By Ellen Goodman
Houston ChroniclePublished: 4/6/06
Excerpt:
I am sure that Jill Carroll and her family are too busy inhaling the
sweet spring air of freedom to spend time sniffing out the pollution in
the blogosphere. Anyone who spent three months imagining the grimmest
fate for this young journalist in the hands of terrorists can't get too
upset when a little Internet posse goes after her scalp.
Nevertheless, this is not a good moment for the bustling, energetic
Wild West of the new Internet media. Remember when a former CBS
executive described bloggers as guys in pajamas writing in their living
rooms? Well, it seems that many have only one exercise routine: jumping
to conclusions.
In the hours between captivity and true freedom, Jill Carroll was
seen in one propaganda film describing the mujahedeen as "good people
fighting an honorable fight" and in another interview saying she was
never threatened. An online jeering section bought it hook, line and
sinker without waiting to hear that the videos were made under threat.
As Alex Jones of Harvard's Shorenstein Center said, "They were gulled
by a clever piece of propaganda and ought to be ashamed of themselves." ...
If newspapers are the first rough draft of history, a blog is like
reading a never-ending draft as it's being written and published,
mostly unedited, without standards or correction boxes. Defenders will
tell you that blogs are "fact-checked" in the rough and tumble of the
marketplace by other bloggers. But don't count on it.The difference between old media and new, MSM and blog, says Al
Tompkins of the Poynter Institute, is the difference between sitting at
a restaurant and having your food delivered nicely plated or standing
at a buffet nibbling constantly. It's the 24/7 news cycle brought down
to the 604,800 seconds-per-week cycle.
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