Monthly Archives: March 2006

In Which I Speak on ‘Blogger Ethics’

If you are in the Coral Gables area today at 10:10 am, you can catch me speaking on the odd topic of “blogger ethics” (and how these compare to journalists’ ethics) at the UM School of Communications School Courtyard, as part of Communications Week.

As the interloper from across the street, my job is to raises blood pressures. So I’m going to suggest that there are three types of bloggers: Professionals, Pro-Ams, and real Amateurs.

For the professional blogger, whose blog is part of the job, the ethical rules that apply are (1) Don’t hide your affiliation with your employer and (2) follow the rules that apply to your job/profession.

For the Pro/Am blogger (e.g. a part-time freelance journalist, some academic bloggers), I think that the rules are basically the same, although it’s probably important to be especially clear as to how you see yourself, so that readers know what to expect you to act more like a pro, or more like an amateur. That’s for example why I say my blog is “personal”, and I pay for my own hosting rather than using UM equipment — I see myself as an amateur, a hobbyist, and want to be seen that way, whatever the traffic implications.

But for the real amateurs, the large majority of bloggers, the ethical rules are the same ones that you bring to daily life: Don’t lie (do correct errors), cheat, or steal (link instead!).

I suspect there may be special issues for the under-18 blogger, but that’s mostly about not hurting yourself, rather than about not hurting others.

There are of course far more bloggers than journalists, so we’d expect a few bad apples here and there, and they certainly exist. But overall, I wouldn’t be surprised if bloggers had at least as good ethical behavior as journalists, since they aren’t in the grip of a role morality and can just act as people. (OK, done the blood pressure thing.)

If time permits I’ll also say a few words about some hard calls that come up in blogging, notably comment management issues. For example,

  • When is it ok to censor comments spontaneously (this one is easy — always so long you are clear in advance about your policy, apply it fairly, and make it clear what you are doing when you apply it)
  • What do you do about blogger swag — people actually send me stuff sometimes in the hope that I’ll blog about it!
  • Someone emails you and asks you to delete a comment about them that they find hurtful, what should you do? (very contextual, and thus very difficult)
  • Someone emails you, claiming to be the person who posted a particular comment two years ago and asks you to modify or delete it, what should you do? (this one is hard – you don’t know if they’re really who they say they are, and it may depend a lot on what it said)

And I will make a heroic effort not to talk about the Subject I Am Not Supposed To Talk About.


If you want to read more on this topic, good places to start (i.e. folks I pretty much agree with) are cyberjournalist.net’s proposed code of ethics and Rebecca Blood on Weblog Ethics.

Posted in Talks & Conferences, U.Miami | 5 Comments

Father Frank Speaks Out on the Strike

Father Frank Corbishley is about the farthest thing from a radical priest I can imagine. By that I don’t mean he’s reactionary, but that I have no idea what his politics are. He presents as very middle of the road. He’s nice, gentle, soft-spoken, super-decent. I don’t usually run in the company of Anglican priests, but we have children about the same ages, and I got to know him a bit via the kids’ on-campus daycare/pre-school, which is attached to the campus Anglican church in some fashion (both physically and legally or, if you prefer, corporately and corporately).

No fire-breathing radical here.

Let’s listen to what Father Frank has to say about the strike,

Every day striking workers arrive to the Episcopal Student Center on the University of Miami campus, a place now known as “Strike Sanctuary,” where I serve as chaplain. The strike is now in its 4th week and the workers remain strong, but a bit worn out from the continual harassment they are receiving from their employer, UNICCO, the contracting service against whom they are striking. One worker told me that last Saturday UNICCO called him 17 times, pressuring him to return to work. Many workers receive phone calls from their UNICCO supervisors, some threatening to fire the workers if they do not return to work.

In spite of the pressure, the workers fill the sanctuary each day as they courageously engage in this David and Goliath struggle. I am moved by how they encourage and support one another. I am also impressed with how the union leadership cares for them by providing the workers with income, food, and meaningful actions to bring this strike to a just resolution.

