Author Topic: BuzzFeed crossed the line in publishing salacious 'dossier' on Donald Trump  (Read 859 times)

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Wingnut

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BuzzFeed crossed the line in publishing salacious 'dossier' on Donald Trump

Margaret Sullivan
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Where does transparency meet irresponsibility? Right at the line that BuzzFeed's editor Ben Smith approached on Tuesday and decided to step over in the name of serving citizens' best interests.

With caveats and explanations aplenty, Smith published a 35-page "dossier" - actually just a bunch of scurrilous allegations dressed up as an intelligence report meant to damage Donald Trump.

Smith said he did so because his, and BuzzFeed's preference and philosophy is, essentially, "when in doubt, publish." But at many other news organisations, the rule is caution: "When in doubt, leave it out."\

In this case, the doubt should have prevailed. News organisations and government officials have known for months that this information, if it can be called that, existed. But despite many attempts, the claims about Trump's behaviour and relationships in Russia could not be verified.

Thus, major newspapers and magazines sat on them. In October, the Washington bureau chief of Mother Jones, David Corn, wrote a story based on the file, but stopped well short of publishing the specifics.

Why? Because he couldn't verify them.

So, what changed, and blew this out into the public eye? Not just BuzzFeed's data dump, but a series of events. Intelligence agencies summarised the "dossier" and included it in material given to Trump and President Obama.


CNN published a story Tuesday saying that much. And with the door cracked open, BuzzFeed pushed through. In doing so, the digital behemoth - which for years has balanced a tension between its start as a lighthearted click factory and, under Smith and a serious news team, a purveyor of investigative journalism and breaking news.

"Publishing this dossier reflects how we see the job of reporters in 2017," Smith wrote. In other words, readers are grown-ups and deserve to be treated as such, not paternalistically protected from information that might upset them. True enough, but it avoids the larger point: It's a bad idea, and always has been, to published unverified smears.

The decision certainly resulted in clicks. It also brought approval and disapproval, in some cases from unexpected quarters.

Richard Tofel, president of ProPublica, praised the decision: "Kudos to @buzzfeedben and his team for publishing the dossier. Once CNN story out, citizens should have evidence to consider for themselves."

Vice columnist Michael Tracey noted that while WikiLeaks had been "relentlessly attacked" for publishing verified, authentic information, BuzzFeed was being "cheered for publishing what appears to be a total sham."

And in the New York Post, columnist and longtime magazine editor John Podhoretz made a solid point: "In my experience, there is no source of whom you need to be more skeptical, and whose information you need to verify to the letter before you can even begin to think of publishing it, than an 'intelligence' source."

Once BuzzFeed published, of course, the dam burst. Slate followed, publishing the documents itself, and anyone in the world had access with a few keystrokes.

Trump immediately took to Twitter to brand the information "fake news" and to blame a political witch hunt. The publication of the documents does, indeed, give fuel to the notion that the press is out to get him.

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http://www.smh.com.au/world/buzzfeed-crossed-the-line-in-publishing-salacious-dossier-on-trump-20170111-gtpvkh.html

Offline Frank Cannon

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Whether these dopes at Buzzfeed or CNN know it or not, they just made Donny teflon. Nobody is going to believe any revelations about him again after this cluster f.

HonestJohn

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It's funny to see people taking Buzzfeed as news, instead of the guys that make videos like "Men try wearing sexy women's Halloween Costumes".


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PRPf_H9X9PE

I guess when all your own sources of information are worse, Buzzfeed looks reputable.
« Last Edit: January 12, 2017, 06:16:53 am by HonestJohn »

Offline EasyAce

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  • RIP Blue, 2012-2020---my big, gentle friend.
Once again I'm reminded of this about the press this man's group received back in the year:

There ain't much good you can write about us but I don't see where that gives people the right to make
stuff up. All that bullsh@t, hell, ain't the truth bad enough for 'em?
---Sonny Barger, when he was
the active maximum president of the Hell's Angels.


"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

Fake news---news you don't like or don't want to hear.