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-Here's an idea-- everybody has a right to be forgotten.
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Let's say tomorrow you enter and win a hot dog eating contest.
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You just house the competition-- dog after dog
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you are an unstoppable frank mangler.
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People are so impressed they take out their phones,
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they make videos, everything.
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And then 10 years from now, after many considered life choices,
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including becoming a serious vegetarian,
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you're applying for a job at PETA.
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Except, right there on YouTube for all to see,
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your face, the Hot Dogalypse, Harmageddon.
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Thank you for your resume, we'll be in touch.
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Or far more realistically, though hopefully unlikely,
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let's say you go bankrupt.
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A bunch of years pass, you get back on your feet-- steady job,
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no debt-- feeling good, you want to buy a house.
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You go to the bank and the lending agent simply
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Googles your name, bankruptcy.
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And there you are, years ago on some public record-- fiscal
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pants around your fiscal ankles.
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You are a risk, and so no loan.
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In both of these situations the internet's impeccable memory
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could lead to trouble.
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But at this point you might be asking
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who is going to Google, really, for a loan?
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-Human torch was denied a bank loan.
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-Well, let's talk actualities.
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Mario Costeja Gonzales from Spain had lots of debt
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in the '90s-- so much so that his house was foreclosed upon.
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A newspaper then reported on the foreclosure.
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Costeja Gonzalez paid his debts, and
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while his financial troubles disappeared,
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that newspaper report did not.
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It even got digitized and put on the internet.
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A simple Google search brought it right up.
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He asked the newspaper to take it down and they wouldn't.
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He asked Google Spain to remove it
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and they said he had to talk to Google US.
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The whole thing ended up in the Spanish courts,
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who then took it to the highest EU court, who
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said that Google has to unindex those search results.
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They point to things which are no longer useful or noteworthy,
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and so the European Court of Justice
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ruled that Google must comply with Costeja Gonzalez's request
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and provide similar functionality for others.
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If there is public information about private citizens indexed
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by search engines and those private citizens
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want that public information gone, gone.
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And so begins the discussion of the right
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to be forgotten-- well, sort of.
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Much older, and not specifically internet, French and Italian
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laws provide what is called a right of oblivion,
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where a convict can block printing of details regarding
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their misdeeds after they have paid their debt to society.
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This emphasis on personal privacy
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might seem extreme to many Americans, which
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we'll talk about in a second, but it
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does have a foot in history.
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Viktor Meyer-Schonberger, show the author of Delete:
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The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age,
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talked to The New Yorker about how
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personal information collected innocently
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by European cities in the early 20th century
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was used by the Nazis to track people down
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by religion and ethnicity.
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He suggests that Europe's past inspires
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a suspicion towards permanent comprehensive records,
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that their attitude towards collecting and storing
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personal data is a careful one.
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Google's head counsel agrees that this careful attitude
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is quote, a European concept, and given
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that, the right to be forgotten needs limiting, he says.
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Which it is limited-- to Europe.
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Currently, if Google unindexes a search results from Google.es
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or .fr or .de at the request of a European citizen,
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that search result is still indexed on Google.com.
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The EU courts are suggesting, but ultimately can't
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force Google and other search engines like Yahoo and Bing--
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who are also unindexing search results in the EU
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to adopt the right to be forgotten worldwide.
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Google has even basically said, um, yeah, no,
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that's not going to happen.
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Why would they say that?
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Well, there are three big concerns,
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and here is where we get to some of the America stuff.
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One, does this encroach on the freedom of speech?
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Bloggers, journalists, publishers--
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they should be able to write about whatever they want,
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even if the people it's about aren't super psyched about it.
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Concern two, same issue, different angle--
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is this censorship?
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If someone can zap stuff about them that they don't like out
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of existence, that seems bad.
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Costeja Gonzales himself has said,
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I support freedom of expression and do not defend censorship.
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What I did was fight for the right to request
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deletion of data that violates the honor, dignity,
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and reputation of individuals.
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The EU commission even wrote that the right to be forgotten
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isn't about making prominent people less prominent
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or criminals less criminal.
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In other words, freedom of expression
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and from censorship and the right to be forgotten
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are not mutually exclusive.
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NNG Andrade has suggested reconsidering the right
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to be forgotten as the right to be different from oneself.
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It's not about censorship as much
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as it's about how perfect memory can sometimes
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be an enemy of the future.
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Imagining people complexly through the network
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is already tough.
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We're different people in different places
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at different times.
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Maybe the right to be forgotten prevents becoming
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unfairly chained to your past.
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Which brings us to concern number three--
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does this allow the rewriting of history?
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We've argued on Idea Channel before that even the smallest
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bit of seeming ephemera could hold
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great historical significance.
