May 17, 2024

British Newspaper Has Advantages in Battle With Government Over Secrets

The Guardian, which leans left and used to see itself as the voice of Britain’s socially conscious middle class, has struck a more combative tone in the last few years. It was deeply involved in publishing the WikiLeaks material and with that organization’s impresario, Julian Assange, and now with the lawyer Glenn Greenwald and the former National Security Agency contractor, turned leaker, Edward J. Snowden.

Having gone global and remained free to readers on the Web, with a newsroom in New York as well as in London, The Guardian is a much harder news organization than most to intimidate or censor, as the British government, with no written Constitution or Bill of Rights to enshrine protections of free speech, has discovered.

But the tale of the last two months, as Mr. Rusbridger tells it, at least, is an extraordinary one of attempted political interference. Agents of the British government descended on The Guardian’s offices to monitor three executives as they physically destroyed computer hard drives containing some of the classified material that Mr. Snowden downloaded from American intelligence databases and gave to Mr. Greenwald and others.

“You have powerful protections in America that we don’t,” Mr. Rusbridger, 59, said Tuesday in an interview after publishing an op-ed article in his paper describing some of the government’s actions.

In conversations with him, the British government threatened the paper with “prior restraint,” he said, to stop it from publishing material, and then demanded that The Guardian return or destroy the classified material it was holding.

“It was quite explicit: we had to destroy it or give it back to them,” Mr. Rusbridger said in an earlier interview with the BBC. “I explained that there were other copies, not within the U.K., so I couldn’t see the point of destroying one copy. But because we had other copies I was happy to destroy a copy in London.”

The United States has sought the extradition of Mr. Snowden, now in Russia, but it has not acted to restrain newspaper publication or gone into newspaper offices to seize or destroy files and hard drives, as in Britain.

Mr. Rusbridger, Guardian editor since 1995, said he was prompted to describe the government’s actions after the British police detained Mr. Greenwald’s partner, David Michael Miranda, at Heathrow Airport on Sunday, on his way home from Berlin to Rio de Janeiro. Mr. Miranda had met another of those aiding Mr. Snowden, the filmmaker Laura Poitras, and was carrying encrypted material from her back to Mr. Greenwald in Brazil.

Mr. Miranda, a Brazilian, was held in the transit area of the airport under Schedule 7 of Britain’s Terrorism Act 2000 for the legal maximum of nine hours; he was questioned and his electronic equipment seized before being released without charges.

He and Mr. Greenwald intend to file a lawsuit over the detention, Mr. Rusbridger said, “because it’s not clear that he was actually committing any offense in carrying material through Heathrow.”

The British government has defended the detention. After saying little on Sunday or Monday, a Home Office spokeswoman said that the police had been looking for “stolen information” that could be of use to terrorists.

“If the police believe that an individual is in possession of highly sensitive stolen information that would help terrorism, then they should act, and the law provides them a framework to do that,” the spokeswoman said. “Those who oppose this sort of action need to think about what they are condoning.”

The prime minister’s office was kept informed, as was the American government, which denied having asked Britain to take any action against Mr. Miranda.

Mr. Rusbridger sees the detention as an act of intimidation.

Using terrorism legislation that “offers none of the protections that exist in mainland Britain is quite a disturbing new turn,” he said.

Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura contributed reporting.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/21/world/europe/british-news-organization-has-advantages-in-secrets-battle-with-government.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: First AwesomenessTV Movie to Appear Friday in AMC Theaters

LOS ANGELES — How fast is YouTube building new media companies? Consider the case of AwesomenessTV, a YouTube-based channel for teenagers.

Last year at this time, Awesomeness had not introduced its MTV-esque programs. Now the channel has about 400,000 subscribers and 80.6 million video views. A Nickelodeon show based on its programming is planned. And on Friday an Awesomeness movie release will open in AMC theaters.

