Category Archives: U.Miami

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

Life Is Tough … For Some

I wonder if stuff like this helps explain why applications to UM Law remain strong?

Pseudonymous 1-L UM blogger Klio writes about her spring break:

Spring Break for the University of Miami Law Student is a bit non-traditional. Because we spend our law school days sparsely clothed in a tropical paradise, most of us head back home to a Abercrombie & Fitch wool sweater hell. Some of us seek refuge from the 1L stress with an inquisitive exploration abroad to places like London, Paris, and Latin America. Others just stay put, tumbling out of bed at noon to crash face down on the sandy, white beaches.

Personally, I spent the week binge writing.

Posted in Law School, U.Miami | 1 Comment

Senior Navy Lawyer Who Opposed Torture is UM Alum

One of the Pentagon’s top civilian lawyers repeatedly challenged the Bush administration’s policy on the coercive interrogation of terror suspects, arguing that such practices violated the law, verged on torture and could ultimately expose senior officials to prosecution, a newly disclosed document shows.

I’d just like to note that Alberto J. Mora, the subject of Monday’s NYT article, Senior Lawyer at Pentagon Broke Ranks on Detainees is an alumnus of the University of Miami School of Law.

“Even if one wanted to authorize the U.S. military to conduct coercive interrogations, as was the case in Guantánamo, how could one do so without profoundly altering its core values and character?” Mr. Mora asked the Pentagon’s chief lawyer, William J. Haynes II, according to the memorandum.

Indeed.

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Lech Walesa at UM on Monday

Former Polish President Lech Walesa will be speaking on campus on Monday.

And I’m going to have to miss it. Yes, he has turned out to be something of a reactionary as a post-liberation public citizen. But still a great figure of courage and an inspiring reminder that regular people can move mountains (with enough help from their friends). So I would have liked to go.

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When Am I Supposed to Get Work Done?

In addition to everything else, there’s a ton of good seminars coming up in the law school and nearby on campus. For example:

  • An ethics seminar series on “Confidentiality and the Professions” being presented by visiting scholar Ronald Goldfarb, starting Thursday, and being held both at the Coral Gables campus and the medical school.
  • “Dreaming of Democracy,” a symposium in honor of my colleague D. Marvin Jones’s recent book: Race, Sex, and Suspicion: the Myth of the Black Male (Praeger 2005), Friday, Feb. 17, from 2-5pm in the law school, room E352.
  • A Symposium on “Wrongful Convictions: Psychological and Legal Issues” on Friday, Feb. 24, starting at 1pm in the law school, room E352.

Continue reading

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Lonny Rose is Going Full Time at NITA

Our very energetic and effective director of our Litigation Skills Program has landed a plum job: The National Institute for Trial Advocacy (NITA) has named Laurence Rose as its first-ever CEO & President. He’s been NITA’s part-time Executive Director for several years, while based at UM, and now he will be moving out to their new HQ in Colorado.

I gather he’ll keep on helping out at UM on a part-time basis for at least a year, and then we’re going to see how exhausted he is from commuting.

Congrats Lonny!

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