
(update below)
As the News Corp phone hacking scandal continues to grow and envelop US newspapers and media organizations, which are owned by Rupert Murdoch and part of the News Corp family, the management of each of these papers and organizations are working overtime to defend Murdoch from the criticism. And, in a recent editorial addressing the business of news and those who are criticizing members of the News Corp family, the Wall Street Journal delivers a dig against papers like The Guardian that have done business with WikiLeaks.
The editorial argues the phone hacking scandal “years ago at a British corner of News Corp. to the Journal” is possibly being used to “injure press freedom in general.” It agrees that the phone hacking is “deplorable” and those responsible are likely to be prosecuted. It suggests News of the World violated its readers’ trust. But, at the same time, the editorial asks, “Do our media brethren really want to invite Congress and prosecutors to regulate how journalists gather the news?”—a question that foretells of the next Tea Party battle cry: “Keep your government hands off my newspaper!” (And, of course, I’m talking about the Tea Party defending the New York Post, not the Wall Street Journal. You have to like to read to care about protecting the WSJ from the government.)
Here’s the section where the WSJ editorial staff take a cheap shot against newspapers like The Guardian that have worked with WikiLeaks. After outlining how News Corps has invested in the WSJ, making it possible for foreign coverage to expand, for digital delivery to be launched and for the weekend edition to become more substantial, the editorial asserts:
We also trust that readers can see through the commercial and ideological motives of our competitor-critics. The Schadenfreude is so thick you can’t cut it with a chainsaw. Especially redolent are lectures about journalistic standards from publications that give Julian Assange and WikiLeaks their moral imprimatur. They want their readers to believe, based on no evidence, that the tabloid excesses of one publication somehow tarnish thousands of other News Corp. journalists across the world.
First off, a tabloid newspaper staff may be the embodiment of Schadenfreude, as a tabloid’s staff especially the executives involved make profit out of exploiting the misfortunes of celebrities, politicians, sports athletes and sometimes, as this phone hacking scandal has shown, members of the public who get murdered. It seems like karma is delivering retribution, as members of the News Corp family are being hit with payback from people who are tired of letting those in News Corp be the mean girls that run the high school.
Second, it’s pretty disingenuous to imply that newspapers that have worked with WikiLeaks—and published information they have obtained through WikiLeaks—don’t have their own independent editorial stance on the operations of the organization itself. In the PBS FRONTLINE documentary WikiSecrets, Investigations Executive Editor David Leigh says, “Julian, whose project was to publish the entire data set, was very reluctant to delete those names, to redact them. And we said, ‘Julian, we’ve got to do something about these redactions. We really have got to.’ And he said, ‘These people were collaborators, informants. They deserve to die.’ And there was a sort of silence fell around the table.”
But, let’s forget about the fact that The Guardian and WikiLeaks have been at vicious odds with one another. Julian Assange is, to some extent, on the side of WSJ. He agrees that not all News Corp organizations should have to pay for one paper engaging in illicit and illegal activity.
From a press conference last week:
No person, no director or spokesperson or contractor of WikiLeaks has even been charged with a crime in any country and yet we have suffered this economic embargo for the past seven months. News of the World has been charged multiple times for sourcing related offenses. That said, it does appear based on the allegation that in some cases News International overstepped the boundaries of what was ethical. That does not mean that an entire newspaper should receive the death sentence. Rather, the few employees or staff or managers should be investigated, perhaps, and dealt with. But should all the journalists in News International and the entire paper go? It’s always a loss to a community when it loses one of its papers. I would ask that people think carefully and distinguish between destroying an institution and cleaning up a few bad apples.
That’s right. The information anarchist has empathy for those in the News Corp family, who are paying for the phone hacking but had nothing to do with the phone hacking, and would likely agree with the WSJ that Attorney Eric J. Holder and the Department of Justice should be restrained in its investigation of the News Corp family.
The editorial raises the alarm about foreign-bribery laws being enforced to regulate news. It mentions how the government came after the late Robert Novak in its pursuit of White House aide Scooter Libby for being involved in leaking the news that Valerie Plame was a member of the CIA. It’s classic conservative establishment pretzel logic that newspapers working with WikiLeaks are unethical while journalists involved in leaking the names of agents in the CIA are victims of a government conspiracy against press freedom.
