How The Cowardice Of The LA Times And Washington Post Highlights The Danger Of The Link Taxes They Demand, And Their Hypocrisy
from the we-won’t-and-we’ll-make-it-so-you-can’t-either dept
As Mike and others have pointed out, the Los Angeles Times and Washington Post have utterly failed the public. While it is of course their right to endorse, or not endorse, anyone they choose, the refusal to provide any such endorsement in an election with such high stakes abandons the important role the press plays in helping ensure that the electorate is as informed as it needs to be to make its self-governance choices. They join the outlets like the New York Times, CNN, the Wall Street Journal, and others who have also pulled their punches in headlines and articles about the racist threats being made in the course of the presidential campaign, or inaccurately paint a false coherence between the candidates in their headlines and articles, and in doing so kept the public from understanding what is at stake. The First Amendment protects the press so that it can be free to perform that critical role of informing the public of what it needs to know. A press that instead chooses to be silent is of no more use than a press that can’t speak.
The issue here is not that the LA Times and Washington Post could not muster opinions (in fact, one could argue that its silence is actually expressing one). The issue is more how they’ve mischaracterized endorsements as some sort of superfluous expression of preference and not a meaningful synthesis of the crucial reporting it has done. In other words, despite their protests, the endorsement is supposed to be reporting, a handy packaging of its coverage for readers to conveniently review before voting.
If it turns out that the publication can draw a conclusion no better than a low-information voter, when it, as press, should have the most information of all, then it can no longer be trusted as a useful source of it. While both the LA Times and Washington Post have still produced some helpful political reporting, their editorial reluctance to embrace their own coverage makes one wonder what else they have held back that the public really needed to know about before heading to the ballot box. Especially when it seems the Times in particular also nixed the week-long series of Trump-focused articles it had been planning, which would have culminated in the editorial against him – the absence of that reporting too raises the strong suspicion that other relevant reporting has also been suppressed.
This crucial educative role that the press plays to inform public discourse so necessary for democracy to successfully function is now going unserved by the publications who have now abdicated that important job. Which is, of course, their choice: it is their choice in whether and how to exercise the editorial discretion of what to cover and what to conclude. The press freedom the First Amendment protects includes the freedom to be absolutely awful in one’s reporting decisions. No law could constitutionally demand anything otherwise and still leave that essential press freedom intact.
But if these incumbent outlets are not going to do it, then someone else will need to. The problem we are faced with is that not only are these publications refusing to play this critical democracy-defending role, but they are also actively trying to prevent anyone else from doing it. Because that’s the upshot to all the “link taxes” they and organizations they support keep lobbying for.
As we’ve discussed many times, link taxes destroy journalism by making that journalism much more difficult to find. The link sharing people are now able to freely do on social media and such would now require permission, which would necessarily deter it. The idea behind link taxes it would raise revenue if people had to pay for the permission needed to link to their articles. But all such a law would be sure to do is cut media outlets off from their audiences by deliberately cutting off a main way they get linked to them.
While the goal of the policy, to support journalism, may be noble, the intention cannot redeem such a counterproductive policy when its inevitable effect will be the exact opposite. It is, in short, a dumb idea. But if link taxes are imposed it will be a dumb idea everyone has to live with, no matter how much it hurts them. And it will hurt plenty. Because even if it manages to generate some money, the only outlets likely to ever see any of it would be the big incumbents – the same ones currently failing us. Smaller outlets, by being smaller, would be unlikely to benefit – compulsory licensing schemes such as this one rarely return much to the longtail of supposed “beneficiaries.” Yet for those smaller outlets keen to build audiences and then monetize that attention in ways most appropriate for it, these link tax schemes will be crippling obstacles, preventing their work from even getting seen and leaving them now without either revenue or audience. Which will make it impossible for them to survive and carry the reporting baton that the larger outlets have now dropped. Which therefore means that the public will still have to go without the reporting it needs, because the bigger outlets aren’t doing it and the smaller ones now can’t.
Laws that impose regulatory schemes like these are of dubious constitutionality, especially in how they directly interfere with the operation of the press by suppressing these smaller outlets. But what is perhaps most alarming here is the utter hypocrisy of these incumbent outlets to claim link taxes are needed to “save” journalism while not actually doing the journalism that needs saving, yet demanding a regulatory scheme that would effectively silence anyone interested in doing better.
If they wonder why journalism is struggling, then the thing they need to do is look in the mirror. The way to save journalism is to actually practice journalism. No link tax is going to make the LA Times or Washington Post play the role they have chosen not to play anymore. But they will make it so that no one else can play it either. And that’s no way to save journalism; that’s how you kill it for good.
And with it the democracy that depends on it.
Filed Under: cjpa, endorsements, jcpa, journalism, link taxes, politics
Companies: la times, washington post


Comments on “How The Cowardice Of The LA Times And Washington Post Highlights The Danger Of The Link Taxes They Demand, And Their Hypocrisy”
Being silent?
IS an option and opinion.
With all the BS flying around, its hard to analyze and Verify ANYTHING.
AND there are 3rd parties Playing games in the background. On FB, The problem with Jon Stewart, is being hit by MANY FAKED NEW accounts, that all they post is To his FB section.
Thinning Any of that out is Editorializing. And being Fair is trying to lookup and Verify Anything most of them are saying or trying to introduced to be debated.
To be FAIR, they would need to post, Both sides Fairly and take up the Whole site with the PAID adverts.
The FUN part would be to Run verification on EVERY ONE OF THEM, and Mark them as is done on the internet..
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re:
I’d like to congratulate you for the most incoherent, psychotic, ranting bullshit that I’ve read today. Your inability to compose so much as a single cogent sentence combined with your random phrasing makes this an especially valuable contribution in the field of utterly worthless discourse.
Re: Re: Right back at you, AC
I’d like to congratulate YOU, Anonymous Coward, for posting the single most useless, generic and worthless response to this article, contributing nothing to the discourse.
I assume it’s for this article merely because of its location as it makes no reference to anything in the article.
Or do you post the same generic response to all BestNetTech articles?
Re: Re: Re:
May I ask what a _cplocation is? I’ve seen it twice today and have no idea
Re: Re: Re:2
May I ask you to google terms you’re unfamiliar with instead?
Re: Re:
Is that you, Billy Madison?
Don't blame "the newspapers" for owners orders
Don’t blame “the newspapers” or the editorial boards for things they are ordered to do by the billionaire owners.
The owner of the Times reportedly wants to be healthcare “czar” in a new Trump administraion. Bezos is afraid his companies will lose billions in government contracts (a very real concern given what Trump tried to do in his first term).
Both are probably concerned about Trump’s threats to shut the papers down.
Re:
That they’re obeying Trump in advance, even when they don’t and can’t know if he’s winning the election, speaks volumes about their cowardice.
Re: Re:
Money talks and BS walks. I suggest you look at the betting odds. They are made by people who do not want to lose money.
Re: Re: Re:
betting sites are 100% bs so there not true
Re: Re: Re:
next time don’t trust betting sites or polls
Re: Re: Re:
I could try to divine the election results from digging my hands in a pile of horseshit, but that would get me the same thing I’d get from looking at the betting odds or a bunch of different polls: nothing worth looking at.
Re:
Just taking orders doesn’t absolve someone from being complicit. Especially given how much effort they’ve spent insisting they’re independent (on their own time/initiative, too).
But regardless, even if you don’t ‘blame’ them, you do have to recognized they’re compromised, and treat them accordingly.
Re: Re:
“Just taking orders doesn’t absolve someone from being complicit.”
You mean those editors that resigned in protest over what they were ordered to do?
Re: Blame Game
Ok, while we’re at it, let’s not blame anyone at Faux “News” for Rupert’s driving.
Re: 'If we pay the dane-geld the dane will be sure to go away!'
Don’t blame “the newspapers” or the editorial boards for things they are ordered to do by the billionaire owners.
Ehh… Do I necessarily blame them for sacrificing their principles and keeping their jobs, instead of sacrificing their jobs and keeping their principles? So-so.
Do I consider anything they might report from this point on even remotely trustworthy, having had it made perfectly clear that what they can and can not report on is entirely up to the wealthy owners of the businesses, who are willing to bend the knee to a would-be dictator in either cowardice or greed and to hell what that means for anyone else? No, not in the slightest.
The owner of the Times reportedly wants to be healthcare “czar” in a new Trump administraion. Bezos is afraid his companies will lose billions in government contracts (a very real concern given what Trump tried to do in his first term).
Both are probably concerned about Trump’s threats to shut the papers down.
They should spend some of their copious time and money chatting up some historians, find out how well ‘appeasement’ tends to work as a practice to keep mentally deranged dictators off your back. While they’re at it they can do a little research regarding more modern developments, specifically as it applies to how quick convicted felon Trump is to turn on his own supporters at the first sign of ‘disloyalty’, no matter how ‘loyal’ they may have been in the past.
Re:
In the early 1930s, the German people were concerned about Hitler’s threats to shut newspapers and radio stations down, and look where that got them.
Cancel Cancel Cacel
I have cancelled my WAPO subscription and I encourage all who have a subscription to do the same.Find another news outlet to support.
Re:
Cancel your Prime subscription and stop using Amazon. That hurts Bezos. Canceling the Post subscription just hurts a still good newspaper that lost over $75 million last year.
Re: Re:
Why not both? I feel like a core point of this article is that the post is not doing journalism. We know it scrapped an entire week of articles on trump that were groundwork for the editorial endorsement of harris that was suppressed. The post can not, and should not, be trusted to provide “good journalism” and shouldn’t be supported.
Re: Re:
Isn’t Bezos not really in Amazon anymore?
I’m not saying that you shouldn’t cancel your Prime account, I’m saying that it’s not going to hurt him as much as you hope it is.
Re: Re: Re:
You’re right that Jeff Bezos is no longer be the CEO of Amazon, but he is the Executive Chairman of its board, so every Amazon Prime subscription not signed up for absolutely does still hurt him in the pocket.
Re: Re: Re:2
Okay, thanks for the explanation.
So there’s still a non-zero chance of ants biting hard enough to slay an elephant. That’s uplifting. Not very much, but it’s a non-zero amount so that’s got to count for something, right?
…Right?
Is the newspapers reluctance to endorse an obvious sign of fascism?
I believe so.
Our of fear of upsetting Trump these billionaires are suppressing their own newspapers editors and journalists.
This is exactly how democracy dies.
Re:
even tho it’s not gonna save them
Re: Re:
“If I demur, they will not be coming for me” is the key creed propelling fascism. They don’t need to come for you if you stay in line to the slaughterhouse.
Re: Re: Re:
and i counter that by introducing you to the appeasement test that proved your words wrong
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re:
Or maybe they know that Kamala is an execrable candidate and don’t want to be on-record encouraging people to vote for her?
Re: Re:
K-A-M-A-L-A is not the spelling of ‘Donald’ I know.
Re: Re: Re:
Donald Trump is Adolph Hitler and his movement is a neo-Nazi one.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Having the outlet be able to opt-in/out seems like a very obvious solution to this problem. Canada’s version basically already has this, with it’s mediated bargaining system.
There are other potential solutions, like just lump sum taxing it upfront, and only using links as a way to divvy it up after the fact. Or more controversially, not letting them remove links to dodge the tax. This is mainly a problem because as designed, it gives companies an incentive to dodge the tax, and the means to do so. If you’re going to implement it, you need to fix one or both of those.
Re:
I feel like there are First Amendment issues with not allowing sites to remove links or putting extra taxes on social media. On the other hand, the people who hit “report” on this are a bunch of censorious jerks who can’t stand to have an opinion that doesn’t agree with theirs expressed.
