I blew my roommate the fuck up last night because he started a conversation with "I guess I'm just depressed over this whole Gawker thing..." and when I mentioned the whole toddler sex tape thing he said "but that was just one guy!" without any acknowledgement that it was the editor-in-fucking-chief.
I know every blog on the planet wants to make this about bullshit first amendment crap but you know what? They've all needed to be bankrupted out of a job since fuckin' lucidending. Or the stolen iPhone. Or the entire ouvre of Analee Newitz.
I only wish it were painful.
Linking the shit out of this. My greatest hope of the day is that their "we're shutting down" page sets some sort of traffic record.
I miss the original Jalopnik, when it was just one dude who loved crazy old cars, and he just posted the greatest photos and rambling content about shops he visited, cars he saw on the road, and Coop's art. It was the last of the great "I have no idea what I'm doing, but I do it really well" blogs. And then Gawker bought the name and turned it into ... shit. "Ford told us to post this photo, so here is your ridiculously awesome Ford Mondeo wallpaper!" Gak.
If only there was a way for me to be at the front of the line selling gasoline and matches to the near infinite line of people who want to piss on Gawker's ashes.Linking the shit out of this. My greatest hope of the day is that their "we're shutting down" page sets some sort of traffic record.
You'd think, right? Wired: Vox: Reason: Paul Carr has been making the point that you can hate both Gawker and the fact that Peter Thiel blew it up.At its worst, Gawker published articles with seemingly little news value, like its purported outing of a Condé Nast executive (Condé Nast is WIRED’s parent company). At its best, Gawker punched up with a vengeance, holding powerful public figures and institutions accountable.
Gawker isn't the only publication to be targeted by a disgruntled billionaire. Last year, the liberal magazine Mother Jones defeated a defamation lawsuit filed by Republican donor Frank VanderSloot. Winning the lawsuit cost Mother Jones, a relatively small nonprofit organization, and its insurance company $2.5 million in legal fees.
Nothwithstanding his protestations, Thiel certainly is trying to draw a line by supporting Bollea's lawsuit and offering to help other litigants who believe their privacy has been violated by the press. "I will support him until his final victory," Thiel writes, noting that Gawker plans to appeal the verdict against it, "and I would gladly support someone else in the same position." Thiel's choice of cases will tell journalists where he thinks the line should be, and this is no mere suggestion. Although he tries to blur the distinction between criticizing someone and taking him to court, only one involves the use of force and the threat of bankruptcy.
Ars Technicha hired a few of the old Gawker people. When I saw that I went to a friend, borrowed some firearms and spent a few hours on his gun range. Ars used to be really good and it ticked me off when they changed about two or so years ago. After Gawker outed all the CCW people in NYC (with the headline "Here Is a List of All the Assholes Handsome Law-Abiding Citizens Who Own Guns Some People in New York City" no less), including women hiding from abusive ex's, I made a quiet vow to never give a Gawker writer-or any website that knowingly hires ex-Gawker people-views of brain energy. Newitz, whom you mentioned, is now a culture of tech editor at Ars and she brought a couple of the i09 people with her. Never been back there since.
What's wrong with Annalee Newitz? I really liked her when she was working for the EFF and writing for Alternet I stopped paying attention to her shortly after io9 started because she stopped talking about anything I was interested in, but boring geek chic shit isn't the worst thing Gawker did.