– Google chief: Internet keeps government honest.
Broader adoption of the Internet will keep governments on their toes as wired-up citizens exercise their newfound power to check rights abuses, Google chief Eric Schmidt said on Saturday.
“In nations and communities around the world, citizens are turning to online tools to keep their governments honest,” he told business leaders on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum in Honolulu.“Whistleblowing has never been so easy,” he said.
– Requisite boring interview with misguided Gloria Steinem: “We need to be angrier.” Really? Angrier than this? Not one question for Ms. Steinem about the number of rapes at the OWS demonstrations and the need for some to create “safe women” zones because the movement overall is unsafe for women? Steinem doesn’t want to site that sarcastically as “progress” right along with her views of abortion? It’s 2011 and progressives can’t even have a protest without raping everything in sight.
– Forbes weighs in on the Chelsea Clinton hire:
But you can’t really buy authority. What you get instead is attention, and it’s not clear networks know the difference. (Have you watched the Today Show lately?) NBC in particular is hooked on this fame trading. Clinton joins a stable of other famous media-political offspring, including Luke Russert, Jenna Bush Hager, Meghan McCain. The message here is that fame and parentage confer journalistic authority, rather than talent or an ability to get the story right. If you’ve grown up in the media bubble that no doubt helps you understand how it works. But such experience doesn’t give you an insight into how the real world works.
– I wish The Wrap would have complemented the GOP gaffes with just some Obama gaffes.
– NewsBeast shake-up; Tina Brown’s pub continues to flounder.
– And then a DailyBeast contributor blasts the Media Matters/ Nancy Pelosi attack on Big Peace’s Peter Schweizer. Life signs? Kudos.