It’s not really editorial reluctance; it’s their billionaire owners’ reluctance. The editorial staff were overruled, and some of them are already resigning over it.
You can make the same point: it makes one wonder what else the billionaire owners might be suppressing. But let’s put the blame where it belongs.
Ah yes, the famous motto of the Post -
“Out, out are the lights —out all!”
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Update
Jeff Bezos himself has posted his reasoning:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/10/28/jeff-bezos-washington-post-trust/
Re:
I think you already have had your tongue in enough billionaires anal cavities for one week, sir.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Still seething, eh Double M?
Re:
Just you seeing things. You could probably sell the plot of whatever the hell goes on in your head to some Hollyweird jackass. Make sure to let them know you aren’t just a broken LLM because they will be fooled.
Re: Copium… not even once!
How many times do we have to tell you bro. Never get high on your own supply.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Hey Cathy: I live in a swing state and I’m voting Trump-Vance because the Washington Post didn’t tell me who to vote for.
Apparently endorsing the Harris campaign was left to the humor columnist at the WaPo.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re:
Yes, an AWFL who hates Trump (check out her timeline on X) thinks Kamalatoe “would make a fine president.” Shocker. 🙄
Re: Re:
Better than felon Trump.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:
Too bad you don’t own the Washington Post!
Re: Re: Re:2
too bad your just a troll on a tech blog site
Re:
Links to readable sources, please. Can’t read shit behind a paywall I won’t have taken down because doing so endorses the problematic actions undertaken by the Wapo’s owner.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Lol
Rofl.
Holy crap the state of this 2005 site.
Re: You may continue to cope and seethe.
You really do put the impotent in impotent rage.
I assume that even though the journalists are working for a newspaper, they have the right to their own work? That they produce in their own time?
If so, then they can always publish the same information they’ve accumulated on another outlet.
Re:
And get paid for it? You do know how most journalists make their living, right?
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Quotes
“Insightful piece! The impact of link taxes on journalism and free access to information is concerning, especially when major publications advocate policies that may limit their own readership and online discourse. Thanks for shedding light on this complex issue!”
Regarding the Washington Post, Jeff Bezos recently (within the past year, I believe) replaced the managing editor, and two other top editors with outsiders.
The managing editor’s experience is with British tabloids. He had no connections with the Post, no understanding of American journalistic ethics, and was only loyal to Bezos.
Other Post editors and staff expressed their deep concerns at the time.
Is Jeff afraid of falling out of a window?
Seems that may be the case here.
One would think that with all that money Jeff would have a safe house/ship/island somewhere without windows.
Re:
even tho he’s going to fall out a window anyways cuase appeasement to a dictator never works
Re: Re:
It reorders the queue to the window.
Re: Re: Re:
no remember this is trump he would kill you if you are disloyal to him even once
Re:
Self-defenestration for Bezos? Yes, please!
the refusal to provide any such endorsement in an election with such high stakes abandons the important role the press plays in helping ensure that the electorate is as informed as it needs to be to make its self-governance choices
Is it not possible to inform without endorsing?
Re: Not while still being honest
Yes, but no.
When accurate and honest reporting would slant heavily in favor of one side over the other by portraying their opposition as deranged would-be dictators that are threats to the country and everything that makes it worth a damn, though the damning practice of ‘not sanewashing what their leader says and does, pointing out how often he and his followers treat ‘reality’ as an enemy and not making excuses but just factually reporting what terrible/illegal thing they’ve said/done recently’…
You don’t need to make an explicit endorsement to have made one, sometimes there mere act of doing good journalism will do the trick and if your boss is, whether from greed or cowardice vehemently against that…
Re: Re:
WAPO endorsed no one twice as long as they endorsed anyone, historically.
Where do you think the nazis will build their internment camps to house all you enemies from within after they get elected?
Re: Re: Re:
Cowards are hiding already.
I did nazi that coming
dsgaSDF
GASDGASDF