Author Archives: Michael Froomkin

Yesterday’s News Tomorrow (Literally)

Today's Washington Post web site has a story with tomorrows date, one that appears in tomorrow's paper, about Obama's attempts to woo the Latino vote in California. The tenor of the story, written by two reporters, is that it's an uphill slog and things aren't going well (it concludes by quoting an observer as describing Obama's outreach campaign as “a little bit too late and not enough”).

Don't these guys read even major blogs? Over at Daily Kos they've had this item since 2:08 pm DC time: Obama's Piolín boost:

this is gold for Obama, with Ted Kennedy getting royal treatment on the El Piolín radio show today. This is significant for several major reasons. Hillary is leading Obama in southern California in huge part because of the Latino vote — helped in large part by Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's support and machine. Big city mayors are some of the best endorsements a candidate can get because they have a patronage machine they can activate on behalf of candidates they support. Yet down in southern California, El Pioín owns the market and is the largest radio show in the country. Yup, that's bigger than you-know-who.

Maids get out of bed and slip on their uniforms, landscapers load leaf blowers into rusty flatbed trucks before chugging up the freeway and cooks turn on restaurant stoves to make flapjacks. They, like other listeners, know [Eduardo] Sotelo as El Piolin, or Tweety Bird, and they regard him as a Mexican immigrant hero, someone like them, a role model. Twenty years ago, Sotelo sneaked across the Mexican border into California by hiding in the trunk of a car, and now his Spanish-language radio show, “El Piolin por la Mañana,” has made him a rags-to-riches story, a DJ who beats Howard Stern, Rush Limbaugh and Tom Joyner every weekday morning, according to Arbitron ratings.

Remember the big immigration protests last year? This was the guy who fueled them nationwide. So he's not just a fun D.J., he can move people. And to this crowd, Sen. Ted Kennedy is a HUGE hero — the man who has been fighting to pass comprehensive immigration reform in the Senate.

And today, his show was one big love note to Obama, featuring none other than Kennedy.

Maybe this isn't quite as big a deal as the blogger would have it. But you'd think it was worth a mention somewhere in a long article on the subject, wouldn't you?

Read the Post article carefully and it seems that many of the quotes were gathered earlier in the week. This ties into an increasingly common phenomenon for me: stuff I read online is either better than, or two or three days ahead of, what I read in the papers. (The papers are still best for big investigative stuff, and for routine coverage of setpiece government, like Congressional hearings. But they are surprisingly poor these days at anything complex, including Senate parliamentary procedure.)

I don't know what the deadlines are at the print Washington Post, but more and more I have to think that Brad's right: the print media are digging their own grave.

I'll miss them.

Won't I?

[Update: actually, by the time I posted this, it was “tomorrow” already, so I should have said, “Yesterday, the Washington post web site had a story with today's date…” But the story had been up for a while.]

Posted in The Media | 2 Comments

A Google Threat I Never Suspected

There are a host of reasons to worry about Google's ability to scoop up and correlate facts about its users. But I have to admit that I never thought of the one exposed at Google Maps is Evil.

Posted in Completely Different | 4 Comments

The Proprietary Media

I think people are often startled when I, a fairly mild-mannered mostly-establishment guy at heart, suddenly start sounding like a wild-eyed radical when speaking about the social consequences of the concentration of mass media in the hands of a few corporations, many run as personal fiefdoms by hard right figures such as Rupert Murdoch.

I believe that there is a multitude of evidence, however, that right-wing ownership of radio and TV skews content far to the right. And now, alas, we have one more: see Orcinus on what happened at KIRO. Note that KIRO is in Seattle, one of the more liberal towns in America. And it can happen there.

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Lame Duck Watch

We seem suddenly to be in serious lame duck territory.

And, can you imagine a major network running anything even remotely like this a year ago? Much less less three or four years ago?

Posted in Politics: US | 2 Comments

More on How to Crash the Net

That the internet is fragile is not a new idea. (Remember USENET? “Death of the Internet predicted. Film at 11”?)

Not surprisingly, Wendy Grossman long ago noted the discussion at CFP in 1998(!), and wrote it up as Buy ten backhoes, and Simson Garfinkel listed 50 Ways to Crash the Net.

Update: And how could I forget Staniford, Paxson & Weaver, How to 0wn the Internet in Your Spare Time (2002)?

Posted in Internet | Comments Off on More on How to Crash the Net

The Internet is More Fragile Than You May Think

The internet may be a packet-switching network, but certain paths are in fact critical as they rely on fragile cables. Which break.

Today it's a major Mediterranean cable that's broken.

Egypt, it seems, has pretty much fallen off the Internet, and service to several other countries including Pakistan and India is impacted.

It's an important reminder that while many routes between A and B may be possible, sometimes there are not so many; and sometimes there's only one big pipe.

Which makes wiretaps — and full network monitoring — a lot easier.

I recall setting up a panel at CFP years ago on how one would destroy the internet. One guy described evil worms. Another had a nefarious DNS-killer. And then one fellow just said, “give me a backhoe…”.

Posted in Internet | 2 Comments