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Now, are we saying that some of it should just get axed?
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-Here's Johnny.
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-But Google's not deleting things,
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they're unindexing search results.
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So maybe the bigger question is whether people
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should be allowed to bury or disconnect from their own past.
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That is a big question.
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I see a related anxiety on social media
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when people habitually write posts and then delete
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them not long after.
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There are lots of reasons you might do this.
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Maybe you post something you instantly regret
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or maybe you write something inflammatory
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with every intention of deleting it immediately,
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sort of like internet shouting into a pillow.
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Or so you have a high follower count with not much content,
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but some people post and delete because having
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a persistent publicly available self
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document is terrifying or embarrassing or just weird.
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I've heard some people refer to this as delete culture.
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And developers, at least, are responding to this desire
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to be forgotten-- to always already be forgotten,
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to have never been remembered by the internet.
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Apps like Snapchat, Yik Yak, Secret, Whisper,
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and a surprising number of others-- so many sources
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in the doobly-doo are premised on impermanence, anonymity,
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or both.
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Of course, as some of us learned the hard way with Snapchat,
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impermanence doesn't necessarily equate with deletion.
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And as for the others, time will tell exactly how anonymous
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they really are.
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Personally, I don't post anything on Yik Yak
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that I wouldn't say to my own mother.
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Anyway, the right to be forgotten,
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delete culture, these apps-- they all
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speak to the perceived, though possibly
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actual, effective permanence and influence of the internet.
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Many people feel like if they put themselves on it
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or if their selves end up on it, it
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will become monumentalized-- it will tower over,
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transcend some self that they hope eventually to become.
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Reputation.com's founder sees it as unfair
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that Disney or Fox or Viacom can handily
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have their media scrubbed from Google's search index
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but such a thing is nearly unthinkable
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for a private citizen's public data,
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even if that public data is out of date.
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The question is whether private citizens do have the same right
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to control their public data as media empires do
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over their copyrighted material.
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Some people say yes.
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Some people say all people do and that the right
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to be forgotten is and should be considered
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nothing short of a universal right, a human right.
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Ultimately, the effectiveness of and potential damage
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caused by enforcing such a right will be determined by the way
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it is implemented and how people use it or abuse it.
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But before we get to that point, it's
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worth reasoning out what it means
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to support such a right to be-- I
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just completely lost my train of thought.
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Um-- What were we talking about?
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What do you guys think?
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Does everyone have a right to be forgotten?
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Let us know in the comments and don't forget to subscribe.
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Subjectivity in the my journalism?
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It's more likely than you'd think.
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Let's see what you guys had to say about objectivity
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journalism and cereal.
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First things first-- office hours
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are this weekend on Saturday, February 7,
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at the IBM Pavilion, 590 Madison Avenue in Manhattan, New York.
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Come and hang out.
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We're going to be there from one to three.
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There's no plan-- just going to chill, have a conversation,
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meet each other.
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I'm really excited.
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There's no plan of where I will be
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since it is a private public space, so we can't really
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reserve anything but if you don't see me just look
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for my super bright orange backpack.
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I will have this with me and you can see it from space,
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so I should be pretty easy to find.
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Second order of business-- next week's
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episode is about the Legend of Korra finale.
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So if you haven't seen it, you can.
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You don't necessarily have to watch
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it to understand what we're going to talk about,
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but having the background wouldn't
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hurt-- Legend of Korra, Book 4.
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It's really good anyway so you should just watch it.
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OK, finally on to comments.
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Joe Hansen from It's OK to be Smart left a comment saying
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that he was shocked we didn't get to Jay Rosen's
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idea of the view from nowhere-- this idea that journalists are
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able to view the world from nowhere,
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from a place that is free of ideology, free of background
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information, which is a place that doesn't really exist.
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And Joe goes on to talk about the really important idea
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of authority and how audiences give authority to journalists
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and news networks and broadcasters,
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and there is the question of why we do that and whether or not
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we are maybe about to stop.
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And I think that this comment is so, so great.
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I wrote a pretty long response to it
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and then there was a great conversation that followed.
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So links to this one and the rest in the doobly-doo.
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Matolryu from the subreddit hits
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on the really important, uh, factor
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of entertainment in journalism.
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And Googolplex Byte also sort of hits on this same thing
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by saying that journalism can't be objective
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because objectivity doesn't sell.
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And this is a big thing that I think about all the time--
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whether or not journalism should or should not be competing
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on the level of entertainment.
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I feel like a lot of times it feels like it has to-- I don't
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know that that's true.
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And related to this idea, jakers457
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seems to suggest that ideally, the news would just
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be explanations of things that have happened--
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just pure information.
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And absent the problem of even the gathering
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of information being objective, which, you know, there's