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posted by LaminatorX on Tuesday July 21 2015, @02:32AM   Printer-friendly
from the sad-Fourth-Estate-of-affairs dept.

Tommy Craggs, Gawker Media's executive editor, and Max Read, the website's editor in chief, have resigned from Gawker after the removal of a widely-panned article, a move they say represents an "indefensible breach of the notoriously strong firewall between Gawker's business interests and the independence of its editorial staff":

At issue is a post published July 16 about a media executive who Gawker said sought a nighttime encounter with a gay porn star. The porn star, the site reported, tried to extort the executive, who is married to a woman.

The story was widely criticized because, as some people pointed out, the media executive is a private individual [and] not a public figure. Then on July 17, Gawker's Managing Partnership voted 4-2 to remove the post. Craggs and Heather Dietrick, Gawker's president who serves as the company's chief legal counsel, dissented.

Here's what Glenn Greenwald had to say about Gawker's story:

The story had no purpose other than to reveal that the male, married-to-a-woman Chief Financial Officer of a magazine company – basically an executive accountant – hired a male escort. When the escort discovered the real-life identity of his prospective client – he's the brother of a former top Obama official – he began blackmailing the CFO by threatening to expose him unless he used his political connections to help the escort in a housing discrimination case he had against a former landlord. Gawker completed the final step of the blackmail plot by publishing the text messages between the two and investigating and confirming the identity of the client, all while protecting the identity of the blackmailing escort.

[...] The reasons for regarding the story as deeply repugnant are self-evident. The CFO they outed is not a public figure. Even if he were, the revelation has zero public interest: it's not as though he's preached against gay rights or any form of sexual behavior. It's just humiliating someone and trying to destroy his life for fun, for its own sake. By publishing the article, Gawker aided the escort's blackmail plot, arguably even becoming a partner in it. Even worse, the story (probably unwittingly) reeks of all-too-familiar homophobic shaming: it's supposed to be humiliating at least in part because he's a man hiring a "gay porn star," as Gawker editor-in-chief Max Read put it as he promoted the "scoop." The escort's identity has been confirmed by others and he seems to have a history of serious mental distress, which Gawker is clearly exploiting. Beyond all that, Gawker has an ongoing war with Reddit, owned by the magazine company for which the CFO works, which suggests this is part of some petty, vindictive drive for vengeance, with the CFO as collateral damage.


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  • (Score: 0, Flamebait) by The Mighty Buzzard on Tuesday July 21 2015, @03:11AM

    #GamerGate enjoyed it the most. They spread the word far and wide to make sure the rat-bastardness of Gawker didn't just get covered up.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 21 2015, @04:28AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 21 2015, @04:28AM (#211763)

    What does a CFO of a magazine hiring escorts have to do with corruption in video game news?

    • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 21 2015, @04:39AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 21 2015, @04:39AM (#211766)

      It's a chance for them to hate on Gawker, one of Gamergate's worst enemies.

  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by mojo chan on Tuesday July 21 2015, @07:35AM

    by mojo chan (266) on Tuesday July 21 2015, @07:35AM (#211806)

    Right, it's not about ethics in gaming journalism any more, it's just about ethics in journalism in general.

    Give up, no-one is buying it. GamerGate is about harassment, the ethics angle is just a cover for that. When challenged people can point to the ethics angle and disassociate themselves with the harassment, while at the same time helping perpetuate it. It's a symbiotic relationship with useful idiots.

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    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 21 2015, @02:23PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 21 2015, @02:23PM (#211924)

      There's been an almost year long harrasment campaign against women(because misogyny), that has 10s of thousands of proponents, includes women and minorities, and uses ethical journalism as a front.
      What is your opinion on the lizard invasion?

    • (Score: 4, Disagree) by Katastic on Tuesday July 21 2015, @02:23PM

      by Katastic (3340) on Tuesday July 21 2015, @02:23PM (#211925)

      Come over to /r/KotakuInAction, Reddit's biggest subreddit dedicated to ethics in gaming journalism. Over 45,000 subscribers and climbing. Do it right now and tell me how many posts are related to harassment. Fun fact: You'll find zero. Not nada. Not zilch.

      But don't let that harm your ego! Pretend they're just hiding their magical harassment elsewhere. Because boys OBVIOUSLY are harassing by nature and boys OBVIOUSLY hate the idea of any girl playing with them. It's not like a nerd would ever want a girl to play with him.

      • (Score: 4, Insightful) by mojo chan on Tuesday July 21 2015, @05:32PM

        by mojo chan (266) on Tuesday July 21 2015, @05:32PM (#212007)

        Right now there is a story trying to justify the harassment of Zoe Quinn [reddit.com] using an obviously false comparison. GamerGate is, has always been, and will always be about harassment. Everything else is just a veneer.

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        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 21 2015, @06:29PM

          by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 21 2015, @06:29PM (#212035)

          That's the example you come up with for "It's actually about harassing women"? A thread pointing out what the poster thinks is hypocrisy in journalism? Whether you think they are comparable is irrelevant. The intent of the poster is obvious and clearly nothing to do with "misogyny".