Apple claims online journalists not "legitimate members of the press"

Started by TehBorken, Apr 21 06 08:47

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TehBorken

 [div class="m2"] [b class="a4"]Apple pushes to unmask product leaker[/b]
 By [a href="mailto:[email protected]"]Declan McCullagh[/a], CNET News.com
 Friday   , April     21 2006 11:23 AM[br clear="all"] A California court in San Jose on Thursday is scheduled to hear a case  brought by Apple Computer that eventually could answer an unsettled legal  question: Should online journalists receive the same rights as traditional  reporters?  [/p] Apple claims they should not. Its lawyers say in court documents that Web  scribes are not "legitimate members of the press" when they reveal details about  forthcoming products that the company would prefer to keep confidential. [/p]That argument has drawn stiff opposition from bloggers and traditional  journalists. But it did seem to be sufficient to convince Santa Clara County  Superior Court Judge James P. Kleinberg, who ruled in March 2005 that Apple's attempt to subpoena the electronic records  of an Apple news site could proceed.  [/p] "Unlike the whistleblower who discloses a health, safety or welfare hazard  affecting all, or the government employee who reveals mismanagement or worse by  our public officials, (the Macintosh news sites) are doing nothing more than  feeding the public's insatiable desire for information," Kleinberg wrote at the  time. [/p] The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which is representing the Apple news site  [a href="vny!://www.powerpage.org/" target="_blank"]PowerPage.org[/a], is hoping the appeals court will pull the plug  on a subpoena that could yield details about who leaked information about a  FireWire audio interface for GarageBand that has been codenamed "Asteroid." The  subpoena is on hold during the appeal. [/p] "The California Court of Appeals has a long history of protecting freedom of  the press," Kurt Opsahl, an EFF staff attorney who is arguing the case, said on  Wednesday. "We're hopeful they'll continue to do so." [/p] In the lawsuit, filed in late 2004, Apple is not suing the Mac news sites  directly, but instead has focused on still-unnamed "John Doe" defendants. The  subpoena has been sent to Nfox.com, PowerPage's e-mail provider, which says it  will comply if legally permitted. [/p] Even though the AppleInsider site also [a href="vny!://www.appleinsider.com/article.php?id=756" target="_blank"]published information[/a] about the Asteroid device, it operated  its own e-mail service and would have been able to raise a stronger First  Amendment claim if it had been sent a subpoena. (In a separate case, Apple directly  sued another enthusiast site, Think Secret, alleging that it infringed on  Apple's trade secret in soliciting inside information.) [/p] The types of articles about Apple that Jason O'Grady, PowerPage.org's  creator, posts every few days don't seem that different from those that many  news organizations produce. They include reports on Apple's patent disputes,  benchmarks of software performance, reviews of software and news about upcoming  products that have not officially been announced. [/p] Being the first to publish news about forthcoming products--as long as the  information is accurate--is generally regarded by journalists as a coup. CNET  News.com was the [a title="Apple to ditch IBM, switch to Intel chips -- Monday, Jun. 06, 2005" href="vny!://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39234714,00.htm"]first  to report[/a], for instance, that Apple was switching from PowerPC processors to  Intel chips last year. (Full disclosure: O'Grady has begun [a href="vny!://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39234714,00.htm" target="_blank"]writing a blog[/a] for ZDNet, also owned by CNET.)[/p][/div]  
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