Submission + - Oldest German Webzine Telepolis taken offline
An anonymous reader writes: Last Friday, December 6, 2024, the German online magazine Telepolis (www.telepolis.de) took the entire archive offline from the time of its founding in early 1996 to the beginning of 2021. Since then, older articles and the associated discussions can no longer be accessed.
If one clicks on a link that leads to one of the affected articles or a forum post, a page appears that says:
"This text will no longer be made available.
This text will no longer be made available by Heise Medien GmbH & Co. KG. Further information can be found in the presentation and updates on the work of the editorial team (link: https://www.telepolis.de/Ueber...). If you are the author of the text, please contact archivtp@heise.de."
The beginning of 2021 was the time when the founding editor Florian Rötzer retired and his successor, Harald Neuber, took over.
The blocking probably started at the beginning of December; on December 6, 2024, the editor-in-chief Harald Neuber issued a statement (https://www.telepolis.de/features/Qualitaetsoffensive-Telepolis-ueberprueft-historische-Artikel-10190173.html) in which he justified the procedure.
The texts published since the beginning of 2021 were the responsibility of the new editor-in-chief and would correspond to the journalistic standards set out in the current mission statement of 2022 (link: https://www.telepolis.de/Ueber...).
Older texts would have been removed from the archive at the beginning of December because their quality could not be guaranteed. The questionable quality was justified by possible copyright infringements of some texts.
No other reasons are given.
The old texts would be reviewed now; some of them were to be checked according to the quality criteria of the new editorial team, revised and then possibly put back online.
There is no statement on the future of the forum and the comments.
Telepolis, founded by Armin Medosch and Florian Rötzer, was created at the end of 1995 and went online in March 1996. It was the first German-language online magazine that was even published in print for a time.
From the start the declared intention was to deal with social, cultural, scientific and political aspects of the Internet beyond technical issues.
Awarded the Grimme Prize in 2002, the most prestigious media prize in the German-speaking world, Telepolis was known for its liberal stance that also allowed for controversial discussions. One of the most sensational articles was a series of articles on ENFOPOL; other surveillance systems were also reported on. A short history with Palmares can be found here: https://www.heise.de/tp/featur...
The publisher is Heise-Verlag, which publishes several IT periodicals.
Note for non-German-speaking readers: The translations from translate.google are quite accurate.
If one clicks on a link that leads to one of the affected articles or a forum post, a page appears that says:
"This text will no longer be made available.
This text will no longer be made available by Heise Medien GmbH & Co. KG. Further information can be found in the presentation and updates on the work of the editorial team (link: https://www.telepolis.de/Ueber...). If you are the author of the text, please contact archivtp@heise.de."
The beginning of 2021 was the time when the founding editor Florian Rötzer retired and his successor, Harald Neuber, took over.
The blocking probably started at the beginning of December; on December 6, 2024, the editor-in-chief Harald Neuber issued a statement (https://www.telepolis.de/features/Qualitaetsoffensive-Telepolis-ueberprueft-historische-Artikel-10190173.html) in which he justified the procedure.
The texts published since the beginning of 2021 were the responsibility of the new editor-in-chief and would correspond to the journalistic standards set out in the current mission statement of 2022 (link: https://www.telepolis.de/Ueber...).
Older texts would have been removed from the archive at the beginning of December because their quality could not be guaranteed. The questionable quality was justified by possible copyright infringements of some texts.
No other reasons are given.
The old texts would be reviewed now; some of them were to be checked according to the quality criteria of the new editorial team, revised and then possibly put back online.
There is no statement on the future of the forum and the comments.
Telepolis, founded by Armin Medosch and Florian Rötzer, was created at the end of 1995 and went online in March 1996. It was the first German-language online magazine that was even published in print for a time.
From the start the declared intention was to deal with social, cultural, scientific and political aspects of the Internet beyond technical issues.
Awarded the Grimme Prize in 2002, the most prestigious media prize in the German-speaking world, Telepolis was known for its liberal stance that also allowed for controversial discussions. One of the most sensational articles was a series of articles on ENFOPOL; other surveillance systems were also reported on. A short history with Palmares can be found here: https://www.heise.de/tp/featur...
The publisher is Heise-Verlag, which publishes several IT periodicals.
Note for non-German-speaking readers: The translations from translate.google are quite accurate.