On behalf of the Task Force, we want to thank the clergy who have written, called, visited, led services, prayed, and joined us in marches as your support means a lot to us and the workers. We especially want to thank Bishops Frade, Ottley, and Estevez, who have given us spiritual strength throughout this journey.

Perhaps you have read that UM President Donna Shalala, although previously stating to the Coral Gables Clergy that she must remain neutral, has announced a raise and “affordable health care” to the striking workers. As a result, some people think that the strike is over or that the main issue has been resolved. I believe this was a tactical move on the part of the university to weaken community support for the workers and is an effort at union busting. The fact that Shalala made this announcement during Spring Break, when students and faculty were away, was another intentional tactical move on her part; there was no on-campus constituency to respond to her for several days. Since returning to campus, the faculty senate has unanimously passed a resolution and STAND, the student group, has run an op-ed piece in the student newspaper. Both groups are in full support of the workers continuing their struggle to unionization and our clergy task force joins them in this support.

So, there has been a victory for the workers but it is only a partial victory. The workers remain steadfast in their goal of achieving a union which will guarantee them their rights on the job, safe working conditions, protection against reprisals, and a lasting voice on the job. As you will read in my letter to the editor, published yesterday in the Miami Herald, this has been the goal of the workers all along.

In order to support the workers, the Coral Gables Task Force is inviting you to participate in a march on Tuesday, March 28 at 12 noon. Religious leaders, workers, faculty, students, and community leaders have come together to help the workers achieve their goal of unionization. The march will begin at my church, 1150 Stanford Drive in Coral Gables.

Since I am at a conference this weekend, please feel free to call Rev. C.J. Hawking of Interfaith Worker Justice at 786-280-6902 with any questions you may have. If you wish to speak to me directly, you may leave a message on my cell phone at 305-606-0923 and I can get back to you on Sunday afternoon.

Thank you for your continued prayerful support.

The Rev. Frank Corbishley, Chaplain,
Chapel of the Venerable Bede
Chair, SFICWJ Coral Gables Task Force

Posted in Science/Medicine | 1 Comment

You Can Fly Without ID

I found this account by a self-described “swarthy fellow with a funny, foreign name” of flying without ID quite cheerful. If if he’s not actually really that swarthy.

It seems not everyone has been subsumed by mindless slavish following of stupid rules. And that stories like this one are not even unusual!

Posted in Civil Liberties | 1 Comment

Always Release the Sleazy News Friday

Everyone knows that the fewest people watch TV Friday night, and the Saturday papers have the lowest circulation. So media-savvy pols release bad news on Friday around 5pm.

And, regular as clockwork, here’s this week’s,

FEMA Abandons Pledge on 4 No-Bid Contracts : FEMA has broken its promise to reopen four multimillion-dollar no-bid contracts for Hurricane Katrina work, including three that federal auditors say wasted significant amounts of money.

Acting FEMA Director R. David Paulison pledged last fall to rebid the contracts, which were awarded to Shaw Group Inc., Bechtel Corp., CH2M Hill Inc. and Fluor Corp. Later, the agency acknowledged the rebidding wouldn’t happen until February.

This week, FEMA said the contracts wouldn’t be rebid after all. In fact, they have been extended,

It really is just a giant kleptocracy, isn’t it?

Posted in Politics: The Party of Sleaze | Comments Off on Always Release the Sleazy News Friday

People With Too Much Time on Their Hands

via Boing Boing comes news of a Firefox plugin converts dollars to barrels of oil.

Click one of those links for the broccoli action picture.

(Although, now that I think of it, if it updated in real time and worked for any currency, it might actually be useful….)

Posted in Software | Comments Off on People With Too Much Time on Their Hands

The Alienware Next Door

Who knew that Alienware was in Miami? A fact I only just discovered from AOL News – Alienware Racks Up Video Gamers, Big Bucks.

Of course if you think about it, it makes perfect sense.

Now I just have to figure out how to get them to give me a machine to, um, review for a few years. Which is probably less likely now that they have been acquired by Dell

Posted in Miami | 2 Comments