Is Reporting on State Secrets Like Stealing Justin Bieber’s Diary?

bieber fullness.jpg

Reuters

Leak investigation, meet Bieber fever.

A national security official in the Obama Administration has emailed the good folks at Lawfare to defend the idea that Fox News correspondent James Rosen broke federal law while reporting.

Consider the analogy he or she uses:

The Department of Justice did not claim that the Fox News reporter in the Stephen Jin-Woo Kim case committed a crime merely by publishing classified information. According to the Government’s filing… the reporter in question actively asked people with access to classified information to break the law by providing him classified information he could publish. He used false names and “dead drop” email accounts to do so. In other words, he wasn’t someone to whom a whistleblower came to disclose information; he was actively asking people to violate the law, and enabling them to do so. Remember, there’s no doubt that–assuming Mr. Kim is the guilty party–he violated the law if he disclosed properly classified information to a reporter.

Let’s look at an analogy. If a reporter finds Justin Bieber’s private diary on the street and publishes it, that’s journalism (of a sort). But if she pays someone to break into Bieber’s house to steal the diary, hasn’t she has aided and abetted, or conspired in, a crime, even if her intent is to get material to publish? That’s exactly what the Government says happened here–a reporter soliciting, and aiding and abetting criminal activity.

I’d like to fix the analogy so that it better reflects the ethical issues at play.

First off, the reporter doesn’t pay someone to break into Bieber’s house. Instead, he pays someone who is already permitted access to the diary, but sworn to secrecy — an assistant who scans its pages into digital format for storage — to leak. That alone would still be wrong, of course.

But we aren’t through.

In the more accurate analogy, Bieber’s job involves wielding extraordinary power on behalf of all Americans; everything he writes in his diary is work-for-hire and bankrolled by the American people, who own it; he has sporadically abused his authority in the past; and recent abuses were only discovered when his assistant passed US Weekly a series of diary pages detailing the pop star’s illegal spying on Americans, his systematic torture of foreigners, and his security detail’s lethal attack on paparazzi! Also, Bieber’s job contract with Americans specifically notes that reporters are to help keep him accountable, and that no one can abridge their freedom to do so.

If all that were factored into the analogy, then it wouldn’t be misleading to compare the behavior of Rosen to a reporter who paid someone to steal away pages from Justin Bieber’s diary.

None of which is to say that Rosen’s judgment comes off particularly well in this case…

    

via Politics : The Atlantic http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2013/05/is-reporting-on-state-secrets-like-stealing-justin-biebers-diary/276109/

Unknown mathematician makes historical breakthrough in prime theory

Yitang Zhang is a largely unknown mathematician who has struggled to find an academic job after he got his PhD, working at a Subway sandwich shop before getting a gig as a lecturer at the University of New Hampshire. He’s just had a paper accepted for publication in Annals of Mathematics, which appears to make a breakthrough towards proving one of mathematics’ oldest, most difficult, and most significant conjectures, concerning “twin” prime numbers. According to the Simons Science News article, Zhang is shy, but is a very good, clear writer and lecturer.

For hundreds of years, mathematicians have speculated that there are infinitely many twin prime pairs. In 1849, French mathematician Alphonse de Polignac extended this conjecture to the idea that there should be infinitely many prime pairs for any possible finite gap, not just 2.

Since that time, the intrinsic appeal of these conjectures has given them the status of a mathematical holy grail, even though they have no known applications. But despite many efforts at proving them, mathematicians weren’t able to rule out the possibility that the gaps between primes grow and grow, eventually exceeding any particular bound.

Now Zhang has broken through this barrier. His paper shows that there is some number N smaller than 70 million such that there are infinitely many pairs of primes that differ by N. No matter how far you go into the deserts of the truly gargantuan prime numbers — no matter how sparse the primes become — you will keep finding prime pairs that differ by less than 70 million.

The result is “astounding,” said Daniel Goldston, a number theorist at San Jose State University. “It’s one of those problems you weren’t sure people would ever be able to solve.”

Unknown Mathematician Proves Elusive Property of Prime Numbers [Erica Klarreich/Wired/Simons Science News]

(Photo: University of New Hampshire)

    

via Boing Boing http://boingboing.net/2013/05/21/unknown-mathematician-makes-hi.html

Caroline Kennedy’s jury acquits accused crack dealer…

Caroline Kennedy’s jury acquits accused crack dealer…

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Vintage NASA

Maria Popova’s “semi-accidental” discovery of gorgeous black-and-white photos of vintage NASA facilities.

via Coudal Partners Blended Feed http://coudal.com/archives/2013/05/vintage_nasa.php?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+CoudalFreshSignals+%28Coudal%3A+Fresh+Signals%29

How Google Wins Over Users By Giving Them Less

User research may indicate that consumers want more choices. Google doesn’t listen–and has rated highest among any other brand out there.

Editor’s note: The following is an excerpt from Simple: Conquering the Crisis of Complexity by Alan Siegel and Irene Etzkorn.

“Focusing is about saying no. You’ve got to say no, no, no. The result of that focus is going to be some really great products where the total is much greater than the sum of the parts.” –Steve Jobs

Read Full Story

    

via Fast Company http://www.fastcodesign.com/1672594/how-google-wins-over-users-by-giving-them-less?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Gibbs: Why I stopped reading Dowd

The former White House press secretary says it’s largely the same column for the last eight years.

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via POLITICO – TOP Stories http://www.politico.com/story/2013/05/robert-gibbs-maureen-dowd-91608.html

Revisiting the ‘Crack Babies’ Epidemic That Was Not

This Retro Report video lays out how limited scientific studies in the 1980s led to predictions that a generation of children would be damaged for life. Those predictions turned out to be wrong.

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/20/booming/revisiting-the-crack-babies-epidemic-that-was-not.html

In Litvinenko Case, Secrecy Wins Out Over Inquiry

A judge’s ruling that evidence could be excluded at the inquest into the death of a former K.G.B. agent was arguably a triumph of official opacity in a struggle over what the public should be allowed to know.

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/21/world/europe/in-litvinenko-case-secrecy-wins-out-over-inquiry.html

Fact-Checking ‘Inferno’

Noah Charney finds 10 mistakes and over-simplifications in Dan Brown’s new book ‘Inferno.’

    

via The Daily Beast – Latest Articles http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/05/20/fact-checking-dan-brown-s-inferno-10-mistakes-false-statements-over-simplifications.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+thedailybeast%2Farticles+%28The+Daily+Beast+-+Latest+Articles%29

Split-second choice ended with NY student dead

NEW YORK (AP) — The Long Island college student was being held in a headlock by a masked intruder with a loaded gun to her head, police said. Then the gunman took aim at an officer….

via AP Top Headlines At 8:54 a.m. EDT http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_HOFSTRA_STUDENT_SHOT_?SITE=FLROC&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT