
What's the Best Online News Story You've Read Lately? 124
I'm asking you and your fellow Slashdot readers, "What's the best online news story you've read lately?" because last year I stood up during the awards ceremony and said I felt the entry fee was way too high (the Pulitzer Prize entry fee is only $50), especially for volunteer and non-profit news sites, many of which do excellent journalism even though they don't have the resources of an MSNBC, ABC News or major newspaper chain behind them.
Since I believe in putting my money where my mouth is, I offered to pay the entry fee next year for five deserving stories published by sites that couldn't otherwise afford to enter. Now it's "next year," and I'm keeping my promise. I would like to make sure the entries I sponsor (the money is coming out of my own pocket) have at least a fighting chance of winning, which means they need to be among the very best published anywhere, not just the best ones I've run across myself. Many eyeballs can make a big difference here.
Please take a look at the contest rules before you start posting your favorites to make sure they qualify, and in which category they should be entered.
I'll select the five entries I sponsor based on your comments, and next week I'll update this post with the titles and URLs of the chosen ones.
Re:Howzabout lileks.com? (Score:1)
Though undoubtably unpopular... (Score:1)
Re:Coka-Karma (Score:1)
Even if it isn't all true, it is quite scary and a damn riveting read given the size of the article.
Re:Coca-Karma by Guerilla News Network (Score:1)
In it he (Stephen Marshall) discusses a lot of the missing detail had to be cut to get the piece down in size. And that much more of the detail is covered in the hearings.
He also wrote that their servers got overloaded. Guess he should be glad it didn't make it up on slashdot. I submitted it at the same time as kuro5hin, it was of course rejected here.
Re:Hands Down Winner (Score:1)
The amazing thing is that ever single post on that story was in-character. It gets my vote, at least in the humor category. Oh wait, I mean
Delight and bemusement at those k5 denizens.
Self-deprecating humor ending with an inappropriate smiley.
Lame-ass (but confrontational, always confrontational) sig to follow:
Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!
Re:Hands Down Winner (Score:1)
Additional comment re-stating comment that is to be repeated by others in a slightly different way.
Response to bold text in italics to further overemphasize minor point.
witty sig
Re:The best story of 2001 hasn't been written yet. (Score:1)
No offense, but if you would have read my original post a little more carefully, you'de realize that it wasn't the perceptions of the users that I was referring to, but rather the perceptions of the media and the industry as a whole. I dont think the Linux movement will ever dry up and vanish, but in the eyes of everyone BUT its users, Linux will be dead when VA dies. The public perception of Linux is that it was shepherded by a singular company. Microsoft didn't kill Linux -- VA Linux Systems did. They made the mistake of taking an inherently decentralized community and shoved all the eggs in one basket. That's what people are going to see. The buzz will die down, and the game will be over. On to something else.
The point has already been made by someone else in this thread that IBM's commitment to Linux was a drop in the bucket compared to the money they put behind OS/2 -- And look where OS/2 is now.
The money is meaningless--All the money in the world can't make up for a bad business strategy. If you don't agree with me, you're more than welcome to pull up a performance chart of VA's stock over the past 6 months. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see where that train is headed..
Re: Coca Karma (Score:1)
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god exists !
there is an plan !
Breaking News / Longwood College Fire (Score:1)
The article was updated continously throughout the day with new pictures and information, as well as several times over the next couple of days.
Further, this site was the first to break the news that there were two (minor) injuries rather than simply repeating the "no injuries" line from the official press release.
Therefore, I suggest "Major Fire Hits Longwood College [farmville.net]" as an entry in the breaking news category for an independent organization.
Not to be a troll, but... (Score:1)
I think we're all becoming spoiled by the open nature of these online awards. At most, I think this fee is to discourage people from nominating their diaries and what not. I hate to say it, but the major reason that Big Media (TM) has sweeped these awards last year, is because they have the resources and manpower.
And yes, Slashdot itself has also become Big Media (in terms of the Internet.)
There goes my Karma!
Re:Coke Karma (Score:1)
US centricism (Score:1)
Really though, in online journalism surely the rest of the world deserves some mention.
This is easy (Score:1)
Self-Congratulation (Score:1)
Not that I'm conceited or anything.
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Re:FIX: Coca-Karma by Guerrilla News Network (Score:1)
How about a Katz piece? (Score:1)
Re:Still Needs to Overcome the Big Media Bias (Score:1)
(puts down his drum)
Investigating money laundering (Score:1)
www.narconews.com
Luigidigi
Re:Register's CPRM Story (Score:1)
Klamath Falls: Eco-Terrorism at Its Worst (Score:1)
Like how environmentalists are set to destroy wetlands habitats for 400+ species of waterfowl.
Sierra Times is as far as I can tell an independent website.
Re:Some Stories of Note Since July 2000 (Score:1)
Bravo (Score:1)
Re:I find it interesting... (Score:1)
But individual workers generally don't have the resources to go to a foreign country, spend a significant amount of time researching a situation, collate the data while searching archives of relevant information regarding important players and so forth, and then produce a well-written, well-thought-out article to boot.
So what you're suggesting is about as impractical as, say, large-scale Marxism.
Re:Investigative reporting (Score:1)
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Re:Register's CPRM Story (Score:1)
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Re:hold up a sec (Score:1)
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I nominate Norman Solomon's work.. (Score:1)
http://www.fair.org/media-beat/010315.html
I nominate myself (Score:1)
This one (Score:1)
Coca Karma (Score:1)
I've spent the last week reading into this article and it's supplementary links, and I thought some of you might get a kick out of it. Suffice to say it's difficult to summarize, but it's one man's fight against a force known as Coca-Cola, his right to a fair trial, copyright and trademark issues, a lack of SEC investigations, and maybe even an entire Federal Circuit Court gone corrupt.
Re:Investigative reporting (Score:1)
beaver increase pleases biologists (Score:1)
Re:Anything by Jon Katz (Score:1)
Re:Register's CPRM Story (Score:1)
Oh my God was it good! (Score:1)
Independent Media Center! (Score:1)
as reported on a daily basis by the independent media center [indymedia.org].
this is the independent category, general excellence in journalism (first category).
in addition, the independent media centers have extended the community of the web by creating collaborative, non-commercial, consensus-based collectives in cities around the world for web, print, video, and audio media distribution. i'd say IMC is making history.
Re:this wired story for example (Score:1)
>> The Tower of Babel Is Crumbling
Errr.. Except that's an AP story, not a Wired story.
Re:Opinion Commentary (Score:1)
Re:Oh my God was it good! (Score:1)
Heavy.com (Score:1)
It uses sight(Flash), sound(music), and video to show it's audience it's content. There is no url(besides www.heavy.com) since it's all flash. But the section is called HIPNODX, and it catches the real life of "break dancers"(for lack of a better word in my head). It's very cool.
With five grain of salt, and water before bed.... (Score:1)
To: "BoB"
Subject: YEW R NOT A COWARD, AN I DID NOT NO THAT TERVOR DIED!!!
Why you call you a coward? I no that u r not because u send me this message! An wen did TREVOR DIE?!!? I CANT BELEVE THIS LIES! I have to go cry now.
Suzi Q
SuziQ@AOL.COM [mailto]
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Gotta be this one (Score:1)
Yes, yes, yes (Score:1)
Re:Investigative reporting (Score:1)
clay shirky (Score:1)
http://www.shirky.com/writings/nielsen.html
worth reading (Score:1)
one thing though that did raise my opinion of it a little more, was searching for the case by it's court name and finding very little in online news sites that even mention the existence of this case
while the "court reformer" may be biased against judges, he has in the past been right on this count
maybe he's wrong this time, but bringing a possibly suspect case into the public spotlight can only increase accuracy in the courts
Warning: Supplied argument is not a valid MySQL (Score:1)
A Vote for Coca Karma (Score:1)
Re:Coka-Karma (Score:1)
wtf? You were supposed to mod the PARENT comment up....not the comment asking for the parent to be modded up!
-- juju
wired news (Score:1)
this wired story for example (Score:1)
Re:Here's a site! (Score:1)
Hmm how about.. (Score:1)
Re:The best story of 2001 hasn't been written yet. (Score:1)
Re:Hands Down Winner (Score:2)
Misguided/failed attempt to construct this comment in similar style.
Coup 2K (Score:2)
Independents are neutral (Score:2)
For a moment, I thought of Jon Katz being in the judge board. Brrr.
__
Agreed (Strongly) (Score:2)
(Wrote the author of said story [nancies.org].
-Waldo
Suck? A fitting tribute... (Score:2)
Re:Hands Down Winner (Score:2)
"Nine Fives" Uptime (Score:2)
They say it was a server problem at VA Linux, I think it was a LoI [segfault.org] attack, myself.
Salon.com (Score:2)
DirecTV (Score:2)
LinuxOne - the 'Where are they now?' article (Score:2)
Coca-Karma by Guerilla News Network (Score:2)
http://www.guerillanews.com/cocakarma/ [guerillanews.com]
A very lengthy and detailed account of a currently pending case in the US 7th Circuit Federal Court system. It chronicles the case of one Bob Kolody as he fights Coca-Cola over some marketing intellectual property.
By the end of the article, we've seen armed US Marshals bursting into courtrooms, a judge's connection to the Chicago mafia, complicity in frauds on the Federal Courts and on the Copyright Office, and the whole fate of the case resting on a little-known angle on how the US Supreme Court works.
A definite must-read for the slashdot-type crowd.
There is a LOT that could be improved in this story. Specific references to court papers are made, but not enough detail is really presented to make it entirely convincing. It needs more footnotes, more links, more actual testimony, more data to go with this narrative. As it stands, it is just a very interesting outline for a John Grisham novel, made especially for conspiracy theorists. But if it's more than a quarter true, it's quite a worthy feat of "not scared of the big boys" journalism.
FIX: Coca-Karma by Guerrilla News Network (Score:2)
A very lengthy and detailed account of a currently pending case in the US 7th Circuit Federal Court system. It chronicles the case of one Bob Kolody as he fights Coca-Cola over some marketing intellectual property.
The 5th Estate: Hackers (wouldn't qualify) (Score:2)
This was originally a story broadcast on the CBC on Dec. 6, 2000.
Very, very well done and pretty accurate (for the time). All in all, I was incredibly impressed, this is the first (and only) piece of mainstream journalism that "Get's It" with respect to computers and network security.
Good read (for the most part). Check it out.
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Re:Coka-Karma (Score:2)
General Excellence in Online Journalism (Score:2)
Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting
http://www.fair.org [fair.org]
- tokengeekgrrl
Creative Use of the Medium - www.fray.com (Score:2)
I can't pick just one story from fray so I'm going to say the entire Criminal [fray.com] section as a packge.
- tokengeekgrrl
The Morality Police (Score:2)
Salon is unique in that it's authors have differing opinions: they don't all fit into their editor's socio-political mindset. I write for my University's newspaper and one thing that I notice every time that I attend a press conference is that most media employees are simply toeing the company line, not really expressing themselves as journalists. How sad.
The thing about Taylor's article is that it is insightful and it is not afraid of questioning norms and "established" values in order to get his point across. He even goes so far as to directly contradict another Salon.com article, a move that would be unprecedented in today's news media.
So cast my vote for "The Morality Police".
--windside
LinuxPower.Org (Score:2)
My favorite was his article last year about "KDE is dead, GNOME has won". This article truly showcases Christian's talent and intelligence.
General excellence, online commentary: humour (Score:2)
They have their own list of popular [satirewire.com] articles, and .com [satirewire.com]pany craziness, but just from the homepage comes these gems: SETI@home [satirewire.com], house bonds [satirewire.com], web profanity [satirewire.com], Dell says [satirewire.com], communists! [satirewire.com], corporate power [satirewire.com], and from their archives [satirewire.com]: capitalism! [satirewire.com], Jakob Nielsen [satirewire.com], more onion than the onion [satirewire.com], famous cubist site [satirewire.com], Nader [satirewire.com], USentric [satirewire.com]... Jezus, I'm gonna stop adding links now, otherwise this post could be a copyright violation of their archives page.
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mrBlond (I don't email from Malaysia)
Re:This is easy (Score:2)
shameless self promotion (Score:2)
Foley's, Idiots, and Thoughts on Capitalism [goose24.org]
Both from Goose24.org [goose24.org], an independant random article, free software, goose loving site.
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Netslaves (Score:2)
As a general site, I recommend Netslaves [netslaves.com]. They have a large number of articles by a number of talented writers, and so it is hard to recommend just one.
There is The Last Time I Ate Neuchatel [netslaves.com] By Heedless Housman; and many other similar observational pieces.
But the one I actually recommend is the "How To read a 10q" series [netslaves.com] of articles kicking apart the hard core financials of places like Juno [netslaves.com], Salon [netslaves.com], Razorfish [netslaves.com], Yahoo [netslaves.com], and many others. The explanation The Media, Money, and You [netslaves.com] by Steve Gilliard also should be included with it, as it explains what the series is about. The whole package is really worth looking at.
There is a menu box on the right side devoted just to this series, complete with the intro, etc. Definitely worth putting in for something.
Check out the Vinny the Vampire [eplugz.com] comic strip
Re:Suck? A fitting tribute... (Score:2)
For Independent, Online Commentary: (Score:2)
"Cal Ripken eats his vegetables" [lumthemad.net]
Re:Register's CPRM Story (Score:2)
Why Community Matters (Score:2)
K5 [kuro5hin.org]
/. [slashdot.org]
I'm hard-pressed (Score:2)
Is that all there is? The only site that can challenge the Times, the New Republic, CNN, the WSJ and other primarily off-line sources is The Register!?! I've always thought of it as one step before Segfault.org. Kind of sad...
Unsettling MOTD at my ISP.
Coka-Karma (Score:3)
http://www.guerrillanews.com/cocakarma [guerrillanews.com]
Serious submission: www.hackhu.com (Score:3)
Why? It documents the back-and-forth battle between DirecTV and hackers. Live. And it consistantly gives a very thorough and understandable explanation of what is going on. A good example is this story:
We're Ready [hackhu.com] -- 06/13/01.
Scroll around and ready some of the stuff, and some of the archives. There is some good material in there. Even if the site isn't quite 'above board'.
Comment removed (Score:3)
Re:Register's CPRM Story (Score:3)
See here:
Search on The Register for "CPRM" [theregister.co.uk]
Stealth plan puts copy protection into every hard drive [theregister.co.uk]
Copy protection hard drive plan nixes free software - RMS [theregister.co.uk]
Everything you ever wanted to know about CPRM, but ZDNet wouldn't tell you... [theregister.co.uk]
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Onion Expose: Americans have Giagantic Backsides! (Score:3)
http://www.theonion.com/onion3722/surgeon_general
Here's a site! (Score:3)
Oh wait, you mean stuff that's true?
One of my favorite... (Score:3)
excellent journalism my ass (Score:3)
Opinion Commentary (Score:3)
Hands Down Winner (Score:3)
Appraisal of story, plus cogent quotes.
Criticism of other similar stories contrasted with why this particular one shines.
I got it! (Score:3)
Some Stories of Note Since July 2000 (Score:4)
Salon deserves it... (Score:4)
Break out the tinfoil hats... (Score:4)
The first half of the article was interesting, and, although I have not looked into the details of copyright law or the specifics of the case, it appears at first blush that Mr. Whatzizname might have a valid claim against Coke.
However, the second half of the article is little more than ill-informed, paranoid conjecture about the judge buying her seat on the federal bench, selective case assignments, the use of court security to intimidate people, a conspiracy by the 7th Circuit to squelch the "crusading lawyer," etc. Speaking as a lawyer, much, if not all, of these provacative events described in the second half of the article are all consistent with the normal and appropriate functioning of the federal court system.
I will be the first to admit that, unfortunately, legal proceedings often seem inscrutable to the layperson. However, laypeople should not be in such a hurry to ascribe sinister motives to every legal ruling or procedure that they do not understand. It's a pity that the "journalist" writing this article decided to rely primarily on the guidance of a "court reformer" and "electronic journalist" who obviously has an ax to grind against the judiciary, and is prone to making wild assertions of extravagant criminal conspiracies involving judges, the CIA, etc. etc., and then citing the absence of evidence supporting his assertions as proof of the effectiveness of the same conspiracies. I've got news for the author of the story: while my court might not have tossed the plaintiff's lawsuit against Coke as abruptly (maybe-- it's hard to say without seeing the papers), from the decsriptions in the article, it would have responded exactly as the trial judge did on all the subsequent proceedings. Does that mean that my court is in line with the CIA and Coke and the rest of the black helicopter brigade, too?
But to keep this on-topic, an online news story worth giving an award would try much harder to present a well-researched and balanced story, without resorting to the one-sided sensationalism that this one does. A real reporter would not only not adopt Mr. Skolnick's assertions that Judge Manning paid a million dollars for her seat on the bench, but would not even mention such an extraordinary claim without first attempting to verify through sources other than Mr. Skolnick. Any news story could be turned into an attention-grabber like this one by making vague innuendoes, failing to provide evidence to support the most outrageous claims, and mischaracterizing the consequences of particular acts, all of which this reporter repeatedly does. Keep in mind the addage that "extraordinary claims demand extraordinary proof" while you re-read parts 6-10 of that article.
These awards are for excellence in online journalism, not yellow journalism.
Investigative reporting (Score:5)
Still Needs to Overcome the Big Media Bias (Score:5)
While I appluad Rob's efforts, he still faces an uphill battle to get smaller news sites the recognition they deserve. The biggest roadblock is not the large fee, but rather the judges and screeners. The Judges from last year:
Six of the the judges are from large media outlets. This large media bias becomes more pronounced when you look at the list of screeners [onlinejour...awards.org]. These are the folks who select the web sites for consideration by the judges. ABC News, AOL-Time-Warner, Knigh-Ridder, NBC and Microsoft owned media appear to have the largest reresentation. In addition, there are the other big media usual suspects: Fox, Bloomberg, NY Times, LA Times, CBS, Hearst, etc. You get the idea.
Given big media's open hostility to on-line and independent journalism, why should we expect this collection of judges and screeners to be receptive to news sources that raise questions about the relevance and supremecy of the media conglomerates?
Getting fired from Atom Films (Score:5)
Parts of it were posted in Troll Talk, originally.
Register's CPRM Story (Score:5)
That's my two cents. Feel free to disagree
Coke Karma (Score:5)