Journalists don’t check ID

Anonymous blogger “Emma”, who was recently approached (via email) by Radio-Canada and asked to identify herself for a story, waxes philosophical about the idea of anonymous blogging, especially in the wake of the “Elodie Gagnon-Martin” scandal where an ADQ blogger turned out to be … maybe … an ADQ staffer of another name.

As a journalist who writes about blogs (and for that matter other online stories), I see both sides. But what is perhaps being forgotten in all this is the simple matter that journalists don’t check ID. Unless they have some reason to believe that you’re lying to them, they’ll take your word for it that you are who you say you are. Unless you say your name is Hugh Jass (and even then…) or the name of someone they already know, whatever name you give them is the name they’ll use.

So with that in mind, what’s the point, really? There will always be situations where journalists get tricked and have to apologize, and unless they ask for a driver’s license before every interview there’s no way to ensure that won’t happen again.

Anonymous blogs should be simply identified as such in the news: Take ideas at face value, but trust at your own risk.

1 thoughts on “Journalists don’t check ID

  1. DAVE ID

    Ha ha ha come on. One look at Elodie’s blog and you know where his/her loyalties lie. Anyone blind to that fact is an idiot. Whether he/she works for the ADQ is irrelevant. Schnobb is kind of not really jacked into the net I think. I watch RDI often and his stuff is often days late and his comments on the internet are the regurgitated and scripted crap we always hear from “the tech guy” on the news.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *