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BBC Buys Google News Keywords In Kelly Case 432

foreign devil writes "BBC has purchased keywords related to coverage of the Hutton Inquiry in an attempt to direct all traffic to their special news coverage. This would be only moderately interesting, except the BBC is complicit in the death of Dr. Kelly and the 'sexing up' of the Iraq dossier. The article in the Guardian says this is coming out of the GBP 63.5m ad budget. I wonder how much it would cost them if someone, say, automated searching for those links on Google." It doesn't seem fair to pronounce the BBC complicit in Kelly's death (unless that's proven by the facts of the case), but it's certainly an interested party.
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BBC Buys Google News Keywords In Kelly Case

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  • Bastard (Score:4, Interesting)

    by mphase ( 644838 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:12PM (#8109106) Homepage
    This guy is just being a bastard with this line, "I wonder how much it would cost them if someone, say, automated searching for those links on Google."
    • Re:Bastard (Score:4, Interesting)

      by DrunkenTerror ( 561616 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:31PM (#8109295) Homepage Journal
      I agree. That's pretty low. A lot of us may have thought of such a thing on our own, but to suggest it is irresponible. Now the script kiddies have something to do tonight. Just because you can do something doesn't mean you should.

      PSA:
      Just remeber to keep your grades up, kids. Nothing draws attention to your "hobbies" like a sudden shift in GPA. We all know straight-A students don't break the law. ;)
    • No kidding (Score:5, Insightful)

      by autopr0n ( 534291 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @12:38AM (#8109745) Homepage Journal
      It's especially sad when someone reads one piece of propaganda and goes psycho without considering the motives behind it. The Guardian hates the BBC, and they along with Rupert Murdoch have been trying to get the British government to shut down the BBCs great website, so that more people go to their services.

      What exactly is wrong with advertising your side of the story. Most advertisers are interested parties, and the article made it sound like they were preventing other voices from being heard, which is ridiculous.

      Finaly

      "I wonder how much it would cost them if someone, say, automated searching for those links on Google."

      Absolutely nothing.
      • by Aardpig ( 622459 )

        The Guardian hates the BBC, and they along with Rupert Murdoch have been trying to get the British government to shut down the BBCs great website, so that more people go to their services.

        Fuck me, I never thought I'd see The Guardian and Rupert Murdoch mentioned in the same breath. 'Scuse me while I look outside and check whether the guy driving the snow-plough (East-coast ice storm at the 'mo) is wearing a red leotard and pointy horns.

      • Re:No kidding (Score:5, Insightful)

        by erobertstad ( 442529 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @01:06AM (#8109895) Homepage
        Yeah I hate it when people read something and take it right as fact... like slashdot news. I dropped the search into google, and honestly only found a few bbc links in the seraching I did. And so what if they paid to have an 'ad link' on google.. isn't that is what google makes their money off? The point of a search is to find something that relates to what your searching for. It's related, and they paid to have a 'click though' to their site.. supporting google that we use for free all day and night, and we are upset by this?

        And besides, who cares what version of this story people read? If they arn't smart enough to actualy read both sides of a story anyway, and then try to comment on it, having an ad or not isn't going to stop people like this from being one-sided in the first place.

        Sorry, it just had to be said.

      • Re:No kidding (Score:5, Informative)

        by Rayonic ( 462789 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @01:25AM (#8109996) Homepage Journal
        > What exactly is wrong with advertising your side of the story.

        Perhaps the fact that they're using taxpayer money to do it? And the fact that their public charter requires that they be fair and unbiased on everything they report on?

        So yes, technically speaking, the BBC should not have a "side" of the story -- even if they are involved. Their journalists should report this Hutton Inquiry news in a factual and even-handed manner. No slant.

        The BBC is in a unique position, and is bound by rules that other news organizations are not. Whether they've been abiding said rules is a another story altogether.
        • Perhaps the fact that they're using taxpayer money to do it? And the fact that their public charter requires that they be fair and unbiased on everything they report on?

