When WSJ Flunks Internet History, Blogs Step In To Educate

from the but-we-need-to-support-newspapers dept

We hear over and over again from traditional reporters how we need to “protect” newspapers and how, as newspapers fail, no one can step in and replace them — especially not “new media” like blogs. In fact, we’re told how newspapers are “trustworthy,” but blogs are “amateurish” and prone to hyperbole and errors. It’s a common story told over and over again — especially by those supporting the idea of paywalls and the like. In fact, we wrote about yet another such example just recently. And yet… it seems that we just as frequently hear about newspapers making big mistakes, and blogs stepping in to correct them.

Today’s example involves the supposedly venerable Wall Street Journal, who posted a column by former publisher L. Gordon Crovitz, trying to claim that the internet was really invented by private companies, without much government support. Except, of course, that’s false. Ridiculously false. Thankfully, we had blogs to step in and debunk many of the factual errors made by Crovitz. Quickly into the breach stepped Steve Wildstrom at Tecpinions, who pointed out that Crovitz’s version of history was way off and then Tim Lee at Ars Technica, who went even deeper in showing how Crovitz mangled the history.

Among the many, many errors in Crovitz’s piece were the claims that Tim Berners-Lee (no relation to Tim Lee above) “invented hyperlinks.” He did no such thing. He invented the web, which came long after hypertext and hyperlinks were well known and well-established. He also tries to downplay Arpanet, and worst of all pretends that because Vint Cerf (with Bob Kahn) invented TCP/IP, that it shows it was done without the government’s help. He, of course, leaves out that both were employed… by the government. It also plays up the importance of ethernet, invented at Xerox PARC. This was a big deal (and I even have a photo of the first ethernet connection that I recently took on a tour of PARC), but that was for local networks and not “the internet.”

To be fair, this is the opinion pages, not the reporting pages, but the WSJ is supposed to have a pretty high bar for getting facts right, isn’t it? And I would assume that applies to the opinion pages as well. Of course, what’s interesting is that Crovitz has a history of this kind of thing. A couple years ago, we wrote about another piece by him which misattributed a quote of mine to someone else’s and then took three days or so to post a correction. This Crovitz piece has added one correction at the time of my writing this, but only for (another) misattributed quote (Crovitz apparently didn’t realize that he was quoting a blog post by Tyler Cowen quoting someone else and attributed it to Cowen). Everything else is still in there.

Of course, even more ironic in all of this is that Crovitz helped found Journalism Online — one of the leading companies pushing newspapers to set up paywalls, arguing that newspapers need people to pay, or all good reporting will go away. Everyone makes mistakes. It’s not limited to either newspapers or blogs. I don’t mean to pick on Crovitz or the WSJ in particular here (even though the mistakes in his piece were both plentiful and easily cross checked). It’s just that the idea that newspapers have some sort of “lock” on factual, objective reporting — whereas newfangled “blogs” are chock full of misinformation — is an inaccurate position. Yes, there’s plenty of misinformation spread on various sites, but the same thing shows up in “traditional” media too. The point is that the wider ecosystem seems to be pretty damn good at highlighting those mistakes (even if the WSJ is then very slow to correct them).

Filed Under: , , , , ,

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “When WSJ Flunks Internet History, Blogs Step In To Educate”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
35 Comments
jakerome (profile) says:

Opinion journal is a wholly separate operation

To be fair, this is the opinion pages, not the reporting pages, but the WSJ is supposed to have a pretty high bar for getting facts right, isn’t it? And I would assume that applies to the opinion pages as well.

It’s just not true. The WSJ opinion pages are in line with the Washington Times and the very worst of the reactionary wing of the Republican Party. It’s as bad as the WSJ news pages are good.

Zakida Paul says:

“In fact, we’re told how newspapers are “trustworthy,” but blogs are “amateurish” and prone to hyperbole and errors”

Who ever said that has never read the Daily Mail (a UK paper).

There should never be any protection for any business or industry. Businesses should be allowed to fail when they can no longer sustain themselves and new businesses should be able to step up and take their place.

Cory of PC (profile) says:

Well you are right that we do make mistakes. As a writer, I occasionally make mistakes when I write and I’m working on improving the quality of my work by doing my research and brushing up on my grammar. Granted even if I improve, I will make some mistakes and I am willing to improve on them.

What baffles me is that even if Crovitz believes in the whole “newspapers are professional, blogs are amateurs,” wouldn’t it hurt to open up the search engine of his choice and type in “history of the Internet?” I checked Google, Bing and Yahoo and found plenty of sites that provides some information on the history of the Internet. So let me guess here: is it…

1) he was on a deadline to not do the research,
2) a little (or too) lazy to put some effort into the research,
3) didn’t want to put any effort in his search,
4) actually did some research but got a wrong source, or
5) any combination of the above.

My money’s on Option 5.

MrWilson says:

Re: Re:

I think the answer is much simpler than that. Look at the first paragraph of the article.

I think he started with the premise of, “my conservative dogma dictates that Obama must be wrong about everything and my corporate overlords insist I push this narrative, therefore I will find a way to refute his statements!”

And he just went from there, doing shoddy research to find any work on something networking related (even if only peripherally related to the actual internet) that wasn’t expressly done by someone in the government.

And if you read through the comments on the article, you’ll find his intended audience piping up with their two minutes hate against the object of their hatred, Emmanuel Goldst…I mean, Barack Obama. He didn’t write the article for anyone who actually knew anything about the origins of the internet, much less people who knew the difference between the internet and the world wide web. Some of them are probably the same people who thought AOL was the internet.

JEDIDIAH says:

Re: The other point

That dovetails quite nicely into the real reason that old school Journalism is failing. It sucks and we know it. We can share information between ourselves and do our own research and quickly find out when a journalist is full of sh*t.

It also doesn’t help that the quality of journalism has degraded at exactly the same time.

Murrow would be embarrassed.

DV Henkel-Wallace (profile) says:

"The" Arpanet

By the way the noun was “the arpanet” not “arpanet”. There were arpanet protocols like NCP (replaced later with IP, TCP and UDP) just as there are internet protocols, but they were/are used with the arpanet and the Internet.

FWIW, since most of us used case-insenstive systems, and frequently uppercase defaults, capitalization isn’t really a big deal: ARPANET, arpanet, ARPAnet…unlike the Internet, which is the mongo big internet of them all.

VMax says:

What gets me

Even when I try to be objective I’m still colored by my perceptions of the world. I accept and recognize this. I can’t make a simple comment without adding my experiences to it. As much as I try I always put my own spin on things. I do this without being paid. Journalists are hired optimally to report facts, but they put emphasis on their view. They end up getting hired by someone who figures “they’re in ‘our’ camp.” They move up, they recognize that their slant pleases their employers. At a point, the facts stop meaning anything, they see it as an opportunity to push their agenda, and possibly to move up. This is what I see as the problem with journalism.

Anonymous Coward says:

I know that my local papers never give me important news. I get the typical cat in a tree news. Nothing IMPORTANT. That is why I use online News(BECAUSE IT IS NEWS), Not who won the local 4-H pig championships. How many trees are killed each year for Crap Reporting, By socalled MEDIA. I already find it more difficult to breath. shut this Printed Waste of a Resource’s down before we all LOOSE.

DanZee (profile) says:

Opinion piece

Most of the commenters above are correct, however, it is an opinion piece, and it’s a time-honored tradition of opinion pieces to inspire rebuttals and letters to the editors saying that the writer didn’t know what he was talking about. Opinion pieces have never been held to the same standard as news articles, although I would have thought the editor should have done some research and rejected the piece if the fact were too far afield.

Leave a Reply to Paul Horne Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...