What many may not remember is that in May of this year, before this phone hacking scandal became such a controversy for News Corp, the WSJ announced that it would be announcing its own WikiLeaks-imitation site called SafeHouse. The announcement of the launch of a “leaks site” was a signal that WSJ was making this move to setup a digital platform for accepting news tips from sources, instead of having sources go through a traditional system that may mostly exist offline, because it realized WikiLeaks was on to something. Managing editor of WSJ.com, Kevin Delaney, quoted by Michael Calderone on Huffington Post, acknowledged , “We all agree that WikiLeaks has had a huge impact on the journalism landscape over the last year or so.” And added, “There’s been a discussion among editors that it made sense to create a system to receive information from sources digitally.”
The WSJ, like other newspapers and media organizations, fears WikiLeaks. It understands WikiLeaks threatens its gatekeeper status. It hopes to commercialize what WikiLeaks does so it can ensure WikiLeaks does not impact future profits while at the same time neutralizing the part that involves being adversarial to power. And, at the end of the day, the WSJ is incredibly regretful of the fact that, when it had the opportunity, it didn’t take WikiLeaks up on its offer to have access to the US State Department cables because it didn’t want to enter into a media partnership with WikiLeaks and sign a confidentiality agreement.
It knows that papers like The Guardian did take a chance on WikiLeaks. It has seen papers like The Guardian receive awards for its coverage of documents obtained from WikiLeaks. It has seen papers like The Guardian win prestige, as it seeks to evolve with the media landscape, and it understands it has struggled to achieve command of the new digital news landscape.
What News Corp had, the ability to hack into people’s phones for exclusives, has been exposed. The world now knows the way that media organizations in the News Corp has gotten scoops for tabloid stories. It is not fully known if US-based members of the News Corp family used such a tactic to collect news exclusives, but there is reason to suspect that they too engaged in illicit and illegal activity.
The world questions the News Corp family and wants to know, what else have you been doing that has been illegal? And, the executives of all News Corp media organizations tremble at the thought that another sleazy tactic they use that is largely unknown could be revealed tomorrow and force them to have to further recalculate how to stay afloat in this world that gets more rough for traditional media each and every day.
But, that isn’t the only problem for the WSJ. The WSJ must also face a country of people less and less willing to protect the rich from having to make sacrifices and get off the government teat. Americans are growing less and less supportive of socialism for the rich and capitalism for the poor. They are tired of the deft blend of classist, racist, xenophobic and elitist opinions, which spin headlines and influence the newspaper’s content.
When you consider that and the fact that the phone hacking scandal is forcing those in the News Corp family to be reintroduced to their conscience, going after newspapers that have worked with organizations like WikiLeaks is snide but at the same time understandable.
UPDATE
Trevor Timm, who runs the Twitter user account @WLLegal account that aggregates news and views on legal issues surrounding WikiLeaks, has a post up now that is equally good if not better at showing the hypocrisy of the WSJ:
Timm notes several of the stories the WSJ has published with the same content that The Guardian has used from WikiLeaks. He points out how the newspaper attempts to hide behind the First Amendment. And, then he finishes off his takedown with these words:
…No one wants to invite Congress and prosecutors to regulate how journalists gather the news. Yet the Wall Street Journal invited two members of Congress to call on prosecutors to investigate WikiLeaks under the Espionage Act, which would create new precedent in that very area. A prosecution of WikiLeaks for publishing classified information would open the Wall Street Journalto investigation of legitimate journalism like their investigation into the CIA’s role in Pakistan, which contains highly classified, yet newsworthy, information.
Even if Assange is never convicted, the investigation into WikiLeaks surely has the potential toengulf other reporters. Yet despite the Journal’s professed concern for journalistic freedom, it has printed editorial after editorial calling for Julian Assange to be thrown in jail.
If you missed it, Timm was on a podcast I host each week called “This Week in WikiLeaks.” It was posted here on Firedoglake on Sunday. I encourage everyone to listen to the conversation we had, which can be found here.



37 Comments

“Look over there, it’s wikileaks, ugga bugga, they’re going to eat your babies.”
Classy & substantial as always.
Wikileaks contributed more to journalism with the Mannning release alone than all of News Corp’s holdings ever have, or ever will.
Senator Palpatine is about to reveal himself as the Emperor Darth (in)Sidious. It should be quite telling to see how this wretched evil man defends his criminal actions and propaganda machine that would make even Joseph Goebbels blush.
We don’t really have markets anymore. Just intervention. So the WSJ is obsolete, like the Supreme Court after the death of the constitution.
Your classy Jane. MUwhaaah!
Felix Salmon on NewsCorp’s sordid past in America.
Thw WSJ is now just another propagandist rag filled with reactionary, dumbed-down editorials that laud the owner’s political views and interests. It used to be a source where entrepreneurial minded individuals could get a more or less honest perspective on today’s business climate, but that day has passed.
It slots in with the rest of News Corp’s business model: pander to the emotional deficiencies of the viewership. Create a thrill for readers and viewers.
The milk might be souring now though. It seems that people might actually want substantative impartial reflection and insight – something every single property of News Corp lacks. As the cat is let out of the bag, and people learn of the perverse aversion that News Corp has to ethical standards, most people who have conscienced bones will recoil News Corps media outlets.
Then again, tax cuts are a religion of sorts and those that are inerred to them will force down any and all detestable forms of hypocrisy on their way to achieving their ideological goals (one of which is to never accept that one is wrong). Hopefully, for the rest of us, this contingent of meanies will shrink back to their epicenters and the walking-around casual dopes will peel off their “I’m a libertarian” stickers and pitch them into the trash.
Ru Murdock (and possibly Roger Ailes) getting their just desserts is too good to be true. Things that are too good to be true usually aren’t. I soooo hope I’m wrong.
Do people protect Murdoch because he provides them with a job, or because he has a little something on everyone? The world makes so much more sense if blackmail plays a hand in things.
It was great to see Jane on cspan this morning.
I want to know if there are any connections between Fox News and the NSA. Remember, Cheney only watched Fox.
You will get your wish.
Murdock has no friends in England. And many enemies.
“Friends come and friends go. Enemies Accumulate”.
Perhaps so, but what I really want is for Murdoch to get some blowback here for the damage he’s done. However, *here* he has a government full of friends.
Uhm did the WallStreet Journal use any news obtained by phone hacking by its sister newspaper?
Please. We let war criminals and bankers off the hook. Rupert and his little company will be just fine.
Years ago? Has that been proven in court yet? The British corner of Newscorp we are expected to believe did not share phone hack information gained from 9/11 victims with its American papers and Fox News? Yeah Right
That’s my fear.
Last night I heard someone on my teevee say that the Murdoch affair is Britain’s Watergate. Can’t see justice happening here.
The WSJ is trying to claim that American NewsCorp had nothing to do with the phone hacking they don’t want to be on the hook from private lawsuits which have much lower standards than criminal court.
How can wiki leaks which exposes stuff about Afghanistan by American troops that is news be compared to phone hacking for gossip?
Can Rupert or anyone claim American troops were harmed by that information? That girl who was murdered and because Newscorp deleted her phone messages they can claim false hope and interfering with a murder investigation.
This is like comparing apples to dead rats.
Hey, maybe crime doesn’t pay:
News Corp. Loses $7 Billion in Market Value Over Four Days as Stock Plunges Amid Hacking Scandal
LINK.
Should the FCC let Rupert own newspapers and a tv network if he hacks American phones is the question? This does not seem to be in the public interest.
http://www.tvweek.com/blogs/tvbizwire/2011/07/news-corp-loses-7-billion-in-m.php
Rupert borrowed money to buy the WSJ and expand his empire to movies, tv etc his stock is collateral for those bank loans. If the value goes down his banks will want more stock as collateral this is what caused Enron to go under.
Rupert’s stock has been low for years I am surprised the banks have not gone after him yet.
Despite the banks liking Rupert for his pro business slanted news the banks very well might have to demand more stock as collateral from him.