          Well, the BBC does make money outside of taxes, but whatever, if british voters really wanted it gone, it would be. Obviously the BBC fucked up by "sexing up" the government sexup chargers, but not by advertizing on google...
        • Re:No kidding (Score:4, Interesting)

          by erobertstad ( 442529 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @03:17AM (#8110485) Homepage
          Ok besides the fact that in the end, your tax money just went to google.. a good thing..

          There is *NO* news source out there that you could say does not have a 'side' to a story. No matter how you say how something happen, there is someone else saying 'but my story is better', and so on. Thus why we have that whole free speech thing.. To say that the BBC can't have an ad up just becuase you don't 'agree' with it, is what fighting 'big media' was suposed to be about.

          The point comes down to, it's an ad on google. MANY MANY different links are right there, for the user, to click on. And google of all places is about the best thing for them to put it on. Google, puts right up, and infornt.. "hay I'm an ad, paid for, by some company". You might even have a glimps of a change of this agument if it was a banner ad, tricking the user, or a normal link.

          They did a good thing with your tax money (google rocks), and they are getting 'their side' out to the public, being wrong or right. If this was a topic yourself felt was 'under known in the news', you'd be happy for the extra bit of coverage.
        • Re:No kidding (Score:3, Informative)

          by nickco3 ( 220146 )

          So yes, technically speaking, the BBC should not have a "side" of the story -- even if they are involved. Their journalists should report this Hutton Inquiry news in a factual and even-handed manner. No slant.

          Which is exactly what has happened. The BBC has been widely praised [guardian.co.uk] in other sections of the media for accurately reporting both sides of the story, particularly the Panorama programme on Jan 21 which heavily criticised the BBC's bosses for not checking the facts before opening their mouths.

      • Re:No kidding (Score:3, Insightful)

        by SQL Error ( 16383 )
        "What exactly is wrong with advertising your side of the story."

        When you're a taxpayer-funded media empire and the subject of a serious investigation, there's a HELL OF A LOT wrong with it.
    • Re:Bastard (Score:2, Interesting)

      by pla ( 258480 )
      This guy is just being a bastard with this line, "I wonder how much it would cost them if someone, say, automated searching for those links on Google."

      Perhaps you could explain to me what you think he meant by that?

      Search engines work best by providing an impartial means of finding sites related to the query. News outlets work best by providing an impartial view of current events. When paid promotion hits the scene, they both become completely useless, at best - Suddenly, they have a bottom line, rat
    • My guess is google filters out hits from bots when they calculate what the ad sponsors owe them. Of course the bot could change its User-Agent to MSIE or whatever, but it should still be possible to run a simple script to detect a large number of searches from a single IP for the same query and ban such IPs. With all the google bombing, google whacking, link spamming, blog spamming etc. going on, its hard to imagine that they wouldn't have run into this already.

      A related tidbit: apparently [webmasterworld.com] the top bid a

  • Bah (Score:5, Funny)

    by The-Bus ( 138060 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:14PM (#8109132)
    The BBC is a giant entity, they can't magically coordinate all this... I'm sure somewhere in their halls there isn't a dogmatic poster proclaiming:

    1. Sex-up Iraq dossier
    2. ???
    3. Profit!

    With #2 circled and 'GOOGLE ADWORDS' scribbled next to it.
    • Re:Bah (Score:5, Informative)

      by CelticLo ( 575344 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:22PM (#8109202)
      The BBC didn't sex up the dossier. They accused the UK Goverment of doing so. The Hutton Report officially is released today, (28th Jan 2004), at 12:30[GMT]. One newspaper, (News International's The Sun), is claiming they have a leaked copy of said report, and according to them the BBCs reporter "Gilligan is effectively accused of LYING in a bombshell broadcast blaming Number Ten for "sexing up" a dossier on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction." source http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2004041477,00.h tml [thesun.co.uk]
    • ...especially because AdWords hardly affect the general searches and Overture only places the top few spots. Sounds like someone just wasted a crapload of money for no reason.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:15PM (#8109136)
    The fair and balanced dept seems to be shrinking these days.
  • So the Englishmen went the pond to buy themselves some keywords to use over tea and received the merchandise in a Kelly case - it takes a lot of money to buy keywords in such magnificent cases, I tell you. News indeed. I wonder if my rights online are part of their deal.

    • Re:Makes one wonder (Score:4, Informative)

      by Anonymous Crowhead ( 577505 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @12:01AM (#8109497)
      it takes a lot of money to buy keywords in such magnificent cases

      Anyone who is interested in what they might cost can see for themselves at Adwords [google.com] for free. Just click on the 'Click to begin' button. You can set up an ad, plug in keywords, max cost per click per keyword and see what your daily cost would be. They don't ask for a credit card until the very end so you get a feel without the slightest commitment (not even a name or email address is required until the end.) It's really pretty interesting.
  • AdWords (Score:3, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:15PM (#8109139)
    All your Dr. Kelly are belong to us. - BBC
  • Sexy BBC? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:17PM (#8109154)
    The BBC is complicit in the death of Dr. Kelly and the 'sexing up' of the Iraq dossier.

    One could argue that the Beeb pushed Dr. Kelly to suicide, but calling them "complicit in ... the 'sexing up' of the Iraq dossier" is somewhat bizarre. Are we missing a relative clause here or what?

    • Re:Sexy BBC? (Score:2, Informative)

      by fopa ( 585802 )
      > The BBC is complicit

      Actually, I don't think the BBC is being accused of any crime at all. Sure, they had some questionable reporting, but this case is about the governmet.

      The question is wether or not the government, specificallly Blair, released Dr. Kelly's name to the press, which caused all the hype about him and may have lead to his suicide.

      The BBC has a vested interest in this both because they want it to be someone else's fault and because they are staunchly anti-government and anti-Blair. T
    • Re:Sexy BBC? (Score:2, Insightful)

      by eyeye ( 653962 )
      Its about as accurate as claiming buying some adwords is equivalent to "an attempt to direct all traffic to their special news coverage". Does the article submitter even understand adwords? I could understand if google was one of those search engines that allows paid listings mixed in with real results.

      The article poster is a dimwit and/or troll IMO.
    • It doesn't seem fair to pronounce the BBC complicit in Kelly's death (unless that's proven by the facts of the case), but it's certainly an interested party.

      That's what Timothy added to the story summary before he posted it. Now, I have to ask: why the fuck didn't Timothy edit or rewrite the submission if he believed it was inaccurate or misleading? (Which, by the way, it was: other posters have pointed this out.)

      The editors do a good job of over-extending themselves in so many ways so why can't they ac
  • Not anymore. (Score:5, Informative)

    by Jason Pollock ( 45537 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:18PM (#8109167) Homepage

    Seems their adword budget ran out. The adword links don't appear on "hutton report" or "hutton enquiry" anymore. At least not on google.co.nz, google.com or google.co.uk.

    The top non-ad links are the BBC, but that is more than likely due to the fact that the BBC is generally considered a _very_ good source of news, with a great reputation.

    As for the whole sexing up discussion, I'll wait until after I've seen the report. :)

    • Re:Not anymore. (Score:3, Interesting)

      by DeepRedux ( 601768 )
      On the other hand, many view the BBC as a biased source of news: [ananova.com]

      'Angry' Ark Royal crew switch off BBC
      The BBC has been axed from the nation's flagship naval vessel following claims of pro-Iraqi bias. The Navy says it has switched off News 24 aboard HMS Ark Royal after complaints by the crew.
      ...
      One senior rating said: "The BBC always takes the Iraqis' side. It reports what they say as gospel but when it comes to us it questions and doubts everything the British and Americans are reporting. A lot of peo

      • Re:Not anymore. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by JoeBuck ( 7947 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @01:38AM (#8110058) Homepage

        Yes, the war hawks called the BBC biased because it did not slavishly repeat the Pentagon line at the height of the war, as Fox/Sky, CNN, and MSGOP did. They aired both pro- and antiwar views, and for those who cannot tolerate the latter, that made them biased.

    • But that brings up an interesting question... why buy the AdWords keywords when you're already the natural #1 hit result?
    • Maybe your opinion of the BBC is a little different from mine, but I consider the BBC only possibly a small notch above CNN, which is to say, completely full of horse pucky. Not only that, but I have the CNN sidebar turned on for my slashdot view, and they're constantly reporting on things which were news on /. over a week ago, and which weren't really fresh here then, so they're stupidly behind.

      As for quality, I only regularly read their sci-tech news, but I have yet to see a sci-tech article that got al

    • What bull! The article claims:

      ...anyone searching for "Hutton inquiry" or "Hutton report" on the UK's most popular search engine Google is

      automatically directed to a paid-for link to BBC Online's own news coverage of the inquiry.

      Google has never automatically redirected you to paid links. They also clearly mark the sponsered links as such, even moving them to the right side of the page, seperate from the relevant results. The article is trying very hard to push people's buttons.

  • by Cosmik ( 730707 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:20PM (#8109185) Homepage
    I'll go to a new source other than the BBC, since they are obviously trying to skew the news surrounding the case by buying up these Google results.

    From the Sydney Morning Herald [smh.com.au]:

    According to the newspaper (the Sun), Lord Hutton criticised the BBC and its reporter Andrew Gilligan over a broadcast suggesting Downing Street inserted a claim that Saddam could launch WMD within 45 minutes.

    "I am satisfied Dr Kelly did not say the Government probably knew or suspected the 45-minute claim was wrong before the claim was inserted in the dossier," Lord Hutton is reported as finding.

    "The allegation reported by Mr Gilligan that the Government probably knew the claim was wrong or questionable was unfounded."

    As a result, the program's listeners were given a misleading impression that the Government "embellished" its dossier.

    The British newspaper, The Sun, has gotten its hands on a leaked copy of the report, from which this above information is drawn. Dr. Kelly killed himself after it was claimed he was the one to give the 45 minute quote. Therefore, the BBC is complicit.
    • Calling The Sun a "newspaper" is being more than a little generous.

      I wouldn't believe anything in that rag unless I could confirm it in about five other, indipendent, sources.
    • by Vainglorious Coward ( 267452 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @01:37AM (#8110054) Journal
      Quoting the Sun second-hand by way of the Sydney Morning Herald doesn't really count as a news source. The Sun, as a flagship of Rupert Murdoch's News International has its own axe to grind with the BBC. You can't trust the Sun's "reporting" on anything, least of all about subjects where Murdoch has a vested interest. Your link is about as convincing as if the Sydney Morning Herald had quoted Slashdot.
  • by rasafras ( 637995 ) <tamas.pha@jhu@edu> on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:20PM (#8109190) Homepage
    BBC should track the referrers. If the person comes from Google, instead of displaying a news page, they should display a giant banner proclaiming

    "You are the victim of a shameless advertising experiment.
    Footnote: We are not liable for any self-inflicted damage after reading this page"
  • Correction... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jmv ( 93421 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:21PM (#8109199) Homepage
    ...except the BBC is complicit in the death of Dr. Kelly and the 'sexing up' of the Iraq dossier...

    Actually, the BBC was citing Dr. Kelly to criticize the 'sexing up' done by the british government. Then the government revealed the name of Dr. Kelly as the source, leading to pressures on him. So I don't think the BBC is really complicit in his death and it's definitely haven't 'sexed up' the Iraq dossier.

    Of course, I still find what they're doing with google questionable at best.
    • Re:Correction... (Score:4, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:38PM (#8109335)
      Actually, Dr. Kelly made some comments criticizing the government. The BBC then "sexed up" Dr. Kelly's comments and his reported position in the government in order to increase ratings and further the reporter's agenda and career. (They essentially took comments from a CIA Analyst level expert, spun them, and reported them as anonymous comments from a Cabinet level member.)

      When the BBC heads found out about this they closed ranks and defended the reporter's falsification of information. Compare this with the NY Times reaction when it was discovered that a black reporter was falsifying stories.

      Whether "complicit" is the right word relative to the death is open to debate and the report will hopefully tell more about how much pressure ther BBC put on Dr. kelly to spin things in a way that would preserve the BBC's reputation. Regardless, the BBC was complacint in falsifying and exagerating information, and reporting based upon a personal or insitutional bias and not being neutral (as required by British law).

