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The Media

Boston Globe Will Consider People's Requests To Have Articles About Them Anonymized (techcrunch.com) 35

The Boston Globe is starting a new program by which people who feel an article at the newspaper is harmful to their reputation can ask that it be updated or anonymized. From a report: It's reminiscent of the E.U.'s "right to be forgotten," though potentially less controversial, since it concerns only one editorial outlet and not a content-agnostic search engine. The "Fresh Start" initiative isn't for removing bad restaurant reviews or coverage of serious crimes, but rather for more commonplace crime desk reporting: a hundred words saying so-and-so was arrested for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest, perhaps with a mugshot.

Such stories do serve a purpose, of course, in informing readers of crime in their area. But as the Globe's editor, Brian McGrory points out: "It was never our intent to have a short and relatively inconsequential Globe story affect the futures of the ordinary people who might be the subjects. Our sense, given the criminal justice system, is that this has had a disproportionate impact on people of color. The idea behind the program is to start addressing it."

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Boston Globe Will Consider People's Requests To Have Articles About Them Anonymized

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  • by Arthur, KBE ( 6444066 ) on Friday January 22, 2021 @05:23PM (#60980176)
    Which search engine is that?
  • If your problem is racist policing, leading to racist reporting, de-rasist it.

    I.E. Only name and photo a black criminal if they also name and photo a white criminal of equivalent crime.

    • What if there isn't a white criminal who did the same or equivalent crime that week?

    • Re:Equalize it. (Score:4, Interesting)

      by malkavian ( 9512 ) on Friday January 22, 2021 @05:47PM (#60980232)

      What about when they're not in equal rates (i.e. more crime that would make headlines is committed by people with one skin colour over another)?
      Have a very careful look at the crime statistics, and how they relate to demographics for mandatory report crimes (the kind that make the newspaper).
      What you'll find is that the police are not racist, but that media skews to an area where they'll get the most emotional response, regardless of whether its an accurate portrayal.

      Now, that being said, I'm all for anonymising stories about crime. No race, sex or other identifying information. Until a court has passed judgement and any appeals are finished. This would inform that crime is happening in a general area (good) without people generally getting hung up on specifics.
      Unless, of course they're after public information on a particular description (but that shouldn't be tied to a person until court and due process etc.).

      Hopefully this'll help curtail the current trial by media that we get, and start going back towards a due process oriented system, and away from knee jerk.

    • Leave the names out - problem solved.

  • by MSTCrow5429 ( 642744 ) on Friday January 22, 2021 @05:41PM (#60980214)

    As a former reader of the Boston Globe, a newspaper that was still lauding Hugo Chavez well into him being an openly evil dictator, I am not surprised; wonder if that's been memory-holed.

  • by organgtool ( 966989 ) on Friday January 22, 2021 @05:50PM (#60980234)
    I understand that the internet creates a permanent records of all misdeeds which can follow a person throughout their life but I'm not thrilled with the idea that people can easily anonymize their bad behaviors. Of course, this is only one newspaper and they're free to do what they want, but I don't like where this is going and I refuse to get my news from anyone that offers this "service".
    • You have an issue with newspapers that are comfortable rewriting history to avoid embarrassing reports about people's behavior?

      Can't wait until they offer this revisionist rewriting history service to politicians.

    • Maybe the business model of making money off sensationalizing "relatively inconsequential" things was evil to begin with. If the story was actually wrong, it should be retracted or corrected. Or they can remove it completely or put it behind a paywall because it is "inconsequential". But editing out names on request seems like two wrongs not making a right.
  • This just in! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by theCat ( 36907 ) on Friday January 22, 2021 @05:52PM (#60980246) Journal

    Dateline January 6th, 2021! This just in: Anonymous primates stormed a building in a city and nearly destroyed the democracy of an unnamed country, having been incited to riot by someone else. Police were present. Flags were seen. More on this shocking story as it develops! [this story was written in compliance with the Do Not Blame Me policies of the European Union. All rights reserved.]

    • by aitikin ( 909209 )

      Dateline January 6th, 2021! This just in: Anonymous primates stormed a building in a city and nearly destroyed the democracy of an unnamed country, having been incited to riot by someone else. Police were present. Flags were seen. More on this shocking story as it develops! [this story was written in compliance with the Do Not Blame Me policies of the European Union. All rights reserved.]

      Would that I had mod points...

    • Any remember that anonymous dude "Silence Dogood" in Boston? .. I remember reading his Brit-hating crap and wondering who the heck he was and then come to find out he founded a whole country. wobble man [wobble-man.com]
  • I just see "An error occurred with this part of the page, sorry for the inconvenience."

  • The newspaper is offering to re-write history, if their completely accurate, unquestioned reporting hurts your reputation?

    How Orwellian.

    I'm sure Nicholas Sandman would like to avail himself of this service.

    Hey, Boston Globe - maybe the better answer is to not include peoples names in the casual reports of minor crimes, you know, kinda like how you treat juvenile offenders?

  • But rarely to never do I do them.
    So I'll wait for a bit before I applaud.

    • "So I'll wait for a bit before I applaud."

      OTOH, What? The Boston Globe still exists?

      Will they charge an arm and a leg for 'considering' this?

  • Any remember that anonymous dude "Silence Dogood" in Boston? .. I remember reading his Brit-hating crap and wondering who the heck he was and then come to find out he founded a whole country.

  • How is mommy and daddy's little angel going to get a job if a future employer can see they were arrested for drunk driving, destruction of public property, or heaven forbid having multiple women accuse them of sexual misconduct?

    I mean come on, we need to fill that Supreme Court seat right now before someone else has a chance!

  • My problem with this is not the outcome - itâ(TM)s with what it shows about our underlying values...the Globe should have just done this because they donâ(TM)t want to ruin peopleâ(TM)s lives, not because they want to fix systemic racism...our store of everyday ethics is being drained to fuel a super-charged morality of American guilt and shame...when America is finally egalitarian there wonâ(TM)t be anything human left to share.
  • Years ago I loved a certain publication. They exposed the high and mighty in my area and did a damn good job of it. Then out of the blue, they ran a cover story about this nurse who about 10 years earlier had done some really sad porn. This nurse was a nobody. Not a union head, not a moral crusader, not going into politics.

    In their story, they had no real context. It looked like she needed the money to get through school; nothing more salacious.

    Of course, there are the Stanford rapist Brock Turner types who need to be hounded to their graves with what they did, but in cases like the above nurse, there was no public interest. In that case, I wrote the publication and told them to stop sending their publication to me and that I would never renew or buy at the newsstand. Normally, I am a three-strikes kind of person but not in that case. That sort of crap ruins lives, families, careers, and can end with the person self-destructing.

    Mistakes can and will be made in the rush to push out tomorrows birdcage liner, so it is nice to see someone putting something in place instead of a 3rd-page retraction.

    I just hope that this process isn't used by scum like the Stanford rapist Brock Turner to hide their heinous crimes and entitled powerplays to hide their vile actions.
  • Many members of the clergy are looking forward to this.

  • So unless this happens BEFORE it is published, there's no point.

Our business in life is not to succeed but to continue to fail in high spirits. -- Robert Louis Stevenson

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