Wednesday, July 20, 2011

The Media Conglomerate

media corruption
Monopolies only serve the elite that own them. They reduce choice while increasing unjustified costs to the consumer. As long as they work "within the law" these increasingly global and increasingly bland enterprises reduce the quality of communication and considered action. Morality is given a bad name by all the false moralising, but the constant reminders that a tabloid may invade anyone who dares to rise into the public eye is a powerful reason to fear changing the status quo.

The committee seemed to want to simply ask for an admission that there was executive complicity with law breaking; crime by an individual is the assertion given in the defence of corporate malfeasance, but you only need look at the product of the organisation to realise our emotional responses are what they have become so expert at producing, because there is no other real value in exposing celebrity underwear than inducting a path for the lowest common values we all fear.

When you balance the thousands and thousands of unknown individual affected by privacy intrusion, it is a corporate liability of billions that Murdoch has confirmed is still to be settled. It happened as a result of the organisation's goals and activity. It is not a culture of corruption, that is still a euphemism. It is policy and it must start at the very top as the entire organisation is in the business of emotional manipulation, also known as entertainment.

Pandering to the lowest common denominator is the market. The "bell shaped curve" justifies the policy of producing media that anyone can digest and be drafted into prejudice. It is true that on occasion the product of the lurid investigations conducted explore areas too taboo for the mainstream, breakthroughs in reactionary media tend to be exposure of political corruption by embarrassment or of "criminal masterminds" and pedophiles - using the profane not just for its shock value but its induction of the herding instinct.

The basis of such attacks is to threaten hunger and isolation. It is not seen as a criminal activity due to the inherent popularity of its voices. But when that popularity is the product of what is in essence a pornographic portrayal of celebrity, or mud raking, it is inherent in the structure of the organisation.

See Guardian article

And listen to what Jon Stewart has to say. The Murdoch empire has more impact on US politics with its Murdoch owned Fox News outlet that makes News of the World look less committed to its cause. Freedom of speech is a wonderful thing, but freedom to distort is not.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Hackers revenge

The furore that has erupted since our analysis of media corruption two weeks ago is extraordinary. The demise of the News of the World was a long time coming, the exposés of that tabloid were rarely of any value, more commonly savaging the careers of footballers and the less than deserving. The blow up of the alleged criminality that reaches all the way into No 10 with the Prime Minister defending his hiring of Andy Coulson way past the use by date he should have respected, leaving any apology to the British public limp and soggy.

And as we witness the demise of News International's bid for BskyB, and effective control of more of the political mind set, we appear to be experiencing a political tectonic shift.

And the corrupted appear to have made terrible mistakes in their own security. Lulzsec have infiltrated an old server nobody remembered to switch off, and have gained access to emails from The Sun. The potential time bomb for the Murdoch empire no longer relies upon questionable or corrupted political influences, it is a new definition of democratic power. Lulzsec made it obvious to The Sun that a cloud was moving in front of its big red face by publishing a prank article on the Sun's own servers that Rupert Murdoch was found dead in his garden.

The media and banking empires of today and yesterday will not be able to continue to abuse their position of privilege as the new rules of publication and the new economics of information eradicate their advantage, their voice and their access. As a metaphor, the prank hack article is indeed symbolically accurate. The career destroying tabloid media is a big old dinosaur rotting on the soil.

Will the demise spread to the USA and sink Fox News? One may assume that now entirely possible.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/jul/19/how-lulzsec-hacked-sun-website

Friday, July 8, 2011

British Media

The newspapers are fruit dying in the tree, falling off trunks already crumbling with rot, branches sweep low, drop into the swamp.

The television channels blurt out judgements by the hour as politicians entertain their captains who seem to believe they are creating reality and have therefore some right to listen in to their creations so employ people to collect information turning a blind eye to the methods, legal or illegal, that may have to be employed to arrive at the articles they have published. The failure to question this and for management to be subject to a level of discipline that befits the crime the board would have to have examined this, so instead of putting it right, a news institution is hijacked for dark purposes and then to essentially commit crimes of some magnitude, from which it published salacious details that seemed extraordinarily personal and indeed were the result of wire taps into the private lives of people, thereby subjecting them to criminal intrusion and electing to play puppet master and implicate themselves into police investigation.

The application of the law by police who have accepted bribes to not investigate serious breaches of personal integrity and basic law by a commercial organisation that intends to control a much larger slice of things than anyone should, thus weakening democratic intelligent examination of truth by certifying salacious lies and exposures of illegally obtained information they had no legal right to obtain let alone promulgate and which they did with no regard to the actual harm they may have caused to potential legal positions.

And the discussion is not of what to do about things but how to appear to the voters.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Technical directions

Facebook announces integration with Skype.

What is next? Twitter integrated with Wikipedia?

The obvious problem with this is that Skype is a utility and FB is a platform that has morphed from being a list of your true friends into a promotional tool of connectivity and a platform for ap development - like iphone and andriod.

So instead of making better distinct products, the software giant are combining essentially into homogenised communications platforms that are remarkably similar in effect (how we use them). They all essentially want to be our phone company?

Meantime, Google fights its war on six fronts.

Strangely, that opens up opportunities for innovation.