Tag: gawker
Gawker Privacy Lawsuit Evolves Into Battle Of Tech Billionaires

Gawker Privacy Lawsuit Evolves Into Battle Of Tech Billionaires

Billionaire media owner Pierre Omidyar is backing news and entertainment web site Gawker Media in its lawsuit against wrestler Hulk Hogan, adding a new twist to a case pitting technology money against press freedom.

Omidyar, owner of The Intercept publisher First Look Media, is asking other media outlets to file legal briefs in support of Gawker, First Look said in a statement on Friday. First Look said its goal was to protect constitutional rights.

“The possibility that Gawker may have to post a bond for $50 million or more just to be able to pursue its right to appeal the jury’s verdict raises serious concerns about press freedom,” said Lynn Oberlander, general counsel at First Look, in a statement.

Gawker is battling an invasion-of-privacy lawsuit brought by Hogan, who won a $140 million judgment against it – enough to cripple the company, which this week said it was exploring financial options. In 2012, Gawker had published a sex tape of Hogan, whose real name is Terry Bollea.

The saga has become a lightning rod for debate about the role of money in the legal system and civic affairs.

Omidyar, who made a fortune co-founding online auction site eBay , would support Gawker in its legal fight financially as well as via the court briefs, a person familiar with the situation said. But Omidyar has no interest in buying a stake in Gawker itself, the person said. Gawker said in a statement it welcomed the support from First Look, but did not provide details.

Media outlets including Dow Jones, the New York Times Co and Turner Broadcasting did not immediately respond to requests for comment on whether First Look had approached them. A previous motion to intervene in the case was supported by several news outlets, First Look said, including Turner’s Cable News Network and the Associated Press.

Earlier this week, Peter Thiel, an early backer of Facebook and a co-founder of PayPal , acknowledged that he had played a lead role in financing Bollea’s litigation.

Gawker posted a 2007 article about Thiel entitled, “Peter Thiel is totally gay, people.”

Omidyar, a long-time liberal, said on Twitter his actions were not personal. Thiel is backing presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump for U.S. president.

“Also, I’ve never met Peter, respect his work as VC, and obv disagree on Trump and press, there is no ‘bad blood.'” he wrote in response to a Twitter comment.

A spokesman for Thiel declined to comment on Omidyar’s backing of Gawker.

Many in Silicon Valley rushed to Thiel’s defense once news broke of his support of Hogan.

“Click bait journalists need to be taught lessons. Far less ethics and more click chasing in press today. I’m for #theil,” tweeted another prominent venture capitalist, Vinod Khosla, on Thursday.

Khosla is fighting his own legal battle over whether the public may access the beach on property he owns in San Mateo County, California.

Thiel has donated to the Committee to Protect Journalists, which advocates for journalists who encounter beatings, threats, and other intimidation.

The New York Post first reported the news of Omidyar’s latest push to support Gawker.

Reporting by Sarah McBride and Joseph Menn; Editing by Bernard Orr

Photo: Peter Thiel, the Silicon Valley investor who co-founded PayPal, talks to students during his  visit to the 42 school campus in Paris, France, February 24, 2016.   REUTERS/Jacky Naegelen/File Photo

In Hulk And Trump Scandals, The Girls Do Have Names

In Hulk And Trump Scandals, The Girls Do Have Names

If you’ve been following Hulk Hogan’s successful suit against Gawker or Donald Trump’s rumble with a gossip writer, you may have come across some missing people. Both stories lean on “love” triangles in which one of the sides, the woman, is of so little consequence she’s rarely even named.

The men may act with warped motives, but they star in their sordid dramas. By contrast, the women are virtually inanimate objects. They are unthinking hockey pucks being passed among boys to score points against other boys. Doesn’t the alleged source of discord rate at least an honorable mention — or dishonorable one? We’ll take either.

In the Hogan case, Gawker posted a secretly recorded video of the wrestler having sex with the wife of a friend. It was a setup by the friend, a radio personality named Bubba the Love Sponge. A jury awarded Hogan $115 million in damages for the violation of his privacy.

In the course of the reportage, we learn Hulk’s real name, Terry Bollea. We are told that Bubba’s name at birth was Todd Alan Clem. As for Mrs. Love Sponge, much of the commentary leaves her name out altogether. It is Heather Clem, for the record.

It happens that Heather was a real player here, in cahoots with her (now estranged) husband to cash in on Hogan’s public humiliation. She wasn’t tricked into playing the co-starring role in the racy video. So give her credit — for something.

In Trump world, women get passed around like canapes at a cocktail party. When the woman has an incensed male partner, the coverage of the conflict portrays the men as giant elk locking horns in Rocky Mountain National Park. As for the woman they’re allegedly fighting over, she could have moved to Antarctica for all anyone seems to care.

The case of Trump vs. gossip writer A.J. Benza is a notable example. While Benza was on a radio show, Trump called in to announce: “I’ve been successful with your girlfriend. … While you were getting onto the plane to go to California thinking she was your girlfriend, she was someplace that you wouldn’t have been very happy with.”

Benza retaliated with “I can’t wait till your little daughter gets a little older for me.” It was on that level.

