Search DominoPower's 11,441 Lotus-related article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
The White House email controversy: a detour into mob journalism (continued)

FIGURE B


Karl's porking up at Porker's. Roll over picture for a larger image.

Then, the boys at Coptix fired up Photoshop, updating the image to show Mr. Rove holding a report with Coptix' name on the front, as shown in Figure C.

FIGURE C


Mr. Rove is apparently holding a Coptix report. Roll over picture for a larger image.

And then, Mr. Cross and the Coptix team sat back and waited for the blogosphere to blow a gasket. Which, in short order, it did.

One such example is Corrente, which stated this of Coptix:

Karl went out and hired his own, bespoke, politically wired nameserver company. Of course, Karl would never give business to any company that hadn't sworn fealty to the authoritarian agenda, but I imagine Karl is also getting a level of, erm, personal service that he wouldn't get from a fiddy-dollar administrator like GoDaddy or Yahoo or whatever.

and...

Nameserver administrators also provide email forwarding, which is the equivalent of call-forwarding on the Intertubes. So, if Karl wanted to store all his email safely offshore in, oh, American Samoa or Guam, then Coptix would be the company to do that for him.

The Wonkette blog called Coptix "GOP stooges".

Traffic all across the Internet jumped to judgement, claiming that because Mr. Rove had a document in his hands from an Internet company, he was "privatizing" his White House email in an effort to hide it from public view.

Shortly after this story exploded, Josiah Roe, Executive Vice President of Coptix Inc. published an explanation in the Chattanooga Times Free Press:

Our experiment demonstrated that, as with all great marketing, Web marketing can be used by a few people to shape the way that millions think. Of course, we ran our test on April Fool's weekend, when bloggers, like all journalists, should have their skepticism synapses at their sharpest. Today, two very busy days later, we are reminded that the Internet is a tool to be mastered rather than feared, and that the right word whispered in the right ear can still carry around the world.

Moving on
While the bulk of our investigative report into the White House missing emails is intended to be technical in nature, we're finding there are all sorts of interesting detours along the way. There's no evidence that Coptix is anything more than they seem: Web developers with a twisted sense of humor and outrage.

Citizen journalism is a very powerful thing. Matt Drudge single-handedly opened the door to the Bill Clinton/Monica Lewinsky scandal. In the past decade, digital journalism has scooped traditional "mainstream media" over and over again with exceptional reporting and detailed analysis.

But blogging and citizen journalism also has a darker side, a mob mentality. Many of the so-called "first tier" blogs tend to rush to judgement, triggering an avalanche of follow-on pile-on from hundreds of other bloggers.


« Previous  ·  1  ·  2  ·  3  ·  4  ·  5  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Special Reports > White House email controversy (25 articles)
   Analysis: Spying Chinese temptress steals senior Brit's BlackBerry
   U.S. government agencies' cyber-security and record-keeping worse than previously thought
   The White House email controversy: it's time for a Special Prosecutor
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent DominoPower Articles
Application development, William Shatner, and the origin of the universe
Learn Domino Designer 8.5 for free
The (near) future of Sametime, Quickr, Connections, and Symphony
Inside the IBM Innovations lab
Lotusphere 2010: Hot fixes and cool news for Notes, Domino, and LotusLive
Lotusphere 2010: mobility and collaboration
2010: A Lotusphere of change
Latest Lotus Headlines
Xpages not loading? JVM errors? - Solution
How to implement an iCalendar feed into your Notes calendar with XPages
DWA Hotfixes for Domino 8.5.1FP1 - A Gotcha
IBM Adds DB2 to Lotus Foundations SMB Package
SNTT : XPages onclick Ghosts in the machine
Ports used by Lotus Sametime 8.5 servers
Exploring a Domino Date Bug
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: The iPad defenders have spoken
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
OutlookPower: More about disappearing text
-- Advertisement --

Learn Notes and Domino 8 at your place and pace!
Learn Notes and Domino in your office and/or home! TLCC's highly acclaimed distance learning courses for users, developers, and admins will enhance your career and your resume.

The many included activities and demos will make you a pro! Expert instructor help is a click away.

Click here to try a FREE demo course!!

-- Advertisement --

Mark your calendar for in-depth Lotus training, May 12-14, Boston
Join experts and peers May 12-14 in Boston for educational and networking events that deliver real-world Lotus training so you can increase productivity and efficiency in your company, advance your skills, and squeeze the most from your current environment. One registration gets you into THE VIEW's Admin2010 and Lotus Developer2010.

Register by April 10 to save $200.
ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 1998-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login