October 19, 2009

Twitter and a Newspaper Untie a Gag Order
By NOAM COHEN
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/19/technology/internet/19link.html?ref=technology&pagewanted=print


TWITTER has been credited with helping to organize political protests 
and shine a light on abuses around the world. At the same time, the 
ubiquitous service has been criticized for disrespecting the sanctity of 
once-private halls of deliberation — whether a criminal jury’s chambers 
or an N.B.A. locker room.

In the rarest of cases, apparently, Twitter can do both. That is the 
view of the editor of The Guardian in London, Alan Rusbridger, who, 
after prevailing in a legal fight over the publication of secret 
documents, wrote that “the Twittersphere blew away conventional efforts 
to buy silence,” as a headline on his column put it.

Last month, a British judge ruled that material obtained by Guardian 
journalists about a multinational corporation had to be kept secret. 
Unlike other such injunctions, however, the “gag order” applied to the 
existence of the injunction itself. That is, The Guardian was forbidden 
to report that it had been gagged.

Thus, we have a Kafka-esque experience that, fittingly, has been imposed 
an unknown number of times by the courts, according to the British 
newspapers.

The documents involved in the super- injunction could not have been more 
serious.

In August 2006, an independent shipping company, Trafigura, paid a local 
operator in Ivory Coast to dispose of waste from the treatment of 
low-quality gasoline. The operator dumped about 400 tons of the “slops” 
— a mixture of petrochemical waste and caustic soda — in open landfills 
around a large Ivorian city, Abidjan.

In the weeks afterward, according to a New York Times account from the 
time, 85,000 people sought medical attention, “paralyzing the fragile 
health care system in a country divided and impoverished by civil war.” 
Eight died from exposure to the waste, the article reported.

•

In 2007, Trafigura paid the Ivory Coast government about $225 million 
related to those events, without admitting liability. And last month, 
the company settled a class-action lawsuit in Britain on behalf of 
30,000 Ivory Coast residents by agreeing to pay $1,500 a person while 
asserting “that it did not foresee, and could not have foreseen, the 
reprehensible acts” of its contractor.

Given the legally charged conditions, a preliminary scientific analysis 
of what might have been dumped — ordered by Trafigura’s lawyers — could 
have significant ramifications. And when a copy of that analysis fell 
into the hands of a reporter for The Guardian, Trafigura asked a judge 
to protect it, saying it was a confidential communication with lawyers 
for the company. Furthermore, Trafigura argued, any statements the 
report contained had been superseded by later, more reliable testing.

The superinjunction was issued on Sept. 11. “Presumably the reason for 
this expansive intrusion into liberty is the theory that in the Internet 
era any clue to the origin of information will lead to the information 
becoming available and easily accessed,” James Edelman, a media law 
expert at Oxford University, wrote in an e-mail message.

Even with the superinjunction, the report appeared on the whistle-blower 
Web site Wikileaks three days after the injunction. Last week, a member 
of Parliament asked a question about the case and, by mentioning the 
Trafigura scientific report, forced a legal crisis of sorts. The court 
order ran against the British tradition that what is spoken in 
Parliament is beyond censorship.

Sparked by a teasing article in The Guardian about the newspaper’s being 
prevented from identifying the member of Parliament — and Mr. 
Rusbridger’s tweet about it — readers discovered the question on a 
government Web site and set about broadcasting it on the Internet.

In addition to using Twitter, these sympathetic readers used a new tool 
from Google — SideWiki — to post comments alluding to the controversy on 
the Web sites of Trafigura and its law firm, Carter-Ruck. Furthermore, 
Wikipedia, with its main servers safely sitting in the United States, 
freely linked to Wikileaks, giving coverage that was more comprehensive 
than anything a British news consumer could find.

In the face of the online campaign, Trafigura agreed to allow The 
Guardian to report on the parliamentary question, but insisted that the 
documents remain enjoined. That led to some Twitter trash-talking, 
including calls for civil disobedience by British journalists, asking 
them to re-tweet (RT) its link to the report. The Guardian’s technology 
editor, Charles Arthur, wrote early on Friday morning, “Oh Wikileaks, I 
would so love to RT you, and would get into so much trouble if I did.”

•

Friday night, Trafigura relented on the release of the report, 
simultaneously issuing a statement from the managing director of the 
testing company, who said that it was an “initial desktop study” and 
that he now agreed with the conclusion that the dumping “could at worst 
have caused a range of short term low level flu like symptoms and anxiety.”

There is a danger in overpraising a tool like Twitter at the expense of 
the words it amplifies — in essence, extolling the chisel rather than 
Michelangelo. But last week’s events show that a variety of Internet 
projects, including Twitter, are making it harder for the traditional 
gatekeepers to control of the flow of information.

Certainly, The Guardian was in full celebratory mode last week. 
“Twitter’s detractors are used to sneering that nothing of value can be 
said in 140 characters,” Mr. Rusbridger wrote about his initial tweet. 
“My 104 characters did just fine.”

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

***********************************
* POST TO [email protected] *
***********************************

Medianews mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to