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Citizen Flynt







Citizen Flynt

Citizen Flynt 07/08/2004 08:31 AM

The hustler's new book accuses the president of paying for an illegal abortion, the press of lying down on the job and Ann Coulter of being a "fag hag."




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Citizen Flynt

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Remedy Citizen Response Provides
Adaptable eGovernment Citizen Support
Solution


Remedy Citizen Response Provides
Adaptable eGovernment Citizen Support
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06/16/2004 01:03 PM
ContactCenterWorld.com Jun 16 2004 4:15PM GMT

Flynt to Open Upscale Sex Shop in Fla.
(AP)


Flynt to Open Upscale Sex Shop in Fla.
(AP)
07/18/2004 03:21 PM
AP - Hustler Magazine publisher Larry Flynt is expanding his pornography empire to South Florida, opening an upscale sex shop despite opposition from this city's mayor and others.

Barr Tries to Revive Clinton-Flynt Suit
(AP)


Barr Tries to Revive Clinton-Flynt Suit
(AP)
04/12/2004 04:50 PM
AP - Former Rep. Bob Barr is trying to revive a $30 million defamation suit against former President Clinton, Democratic political adviser James Carville and pornographer Larry Flynt.

Barr tries to revive Clinton-Flynt suit


Barr tries to revive Clinton-Flynt suit 04/12/2004 04:58 PM

Xeni on NPR: Larry Flynt and Online Porn
Crackdown


Xeni on NPR: Larry Flynt and Online Porn
Crackdown
04/14/2004 11:47 AM
Today on the NPR program "Day to Day," I report on the debate over government regulation of online pornography and how veterans of such debates -- like publisher and Hustler magazine founder Larry Flynt -- plan to weather the storm.
Link for today's show, scroll down for archived online audio of "Online Porn Crackdown" after 12PM PT today.

Wired -- Larry Flynt: Life, Liberty and
Pursuit of Porn


Wired -- Larry Flynt: Life, Liberty and
Pursuit of Porn
02/19/2004 11:34 AM
For today's edition of Wired News, I interview Larry Flynt. As Hustler magazine nears its 30-year anniversary, the adult entertainment magnate reflects on how technology has changed his business, the Justice Department's new "porn czar," the f irst major federal obscenity prosecution in over a decade, how the Patriot Act relates to porn, and why online anonymity matters. I also asked him about some recent allegations regarding George W. Bush that were attributed to Flynt, and published by New York Daily News. His response: a new book he's releasing on July 4 will document a year-long investigation into those claims. Snip:

Larry Flynt: [Technology has] had a dramatic effect. In the 1980s, publishing was 80 percent of my business. Now it's about 20 percent, and the rest is Internet or video. I don't think many people anticipated how the Internet was going to revolutionize the way we disseminate information. Now everybody does -- but some did in time, and some didn't. That's one of the reasons Penthouse filed for bankruptcy. They were relying totally on publishing. We knew in the early 1990s that we needed to diversify and branched out into a lot of different areas. Technology still has many surprises for us down the road, particularly in the wireless area. It's going to be absolutely phenomenal. In the next two to five years, you'll see the computer and your home television set merging. You'll have one remote control, and they'll effectively be one device.

WN: Do you ever get tired of having to answer for the actions of some of your more extreme colleagues in the industry?

Flynt: No. I let them do their thing and I do mine. I try to set an example for them. But I've been to prison, and I don't think some of them have. Let them try it, maybe it will change their attitude.
Link

Larry Flynt, Gardena's Civic Treasure
(Los Angeles Times)


Larry Flynt, Gardena's Civic Treasure
(Los Angeles Times)
05/29/2004 04:52 AM
Los Angeles Times - In the South Bay suburb of Gardena, Hustler magazine Publisher Larry Flynt has finally found a place where civic leaders embrace him, law enforcement professionals salute him and even the tax collectors cut him some slack.

Larry Flynt To Claim George Bush Helped
Girlfriend Get An Abortion In The Early
70s


Larry Flynt To Claim George Bush Helped
Girlfriend Get An Abortion In The Early
70s
02/18/2004 01:06 AM
not going to be a pretty election .. finally confirmed .. Daily News

nydailynews.com/news/gossip/story/165111p-144622c.html
track this site | 6 links


A dossier on every UK citizen?


A dossier on every UK citizen? 11/03/2003 07:41 AM
Bureaucratic creep fears over life records plan

"Citizen Smash"


"Citizen Smash" 10/30/2003 11:28 AM

Citizen Reporting Next?


