother with an ethics code, exactly *because* it can't be enforced. Thus it would be worse than meaningless.

I realize this is not a happy reply. But I think it's the inevitable consequence of what's possible and what's not.

[Disclaimer - I applied for MBA membership a few weeks ago, never heard anything back, never asked about it]

Permalink to Comment

TrackBack URL:
http://www.corante.com/cgi-bin/mt/backtar.cgi/7400


EMAIL THIS ENTRY TO A FRIEND

Email this entry to:

Your email address:

Message (optional):




RELATED ENTRIES
The Legend of Dennis Hayes
Evolution Changes Its Mind (Again)
Welcome to 1966
What Must Craigslist Do?
No Such Thing as Free WiFi
The Internet As A Political Issue
Google Images Ruled Illegal
Fall of Radio Shack