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September 8, 2006

Hewlett-Packard Spied on New York Times Writers in Leaks With a Technique Known As "Pretexting"

This one from the guys over at Joynet. David Young posts the dirt:

The methods were/are suspect. Fine. A director of the company, Thomas Perkins of Kleiner Perkins fame, resigned from the board of Hewlett Packard outraged over the methods used. Also fine. Good for Mr. Perkins. But in the coverage (page 4, the editor’s note) of the incident it comes to light that Mr. Perkins just completed a $100 million superyacht. I think that’s interesting.

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 7 By Damon Darlin of the New York TImes— The California attorney general’s investigation into the purloining of private phone records by agents of Hewlett-Packard has revealed that the monitoring effort began earlier than previously indicated and included journalists as targets.

The targets included nine journalists who have covered Hewlett-Packard, including one from The New York Times, the company said.

The company said this week that its board had hired private investigators to identify directors leaking information to the press and that those investigators had posed as board members — a technique known as pretexting — to gain access to their personal phone records.

In acknowledging Thursday that journalists’ records had also been obtained, the company said it was apologizing to each one. “H.P. is dismayed that the phone records of journalists were accessed without their knowledge,” a company spokesman, Michael Moeller, said.

See documentation on The Smoking Gun

Continue reading "Hewlett-Packard Spied on New York Times Writers in Leaks With a Technique Known As "Pretexting"" »

September 11, 2006

JOKE'S ON HIM (Ronn Torossian): Page Six New York Post

The New York Post says Torssian Ron Torossian bought out the domain names of PR firms all over town.

September 10, 2006 -- WHEN Ronn Torossian of 5W Public Relations bought out the domain names of p.r. firms all over town, he forgot to buy the most important one of all: his own! Check out ronntorossianpr.com and it will direct you to a Summer's Eve Douche advertisement. "Let's call the man what he is," says our source who masterminded the prank. Torossian acted unfazed and told Page Six, "It's probably one of the many p.r. firms that I beat on a daily basis, and I welcome them to stand up and say who they are."

I was unaware of the backstory and that Ron's intention

"was to learn how long it would take 5W's competition to realize that they failed to protect there brand."

So I guess the lesson would be if you're going to spin Cybersquatting as an experiment in branding and protecting that brands name, protect your name first?!


October 2, 2006

The Blogging A-List: Who Will Take on The Good Ship Gawker?

The blogging A-list has been the subject of much discussion in recent months as the media industry has come to terms with the fact that the blogging isn't going away anytime soon. Big blogs like those in the Gawker empire have made the careers of relative unknowns.

Jesse Oxfeld went on to New York Magazine, Ana Marie Cox moved to Time (and published a book.) Even mid-grade blogs like Jossip have allowed personalities a chance at a better career.

And now the newest blogger to be validated by the wider media industry is Jessica Coen. Coen recently announced she was moving to Vanity Fair as the online deputy editor sending New York's blogland into a veritable frenzy over her successor as everyone asked the inevitable question of who will take on Gawker.

Thus now that we have established that blogging will get you places if you do it right, who will be the next sensation? The anonymous blog phenomena that was so early 2005 has left an odd gap in the top tiers of well read and respected blogs as more of these bloggers came out hoping for fame and fortune and didn't quite make it. The only sure path to success appears to be manning the Gawker helm. But do people even care about achieving fame via their blogs anymore?

This is an interesting dilemma when we consider the new demographics of the top level blogs. With more and more popular bloggers pursuing it as a hobby or adjunct to already successful (and at times very public) careers will Nick Denton be able to find the kind of captain that Gawker will need to keep the good ship Gawker afloat in the stormy new media seas? Can Gawker fight to stay relevant as her talent moves on to greener pastures and average bloggers forgo the fame and fortune route?

One popular theory for Denton's strategy in the interim is hiring a series of guest editors for short terms stints as the right person for the editorship is tracked down. Gawker staples like Worker #3116, unofficial mascot Krucoff (who just won lunch at Conde Nast and thus clearly doesn't need the new media's help anymore) and the internet's token black friend The Assimilated Negro will be tapped to fill in the gaps. Considering that current managing editor Alex Balk has been a little lackluster in his performance as more of Gawker's original material like features on the Meatpacking District and the unreadable Great Moments in Journalism have fallen flat this strategy feels even more risky.

But Gawker is far too valuable of a property to let issues of mere talent topple it. In order to keep relevant Denton will be forced to make some tough decisions regarding his ship's direction. Perhaps trying to take Gawker in a more pop culture direction is already having a negative impact. Anyone else notice how there are more Gawker Artists bits filling up the ad inventory, not to mention ouroboros style ads for other blogs and new media services? Not a good sign at all. It is time for strategic thinking about new media's direction with Gawker as the unfortunate centerpiece.

December 29, 2006

Manhattan Media & Celebrity Dirt

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This page contains an archive of all entries posted to Buzzed Daily! in the Media Buzz category. They are listed from oldest to newest.

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