Politech is the oldest Internet resource devoted to politics and technology. Launched in 1994 by Declan McCullagh, the mailing list has chronicled the growing intersection of law, culture, technology, and politics. Since 2000, so has the Politech web site.
Weekly column: bloggers remain second-class citizens, legally speaking
http://news.com.com/Apple+goes+to+the+source/2010-1071_3-5601664.html
Apple goes to the source
March 7, 2005, 4:00 AM PT
By Declan McCullagh
Apple Computer's attempts to strong-arm Web publishers into divulging
their confidential sources illustrates how bloggers, Internet
journalists and other online scribes remain second-rate citizens.
No significant difference exists between the news-gathering techniques
used by traditional reporters and the publishers of Apple news sites
Think Secret, Apple Insider, and PowerPage. But there is a tremendous
legal chasm dividing them: The California law protecting confidential
sources shields only broadcast media and "periodical publications"--not
the Web.
Apple claims that the Web writers are not "legitimate members of the
press" when revealing details about forthcoming products. Those actions,
though, describe exactly what good journalists do--writing articles that
serve their readers, rather than the parochial interests of a single
corporation.
The ability of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein to protect Deep Throat
led to their famous series of Washington Post articles about the
Watergate break-in and subsequently led to President Richard Nixon's
downfall. At the time, Nixon's Committee for the Re-election of the
President tried to compel Woodward and Bernstein to divulge their
sources through a lawsuit.
Nixon failed. In a March 1973 decision, U.S. District Judge Charles
Richey wrote: "This court cannot blind itself to the possible 'chilling
effect' the enforcement of these broad subpoenas would have on the flow
of information to the press, and so to the public."
Apple is trying to win the argument that Richard Nixon lost...
The eventual outcome of the case may turn on the wording of the
California Constitution. It protects anyone currently or previously
employed by "a newspaper, magazine, or other periodical publication, or
by a press association or wire service." That shields sites like
News.com, Salon.com, and Slate.com--typically staffed by ex-newspaper
reporters--but probably doesn't help bloggers or the Apple news sites...
[...remainder snipped...]
Posted by Declan McCullagh on Mar 07, 2005
in category free-speech
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