Fact checking please

Perfect timing. Listening to a podcast this morning I was heartened to hear Amber Mac tell Mac Cast listeners about the importance of the editor to users. Way too much hype is out there about "unfiltered" being better. In the real world people only have so many hours in a day and don't have time for unfiltered content. Last week I mentioned why this makes Google's news feeds so great to feed into my newsreader.

Today is another prime example. TNL.net says in a story "I did not expect I would end up getting something that few others are aware of and maybe even a scoop." Maybe. Well several people who should know better like Doc Searls, Phillip Torrone and Dave Winer all announce the news as well.

Here's the thing, a quick Google (or any search engine) search would have pointed out that The Mac Observer had this story two plus months ago. On June 9th TMO's story provided not only the tidbit from TNL's blog but the back-story on how NPR's decision in January was made into the most inconvenient mess for Audible users.

Unfortunately as good as the blogosphere is there are all too often times where it produces yesterday's last month's news as a current story. Then the echo chamber picks it up and runs.

Comments

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

NPR is going all podcast and dropping Audible. But is this an old story? One that the blogosphere just got wind of? Could very well be the case. Apparently, MacObserver started reporting the story in June. This is the kind...

Podcasting (trackback) (not verified) | Aug 15th, 2005 at 9:33 pm

I did indeed miss the story the first time around. Thanks for pointing it out. I generally start with the assumption that someone out there knows about things, which is why I was somewhat equivocal when I wrote the entry (the key here was the sentence "getting something that few others are aware of and maybe even a scoop"). I did not claim it to be a scoop (hence the maybe) but it was indeed something that few others were aware off (hence the linkage to that entry)

You do bring up an interesting point about the echo chamber. However, one has to admit that your post somewhat restores the balance. :)

Tristan Louis (not verified) | Aug 18th, 2005 at 8:06 am

It's TNL.net, not TLN.net :)

Tristan Louis (not verified) | Aug 18th, 2005 at 8:09 am

Fixed!

joshb | Aug 18th, 2005 at 4:58 pm
Jack (not verified) | Sep 6th, 2005 at 2:28 pm

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Use [# ...] to insert automatically numbered footnotes. Textile variant.
  • Use [fn]...[/fn] (or <fn>...</fn>) to insert automatically numbered footnotes.
  • Link to Amazon products with: [amazon product_id inline|full|thumbnail]. Example: [amazon 1590597559 thumbnail]
  • You may insert videos with [video:URL]
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <b> <dd> <dl> <dt> <i> <li> <ol> <u> <ul><p> <img> <table> <tr> <td><strong><em><sup><div><fn><h1><h2><h3><h4><blockquote><img style="">
  • You may post code using <code>...</code> (generic) or <?php ... ?> (highlighted PHP) tags.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically. (Better URL filter.)

More information about formatting options