Who was the girlfriend? I Googled so that you don’t have to. She’s a model named Kara Young.

Trump did not abduct Young. She joined him of her own volition. And lest you, gentle readers, think we’re being judgmental, let us opine that it would take a sturdy woman to pair with the likes of Benza.

So she, too, should rank as an active player here deserving pity, condemnation or congratulations — but definitely recognition.

In the Italian operatic tradition, Young would have been strangled by now. But then again, the woman doesn’t matter here. Benza had eyes only for Trump’s throat. He went so far as to enlist his cheating partner in his counterattacks, saying Young told him that Trump wears hair plugs. Aha, so The Donald isn’t the hairy beast he pretends to be.

Trump’s bragging of sexual conquests reeks of insecurity and desperation. His attacks on women’s appearance are more pathetic than insulting. I swear, I almost feel sorry for him.

But I don’t feel very sorry for the men he mortifies. They chose Trump girls.

There are good women out there. There are party girls who don’t care. And there are bad women as most of us would define “bad.” Point is, when they are part of the story, they should all be put in it.

Follow Froma Harrop on Twitter @FromaHarrop. She can be reached at fharrop@gmail.com. To find out more about Froma Harrop and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2016 CREATORS.COM

Photo: Terry Bollea, known as professional wrestler Hulk Hogan, testifies in his case against the news website Gawker in St. Petersburg, Florida March 7, 2016. REUTERS/Boyzell Hosey/Pool

Straining To Attack Clinton, ‘New York Times’ And Trey Gowdy Deliver Libya Squib

Straining To Attack Clinton, ‘New York Times’ And Trey Gowdy Deliver Libya Squib

Once more, TheNew York Times serves as a bulletin board for partisan attacks on Hillary Rodham Clinton – today by publishing a muddled, pointless “investigation” of journalist Sidney Blumenthal, a longtime Clinton advisor and friend who served in the White House during President Clinton’s second term. It can serve only to justify the ongoing but fruitless existence of the House Select Committee on Benghazi, whose leaking staff served as the story’s primary source.

Reporters Nicholas Confessore and Michael S. Schmidt strain very hard to suggest impropriety in a series of memos about Libya that Blumenthal shared with Hillary Clinton while she was Secretary of State. Rather than producing anything solid, however, what they deliver is flatulent. Their story’s forced, conspiratorial tone and gassy substance are inexplicable, unless they hope readers will assume that Blumenthal was trying to advance a private interest — without a shred of evidence to prove it.

Was it wrong, as the Times story insinuates, for Blumenthal to share information he had received on Libya from his friends or “business associates” with Secretary Clinton? If so, every Cabinet member in every administration, dating back to the beginning of the Republic, surely belongs in the dock.

Yet in order to hint at wrongdoing, the convoluted Times story fails to explain a very basic fact to readers: Nothing in the memos that Blumenthal provided to Clinton discussed any Libyan business or humanitarian project– and by the way, Blumenthal (who I should disclose is a longtime personal friend and colleague of mine) never made a dime related to Libya in any way. He received no payment from his friends, Tyler Drumheller and Cody Shearer, or from any of the other figures mentioned in the Times story, who hoped to provide hospital beds and other needed services in the wake of Muammar Qaddafi’s ouster.

Nor did Blumenthal’s duties as a consultant to the Clinton Foundation, which chiefly involved conferences, speeches, and books relevant to the former president’s legacy, have any bearing on Libya matters.

The Times also obscures the fact that nothing Clinton did with Blumenthal’s memos can be construed negatively either, although again the Times reporters strain for such inferences. Just as Blumenthal anticipated, she routed them through official channels at State, where they were undoubtedly recorded on government servers. There is nothing more sinister to this episode.

But the overarching context is still Benghazi, a topic so far examined by 10 separate official inquiries, including several on Capitol Hill, since the tragic attack on the U.S. consulate there in September 2012. None of those inquiries has found any wrongdoing by Clinton, but congressional Republicans continue to misuse millions of taxpayer dollars to sustain “Benghazi!” as a partisan rallying point.

In this instance Republican staffers on the House Select Committee on Benghazi, chaired by Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC), plainly leaked several Clinton emails to the Times. Aside from a shared animus against Clinton, the Republicans presumably turned to the paper of record in frustration that their probe is headed nowhere – and perhaps because the State Department announced this week that it will not release the former Secretary’s 30,000 official emails until next January 15.

The misbehavior of Gowdy and his staff is particularly odious because Blumenthal’s emails on Libya are almost entirely irrelevant to the Select Committee’s supposed concerns. Moreover, as noted today by Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-MD), the ranking minority member of the committee, Gowdy’s decision to subpoena Blumenthal is extraordinary and violates several precepts of normal congressional order.

To peruse this puzzling article is to wonder whether Confessore and Schmidt (as well as several other Times staffers who participated in its reporting) have nothing better to do. Gawker first posted the Blumenthal emails in 2013, after gaining access to them via Guccifer, the jailed Romanian hacker now under indictment by the Justice Department. As the FBI seems to recognize, Blumenthal was the victim, not the perp.