      The fundamental problem, is that ever since Watergate journalists don't feel that they have "made it" in their profession unless they can bring down a government. So, this type of slanted reporting and lying to the public, under the arua of nuetrality is rewared. When the politicians lie and spin, I expect that of them. They are acting like wolves in wolves' skin. The reporters, especially in this case, acted like wolves in sheeps' skin.
  • by derek_farn ( 689539 ) <derek@nOSpaM.knosof.co.uk> on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:23PM (#8109219) Homepage
    I have tried the obvious search strings "kelly suicide", "Hutton report", "Iraq war", suicide, murder, bbc, labour government, in various combinations without seeing any adverts. Perhaps the ads are only being targeted at non-UK residents, or perhaps they only start appearing after the report is published in a few hours time? Has anybody actually seen Kelly/BBC related ads on Google yet?
  • by -kertrats- ( 718219 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:25PM (#8109244) Journal
    I hardly ever read the colored boxes on the right. They're more ads than anything. Getting results like 'Read the gravitational fields Ebook on Amazon.com' doesnt entice me to look to the right side of my screen. I'll read the normal results over the right-hand side results any day of the week, thank you.
  • by harlows_monkeys ( 106428 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:27PM (#8109261) Homepage
    Buying Google keywords doesn't redirect searches. It just determines what sponsered links show up.
    • Buying Google keywords doesn't redirect searches. It just determines what sponsered links show up.

      And most people that are looking for unbiased information (and know what they are doing) ignore the sponsored links for the most part because they are obviously "payed-for" (sic).
  • Abuse of Google? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by unboring ( 697886 )
    Doesn't this qualify as an abuse of the Google search service?
    I (and I'm sure millions of others) browse through Google results to get the articles and opinions from over the world. Allowing this would mean no fair-an-balanced news via Google anymore.
    Google would be wise to come up with way to prevent such abuse IMHO.
    • by Clinoti ( 696723 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:50PM (#8109416)
      I don't think its abuse of the searching system. This is along the same grounds as a link to vendmachines.com on the right of the screen that you get when you submit a search for vending machines.

      Other information is there to be viewed but you dont have to click on the sponsored link, the option of where you want to follow up is up to you.

      The danger is that the BBC is so large of a company and some feel that this move is not a sponsporship of events by their history division (for example) but rather to cull popular opinion to their spin of the story.

  • I wonder how much it would cost them if someone, say, automated searching for those links on Google

    Google would pull the ad as soon as it appoaches the daily limit. You might be able to mute the ads by seeing to it that you're the only one who sees them, but you wouldn't be able to drive them over their budget.
  • So what? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Ossifer ( 703813 )
    Why would anyone assume that the "sponsored links" are somehow independently managed by an editor? So what if the BBC comes out on top--it just means that they paid the most.

    In my mind a news organization has the right to actively defend itself when it itself is being accused of a crime--just as any other entity would...
  • Panorama (Score:5, Informative)

    by Aardpig ( 622459 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:55PM (#8109448)

    Before we all don our tin-foil hats, its worth pointing out that the episode of Panorama (a highly-respected current affairs programme) which aired last Wednesday was highly critical of the BBC involvement in the Kelly business. Which channel did it air on? That would be BBC One. Don't beleive me? Check out this story [bbc.co.uk] on the BBC website.

    In light of this, it's pretty peverse to suggest that the BBC has gone to any lengths to hide or downplay their involvement in the whole affair. I myself think the Google ad buying is simply part of the BBCs shift towards positioning itself as more of a 'regular' media player (albeit with public funding), as opposed to the state-run service which it originated as.

    • If I had mod points to give....

      Even Newsnight, the BBC2 news program critised the BBC on a number of occasions.

  • by FlukeMeister ( 20692 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2004 @11:56PM (#8109454) Homepage
    Reading this article I'm surprised that The Guardian (very respected UK daily newspaper) have missed one of the more important aspects of the BBC (must highly respected news broadcaster in the world) buying Google search keywords related to the Hutton inquiry. This action will cause the BBC to appear as a link on any website mentioning the Hutton inquiry that uses Google advertising banners on its pages, not just on Google search results pages.

    In taking this action, the BBC will be inexorably linked with the Hutton inquiry as a source of information, rather than having an major role in the events that have led to it.

    I would also question the use of the phrases "buying up all internet search terms relating to the inquiry" and "anyone searching for "Hutton inquiry" or "Hutton report" on ... Google is automatically directed to a paid-for link to BBC Online's own news coverage of the inquiry."

    The first of these phrases implies the BBC is attempting to prevent others from using these keywords by buying Google's entire stock. This is obviously false, as anybody can buy Google's keywords and there is an unlimited supply.

    The second of these phrases states that uses will atuomatically be directed to the BBC Online site when searching for 'Hutton enquiry'. This is blatantly false. Instead, a link to the BBC Online coverage will be displayed amongst a separate list of clearly demarcated sponsored links.

    Buying advertising to negate the effect of negative crticism is a well-established business practice for which The Guardian (and indeed all other media which provide advertising facilities) have long served as a platform for.

    What's far worse than the implied misdirection by the BBC in The Guardian's article is the blantant misreporting of opinion as fact in the Slashdot headline. Stating that the BBC is 'complicit' in the death of Dr Kelly is factually incorrect, not to mention libellous in the extreme.
    • You shouldnt be surprised by this at all. Read this piece of trash [guardian.co.uk] that recently appeared in The Guardian. These people are internet and computer illiterates; nothing wrong with that, until of course you portray yourself as a source of correct information about this very important subject and the way it can influnce the flow of news.

      What is amazing is that there is not one person on The Guardian's staff that can get the facts right when they write about anything related to the internet or computers, even o
  • by Lawrence_Bird ( 67278 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @12:13AM (#8109590) Homepage
    The BBC misrepresented Kellys statements and views (largely by ommision) and created the furor that led to him losing his grip. If you are going to claim the Iraq dossier controversy pushed him over the edge, then you have to put a lot of the blame on the BBC for turning what was a difference of interpretation into worldwide controversy. REF [216.109.117.135]
    • by MosesJones ( 55544 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @02:42AM (#8110358) Homepage
      what was a difference of interpretation into worldwide controversy

      Err no, what was a complete and utter load of bollocks that was presented as a fact. The 45 minute claim was a single sourced piece of information about battlefield weapons that the UK goverment led people to believe refered to long-range weapons.

      It was pure and simple rubbish, if it had been in a company report then you'd be calling for them to be prosecuted for fraud.

      The initial fact is not in doubt. Iraq had _no_ WMD that could be ready in 45 mins, and had no long range capabilities.

      The BBC was not _wrong_ in its report.
  • They are going to have to report the facts anyway no matter how they turn out, all they are trying to do is make sure they get the top link.

    And I think they are betting that the Hutton report would be favorable to them (which it seems it isnt) and blames Tony Blair for Dr Kellys death (which it seems it isnt too).

  • by nlh ( 80031 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @12:23AM (#8109663) Homepage
    Did anyone else notice that when you google "Kelly", this story (as in, this /. story) comes up under 'News'?

    I guess I knew that googleheads read slashdot, but now google does too!
  • Right. (Score:5, Funny)

    by aardvarkjoe ( 156801 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @12:29AM (#8109702)
    It doesn't seem fair to pronounce the BBC complicit in Kelly's death (unless that's proven by the facts of the case)

    Yeah, I'd hate for slashdot to become known as a place where people make false claims and jump to unjustified conclusions.
  • Oddly, the first paid link that came up when I searched for Hutton at google.ca was version of this very story, about the beeb buying up adwords.

    Wacky wacky world.
  • SCO has bought the google keywords "litigous bastards" and linked them to the Free Software Foundation.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @01:49AM (#8110125)
    I work at the BBC and want everyone to know that it is highly unlikely that there's any tin-foil-worthy activity going on here.

    It's a massive, disparate, semi-controlled corporation where one arm can frequently operate without the others being aware. There is the occasional shitstorm which flies up because of this (when, accidentally, the BBC 6 and 9 o'clock News programs almost entirely neglected the ruling Conservative Party's campaign in one election they went nuts and refused further interviews, threatened funding changes etc.) but on the whole the system balances out, given time.

    Hutton is a big story in the UK. I don't work in News (thankfully) but I am willing to bet that what we have is an entirely regular attempt to drive traffic to the BBC for coverage of a major story. The BBC is an interested party, but news.bbc.co.uk couldn't give a damn about protecting Andrew Gilligan, broadcast news or any other part of the corporation.

    In another situation, maybe you would have Conrad Black or Rupert Murdoch flaying the different section chiefs about contradictory coverage, or maybe not. But in the beeb, it simply doesn't happen. Nobody knows about anyone else's activities, and if they want to find out they've got to investigate, like journalists should. It's not efficient, but in terms of a free press, it's effecive.

  • by ozric99 ( 162412 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @02:27AM (#8110299) Journal
    The Sun!

    Nothing I could possibly say could compete with Yes Prime Minister's rather brilliant and oft-quoted commentary.

    PM {Responding to Sir Humphry}: "Don't tell me about the press. I know exactly who reads the papers.
    The Daily Mirror is read by people who think they run the country.
    The Guardian is run by people who think they ought to run the country.
    The Times is read by people who actually do run the country.
    The Daily Mail is read by the wives of the people who run the country.
    The Financial Times is read by people who own the country.
    The Morning Star is read by people who think the country ought to be run by another country.
    The Daily Telegraph is read by people who think it is run by another country."

    Sir Humphry: "Prime Minister, what about the Sun?"
    Bernard: "The Sun readers don't care who runs the country as long as she's got big tits."

  • by sir_cello ( 634395 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @03:41AM (#8110606)

    It's a free market: advertising space is available to anyone, whether they have vested interests or are for/against an issue. Equally, anyone can buy television or newspaper space to do the same thing.

    I don't see that there are any "rights" problems here ? If you had an opposing view, you too could have purchase keywords for the hutton case.

    Irrespective of who purchased those keywords, Google is always going to serve up pageranked results for "objective" results, or return collective links to press coverage from google news.

    If you have a problem, purchase keywords at other search engines. You can argue that Google has a dominant position and therefore subject to anti-trust concerns, but as it returns pageranked results, it's hard to see how this argument is sustainable.

  • Idiot (Score:5, Informative)

    by hoofie ( 201045 ) <mickey@NospaM.mouse.com> on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @04:59AM (#8110913)
    The cretin who submitted this doesnt even live in the UK - he is an American who lives in San Francisco.

    Quote : "the BBC is complicit in the death of Dr. Kelly and the 'sexing up' of the Iraq dossier."

    Where does this idiot get his information from ? Yes, looking at this sentence, the BBC IS involved in the death of Dr. Kelly and the 'dossier' accusations, but only as a part of a whole, including the BBC senior management, the Government, MOD, some MP's and Dr. Kelly itself. And NO-ONE is directly accused of directly causing Dr. Kellys death - he committed suicide, end of story. The BBC's alleged involvement was to stand by an accusation against a government adviser of 'sexing up' an intelligence dossier, despite grave misgivings about the accuracy of the story.

    I know news coverage in the US is poor, but I would suggest the original submitter tries to get some decent news coverage - BBC TV news (if you can get it in the US) still beats the pants off anything else you are likely to get for objectivity and editorial quality. I was also under the impression that the Guardian is a bit of a cheerleader for the BBC in general - public service broadcasting is something I would think the vast majority of it's readership support.
  • by NoMercy ( 105420 ) on Wednesday January 28, 2004 @05:44AM (#8111063)
    "BBC is complicit in the death of Dr. Kelly and the 'sexing up' of the Iraq dossier." Complicit: to ssociated with or participating in a questionable act or a crime.

    The BBC have been biting at the heels of the goverment, ever since they caught a wiff of the fact the goverment did sex it up, theve been hounding them like a rabbid dog, if it wasn't for the BBC, I doubt we'd even have an inquiry, they were in no way complicit with it, they didn't even allow it to go by without being noticed.

    Yes perhaps this did lead to the death of poor Dr. Kelly, but that was because the goverment wanted a fall guy, not the BBC's doing and depending on the outcome of the report the goverment could be in some deep doo-doos.

We are each entitled to our own opinion, but no one is entitled to his own facts. -- Patrick Moynihan

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