Does anyone know where to find how much NewsCorp and Rupert owe the banks as a company and personally?
Conrade Black went to jail during the Bush years for less than whats Rupert has done. Illegal Financial Schemes are less than interfering with a murder investigation and spying on people’s phone records is not a light charge either.
Aside from 9/11 victims has Rupert spied on Americans? Rupert likes to spy on Stars and politicians any bets he hacked Jane?
PERP WALK! PERP WALK! PERP WALK!
Wow, great quote, who said that?
I agree, brought a chuckle.
For Newscorp this catastrophe is equivalent to BP’s oil spill. With one major exception. After the spill, BP still owned its reserves and drilling rights. Newscorp owns nothing, apart from the buildings and the hard and software needed to operate its press and media. Not the same thing at all. Some Arab sheiks are going to be speaking to Ruppert again, and very shortly.
“Do our media brethren really want to invite Congress and prosecutors to regulate how journalists gather the news?”
Do the citizens of the United States of American want to insist that Congress and prosecutors enforce the laws approved and enacted by Congress and investigate, prosecute and punish those who violate the laws of our land to the full extent that those laws allow?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/18/news-of-the-world-sean-hoare
ean Hoare, the former News of the World showbiz reporter who was the first named journalist to allege Andy Coulson was aware of phone hacking by his staff, has been found dead, the Guardian has learned.
Hoare, who worked on the Sun and the News of the World with Coulson before being dismissed for drink and drugs problems, is said to have been found dead at his Watford home.
“Hertfordshire police would not confirm his identity, but the force said in a statement: “At 10.40am today [Monday 18 July] police were called to Langley Road, Watford, following the concerns for the welfare of a man who lives at an address on the street. Upon police and ambulance arrival at a property, the body of a man was found. The man was pronounced dead at the scene shortly after.
“The death is currently being treated as unexplained, but not thought to be suspicious. Police investigations into this incident are ongoing.”"
A former Reuters journalist, Andrew MacGregor Marshall, has folded the content of numerous leaked cables into long form journalism to explain the current political situation in Thailand. The draconian lese majeste laws in Thailand prevented publication there, and discouraged Reuters from publishing elsewhere.
Although of interest to a limited audience, the material is posted here:
http://thaistoryblog.wordpress.com/
Eh? I don’t know about THAT. Sure, people who lurk and/or comment here agree with this sentiment. The vast majority of the US? I doubt it. Most citizens are asleep at the wheel and could care less, nor would they agree with the sentiment about socialism for the rich.
JMHO, of course, but I really don’t feel most citizens feel this way, and I seriously doubt very many have a clue about Murdoch & what’s happening in England. On top of that, if you told US citizens that Murdoch’s minions most likely hacked YOUR voice mail, my “bet” is that most US citizens would shrug their shoulders, roll their eyes, and click their clickers to Fake Noise.
Just saying…
Good post, however, esp exposing typical rightwing hypocrisy and spin. No surprises there.
Well, no, it’s not in the public’s interest. But many have commented on Dick Cheney’s entanglement with Murdoch & his evil empire. And we all know that Cheney’s response to what you posit, above, would be a resounding: “SO????!!!!??”
Thanks. And, yes, I’m willing to suggest that more and more people are frustrated with how they are being asked to sacrifice while the rich get richer and don’t have to sacrifice anything.
Sure, there are ignorant Tea Partiers being manipulated and wound up, who go out in public and yammer away about why there should be no more taxes and government intervention, etc. But, I think small business owners are seeing how the so-called free market is being further transformed in such a way that it is easier for a business if they achieve “too big too fail” status and harder for a small business that legitimately enriches a community and makes profits in a way that is ethical and does not involve the type of corruption rampant on Wall Street.
I don’t discount your skepticism. I’m skeptical of the fact that those who want the rich to pay up will not speak up and make demands. They need to do that. There needs to be no hesitation on their part.
You do have to keep in mind that Pearl walked from any charges in the Black prosecution and that, convcition notwithstanding, Black got a bye from the US Sup Ct.
1.Wikileaks didn’t hack. It obtained files from a whistleblower. News of the World (hereafter NewsCorp) actively electronically invaded, that is hacked, communications and records.