Last March Jeff Gerth, the former Times reporter famous for scooping Whitewater and Wen Ho Lee, reprised the Gawker story at Pro Publica, reviving his stale vendetta against the Clintons and their friends. (The enlightening tale of Gerth’s role in Whitewater – including his dubious effort to spin Justice Department officials on behalf of the pseudo-scandal’s right-wing promoters  – can be found in our new e-book TheHunting of Hillary, available free from The National Memo.)

Exactly what is the news value in today’s Times story? The reporting is unimpressive, to put it politely: Seeking to denigrate the information provided to Clinton in the Blumenthal memos, Confessore and Schmidt describe them as “aping the style of official government intelligence reports but without assessments of the motives of sources,” and conclude with a damning quote from a former CIA official: “The sourcing is pretty sloppy, in a way that would never pass muster if it were the work of a reports officer at a U.S. intelligence agency.”

Actually, while those reports were emailed to Clinton by Blumenthal, their author was Tyler Drumheller, a former chief of CIA covert operations in Europe – a salient fact the Times reporters should have learned from the Gawker posts that inspired them. Did they conceal it to hype their story?

Certainly, Nick Confessore has come far since his stint at The Washington Monthly, a publication unafraid to castigate weak journalism wherever it appeared (including the Times). Describing jaded attitudes in Washington, Confessore complained in the Monthly’s December 2002 issue that capital elites often behaved as if criticizing the right too sharply was “gauche.”

The only worse offense inside the Beltway, he wrote, “is to defend a politician too persistently; then you become not a bore, but a disgrace to the profession and its independence — even if you’re correct [emphasis added]. Thus…The New York Observer’s Joe Conason, who vigorously defended the Clintons during the now-defunct Whitewater affair, is derided as shrill and embarrassing.”

So Confessore has long known that Whitewater, a witch-hunt provoked by Times “investigative reporting,” was arrant bullshit — and that anybody who said so too often and too loudly would be punished by the Clinton-hating establishment in D.C., including the Times’ Washington bureau. His current efforts show how well he learned to avoid that fate.

Photo: House GOP via Flickr

Tarantino Sues Gossip Website Over Leaked Screenplay

Tarantino Sues Gossip Website Over Leaked Screenplay

Los Angeles (AFP) – “Pulp Fiction” director Quentin Tarantino has sued gossip website Gawker, seeking at least $2 million over the publication of a leaked screenplay for what was to be his latest movie.

Tarantino, who announced last week that he had scrapped plans to film “The Hateful Eight” as his next project, accused Gawker of “predatory journalism” over the 146-page screenplay, posted anonymously online at a location which Gawker pointed its readers to.

“This action is necessitated by Gawker Media’s and the other defendants’ blatant copyright infringement by their promotion and dissemination of unauthorized downloadable copies of the leaked unreleased complete screenplay,” said the lawsuit.

“Gawker Media has made a business of predatory journalism, violating people’s rights to make a buck. This time they went too far,” added the legal document filed in the federal court in California, emailed to AFP by Tarantino lawyer Evan Spiegel.

The lawsuit cited Gawker Media and ANONFILES.COM, the anonymous website where the screenplay was posted.

But Gawker responded by saying that it did not leak the screenplay, but simply pointed out where it was posted online — and accused Tarantino of deliberately turning the leak into a story.

The “Reservoir Dogs” and “Django Unchained” filmmaker went on the warpath last week, telling Deadline.com that he believes the screenplay was leaked by someone linked to only six people with whom he shared the screenplay.

“I’m very, very depressed … I finished a script, a first draft, and I didn’t mean to shoot it until next winter, a year from now. I gave it to six people, and apparently it’s gotten out today,” he said last Tuesday.

His lawsuit said: “There was nothing newsworthy or journalistic about Gawker Media facilitating and encouraging the public’s violation of Plaintiff’s copyright in the Screenplay, and it’s conduct will not shield Gawker Media from liability for their unlawful activity.”

It sought at least $1 million for violation of copyright by the person who published it online, and the same amount for contributory violation of copyright — the claim specifically targeting Gawker.

Gawker wrote an online response Monday, saying it did not leak the screenplay.

“Someone unknown to Gawker put it on a web site called AnonFiles, and someone unknown to Gawker put it on a different web site called Scribd. Last Thursday, Gawker received a tip from a reader informing us that the script was on the AnonFiles site, after which Gawker published a story reporting that the script had surfaced online,” it said.

“Quentin Tarantino deliberately turned the leak into a story,” it added, while saying that it published a link to the screenplay “because it was news.”

It added that to its knowledge “no claim of contributory infringement has prevailed in the U.S. over a news story.

“We’ll be fighting this one,” it said.

Tarantino said last week that he wants to know who exactly leaked the screenplay, telling Deadline he wants someone to “name names.”

“I don’t know how these … agents work, but I’m not making this next. I’m going to publish it, and that’s it for now.

“I give it out to six people, and if I can’t trust them to that degree, then I have no desire to make it. I’ll publish it. I’m done. I’ll move on to the next thing.

“I’ve got 10 more where that came from,” he said.

Photo: Imeh Akpanudosen via AFP