“Mindless Behavior: All Around the World” is a concert film — part singing, part documentary — that focuses on the boy band Mindless Behavior. It will run in about 120 AMC theaters in neighborhoods where, based on data culled from social networks, the group has its strongest fan base.

“It’s an experiment,” said Brian Robbins, the impresario behind AwesomenessTV and a former child star (Eric Mardian on the ABC sitcom “Head of the Class.”)

Mindless Behavior, which toured with Janet Jackson in 2011 and is preparing to release its second album, became part of the AwesomenessTV lineup last summer. Mr. Robbins’s company had the movie idea and agreed to pay for it and handle distribution. He declined to disclose the movie’s budget but said it was “very independent-film sized.” A DVD release is planned.

The Nickelodeon show, meanwhile, is tentatively named “Awesomeness” and will include sketch comedy shown on Mr. Robbins’s fledgling YouTube channel.

Nickelodeon, which has committed to 13 episodes, recently described the show to advertisers as part of an effort to “reinvent sketch comedy for this generation” and to “aggressively pump new talent” into its schedule.

While AwesomenessTV will continue to look for opportunities in traditional media, Mr. Robbins said his company’s primary focus would remain online. “We’re making snack food — the entertainment equivalent of potato chips and Twizzlers and cookies,” he said.

“But as AwesomenessTV is understanding more and more every day,” he added, “snack food is a really enormous business.”

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/10/first-awesomenesstv-movie-to-appear-friday-in-amc-theaters/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Bucks: Cash Mobs Promote Spending (and Socializing) Locally

Cash mob participants in Kent, Ohio.Eric MillerCash mob participants in Kent, Ohio.

Updated at 11:04 a.m. / To reflect that another cash mob was held last week in Cleveland.

Looking for a way to spend your dollars locally during the holiday season? Want to go out for a drink and a snack afterwards? A “cash mob” may be just the ticket.

The concept is simple: Organizers select a local business and urge people via Twitter or Facebook to shop there at a certain time. Cash mobs began popping up in recent months in Buffalo and Cleveland, and they are spreading to other locales too. (An organizer in Canada is promoting “Twelve Days of Cash Mobs.”)

As with many social-media inspired phenomena, it’s not entirely clear who came up with the initial idea, but it seems to be catching on. At the urging of a local blogger, shoppers staged a cash mob at a Buffalo wine store last summer. More recently, cash mobs have descended on a bookstore in Cleveland, and on a seller of locally made jewelry and art in San Diego, Calif.

Andrew Samtoy, 32, a full-time lawyer and part-time cash mob impresario in Cleveland, said the aimed is to support local businesses while reclaiming the fun and spontaneity of flash mobs. (Flash mobs began as a lighthearted way for people to gather together to sing and dance in public, but morphed into something destructive as the notion was adopted by thugs and troublemakers.)

“We want to support local businesses that employ people and build wealth in the community,” Mr. Samtoy said in a telephone interview.

A cash mob targeted a Cleveland bookstore in November, and another Cleveland event was held last week. A highlight of a cash mob — at least, in the Cleveland version — is gathering afterwards at local watering hole to tip a mug and get to know fellow mobbers. The nearby city of Kent, Ohio, has been cash-mobbing, too.

On a blog about cash mobs, Mr. Samtoy and his compatriots suggest choosing a business that is supportive of the local community, and not identifying the store too far ahead of time to create an element of surprise. “In my opinion, life has become far too ordered,” he said. (Typically, a meeting place is announced a week ahead of time, and the identity of the store is revealed when everyone gathers.) The spending goal should be no more than $20 a person, although people can of course spend more if they choose. And organizers should give the store owners a heads up, so they aren’t overwhelmed.

Mr. Samtoy added that he wasn’t opposed to big business, but that small businesses deserve support so they can grow.

Do you think a cash mob is an effective way to spend your dollars locally?

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=c02e4612761f1f755500d3fbb3c5524f