The press has had a difficult time over the years figuring
out the Web. At first, they wanted nothing to do with it, other than to
frighten readers with stories about it being full of evil beings. Only after
early adopters like the BBC and the Guardian established an online presence,
and were roundly abused for so doing, did the rest realise where the future lay
and follow suit.
Let's blame somebody else!
So now we have a situation where, as with so much else,
papers use the Web to make money, while on the other hand laying into many of
the major players as a means of generating cheap copy. The
crusade by the Daily Mail against
child pornography is a case in point: the shock
horror stories about what convicted criminals had been viewing starts the
ball rolling.
Then
comes the righteous follow-up, which holds, more or less, that (a) child
killers viewed porn on their computers, (b) they may have searched for it using
a search engine, (c) the most popular search engine is Google, (d) Google has
been accused of tax avoidance, and therefore (e) Google is an avaricious and
amoral convocation of the greedy and evil, and deserves all that’s coming to
it.
Moving right along from that momentary thought that the
logic leaps in this series would have the obedient hackery of the legendarily
foul mouthed Paul Dacre laughed out of court, there is a problem here, and that
is simply this: accessing child porn via Google, on the face of it, appears to
be a singularly difficult operation. Because Google actively removes links to it.
“We are members and
joint funders of the Internet Watch Foundation - an independent body that
searches the web for child abuse imagery and then sends us links, which we
remove from our search index. When we discover child abuse imagery or are made
aware of it, we respond quickly to remove and report it to the appropriate law
enforcement authorities” is
their response to all the screaming.
Now, there is always going to be something out there that
Google has not yet discovered, and therefore removed from its index. But, as
Unity at Ministry Of Truth pointed
out last week, this
amount is vanishingly small. And the Mail’s
righteousness campaign has another problem: there are lots of other search
engines out there – plus those who know where they’re looking don’t need to
search for it.
So why jump on Google? Simples. Everybody’s heard of it,
most use it, and so it’s an easily defined target. But the Mail has a growing problem here, and that is one of credibility.
Their Amanda
Platell “exclusive” last weekend
was either blatantly illegal behaviour, or, more likely, she actually
saw a legal video where all the participants
were over 18. So now Dacre and his attack doggies need to distract their
readers.
That means getting them to “look over there” at Google. No
change there, then.
1 comment:
Perhaps Google should block Mail Online!
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