2. Wikileaks target was operation of an ostensibly democratic government pledged to openness. NewCorp targeted private citizens
3. The subject investigated was the inefficacy of said democratic government’s military policies and operations in the public’s name. NewsCorp’s objective was salacious gossip and vicarious perversity.
Of apples and dead rats, News of the World, NewsCorp and the WSJ reek of rot.
Genachowski and Holder need to take their fingers out of their ears and start doing their jobs.
Great article Kevin but – one small point – please don’t keep repeating David Leigh’s comment about Assange saying collaborators “deserve to die” – it simply isn’t true. Two Der Speigel reporters who were at the same dinner have denied that Assange said any such thing. And take a look at this:
http://bit.ly/iXoWT4
It’s Javier Morano, Editor in Chief of El Pais newspaper (one of the first 5 media partners) giving his keynote speech “Newspapers: From Telex to Wikileaks” at the European Communication Summit last week. At 15.17 into his speech he states the ONLY stipulation Assange had when dealing with how each newspaper would treat the leaks editorially was that measures should be taken to protect people whose lives would be put in danger.
Finally, here’s an article by David Leigh himself, dated 22 August 2010, in which he states Assange’s only comment to the charge that the Afghan War Logs release would endanger lives was that US soldiers have “blood on their hands”:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2010/aug/22/wikileaks-julian-assange-sweden
In other words, Leigh has changed his tune mightily since he fell out with Assange. Please therefore treat his most recent pronouncements with due caution.
You are correct, Arbed.The reason I use him was to show how flawed it was for the WSJ to come out against The Guardian. I should have made clear that I thought Leigh’s comment was horse shit but it shows that some newspapers believe they can work with WikiLeaks and still be condescending, demeaning and outright deceitful toward them as they smear the organization.
I’d like to know if there’s any connection between AT&T and Fox News. Remember ATT had that secret room on the west coast where they were intercepting domestic calls about eight years ago?
Remember this? Whistle-blower says AT&T gave spy agency access to network, April 14, 2006
…..
Klein said the NSA built a secret room at the company’s San Francisco central office in 2003, adjacent to a “switch room where the public’s phone calls are routed.” One of the documents under seal, Klein said, shows that a device was installed with the “ability to sift through large amounts of data looking for preprogrammed targets.”
Other so-called secret rooms were constructed at AT&T sites in Seattle, San Jose, Los Angeles and San Diego, the statement said.
Other documents under seal show that fiber optic cables from the secret room tapped into WorldNet Internet subscribers, Klein said. The documents also instructed technicians how to connect cables to the secret room. Klein said he was required to connect circuits that fed information to the secret room.
The NSA declined directly to address the lawsuit or Klein’s allegations, which covered activities at AT&T Corp. before SBC Communications Inc. bought it and became AT&T Inc. late last year.
Also,this,which purports Fox’s OWN black ops surveillance room:
Jan 10 2008 12:00am EDT (Portfolio magazine blog,excerpt)
Fox News Knocks Down ‘Brain Room’ Claim
Has Roger Ailes been keeping tabs on your phone calls? A disgrunted former Fox News producer claims he has the capability thanks to a secret “brain room” that the network uses for “counterintelligence and black ops.”
Potentially the most explosive among(Dan) Cooper’s many lurid claims, assuming anyone believes them, arises from his account of how his agent, Richard Leibner, dropped him as a client. Leibner did so, asserts Cooper, under pressure from Ailes, who had discovered that Cooper was an anonymous source for a New York magazine story about him, written by ex-Republican David Brock. And how did Ailes learn that?
Certainly Brock didn’t tell him. Of course. Fox News had gotten Brock’s telephone records from the phone company, and my phone number was on the list. Deep in the bowels of 1211 Avenue of the Americas, News Corporation’s New York headquarters, was what Roger called The Brain Room. Most people thought it was simply the research department of Fox News. But unlike virtually everybody else, because I had to design and build the Brain Room, I knew it also housed a counterintelligence and black ops office. So accessing phone records was easy pie.
Read more: http://www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/mixed-media/2008/0 …