Citizen Reporting Next? 06/22/2005 02:01 AM

These are definitely still columnist rather than journalist, but look at the recent reports from Singapore's blogosphere: Fire at Plaza Singapura mall, and Form Prank at Ngee Ann City mall...


Citizen Alterna Is Third Generation


Citizen Alterna Is Third Generation 08/06/2004 10:01 AM

alterna_3g.jpg image

I got a surprising amount of buzz back from the Citizen Alterna watches we talked about just a few days ago, most of it relating to the fact that the design for these watches isn't exactly new. While the strap and case are certainly updated, this post on the Poor Man's Watch Forum (who knew?) illustrates that the watch internals are at least 15 years old. Citizen is selling us 1989's technology in a spruced up form, which is fine, I guess, but I sort of like the 1989 style better. The middle generation of watch I'm not feeling so much. Of course, I own calculator watches, so my opinion is obviously somewhat skewed. (Thanks, Joseph!)

Read - ALTERNA Ana-Digi-Temp-Al-Chrono [PMWF]

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Citizen Alterna Watch [Gizmodo]


OpinionJournal - Citizen of the World


OpinionJournal - Citizen of the World 06/24/2005 06:04 PM
if an atheist and a pope think the same things, there must be something true .. Tunku Varadarajan interviews Oriana Fallaci .. Wall Street Journal's profile .. Prophet of Decline

opinionjournal.com/columnists/tvaradarajan/?id=110006858
track this site | 3 links


Cory in Ottawa Citizen


Cory in Ottawa Citizen 06/08/2004 07:14 AM
On May 30, the Ottawa Citizen ran a great profile on me and my books, with a sidebar on other authors who ppost their work online. The Citizen has a weird policy where they only let subscribers see their online archives, but Brent Kirwan, a generous reader, has sent me a high-resolution photo of the newspaper spread where you can read it yourself. 148k JPEG Link

US citizen 'kidnapped in Riyadh'


US citizen 'kidnapped in Riyadh' 06/12/2004 08:19 PM
A statement purportedly from al-Qaeda says the group killed one US citizen and kidnapped another in Riyadh.

Citizen Journalists' pledge


Citizen Journalists' pledge 06/22/2005 01:49 AM
Cory Doctorow: Dan Gillmor's visionary, compelling Citizen Journalism experiment continues. He's created a sign-up for citizen journalists who want to participate in Bayosphere that is as sweet a code of citizen journalist conduct as you could ask for:
I report and produce news explaining the facts as fairly, thoroughly, accurately and openly as I can.

* Fair: I'm always listening to and taking account of other viewpoints;
* Thorough: I learn as much as I can in the time I have, and point to original sources when possible;
* Accurate: I get it right, checking my facts, correcting errors promptly and incorporating new information I learn from the community;
* Open: I explain my biases and conflicts, where appropriate.

a href="http://bayosphere.com/cjregister">Link

Louis Alvarado, U.S. Citizen


Louis Alvarado, U.S. Citizen 03/14/2005 06:29 PM
Louis Alvarado, U.S. Citizen.

Citizen Journalism: A Newspaper Goes for
It


Citizen Journalism: A Newspaper Goes for
It
12/19/2004 03:18 PM
As Jay Rosen explains in his latest PressThink article, the local paper in Greensboro, N.C., is turning its online self into a community square. Bravo. This is a big deal. And as Ed Cone observes -- Ed is a blogger of note and columnist for the paper -- this isn't exactly rocket science. Anyone can do it. Almost every newspaper should try.

Citizen Smash - The Indepundit


Citizen Smash - The Indepundit 03/06/2004 01:53 AM
takes a look at who's complaining about President Bush's new commercials .. Lt. Smash Finds More Quotes From 9/11 Relatives With An Agenda .. The

lt-smash.us/archives/002714.html#002714
track this site | 8 links


"When I’m Reporting, I am a Citizen of
the World.”


"When I’m Reporting, I am a Citizen of
the World.”
06/17/2005 03:19 PM
That's a quote from CNN's Bob Franken. A tour through his press think shows why I ask the Big Journalism Deans: if schools like yours are supposed to spread the gospel, how do they know they have the religion right?

US citizen among Cairo dead


US citizen among Cairo dead 04/08/2005 05:25 AM
A US citizen dies from wounds sustained in the Cairo bomb blast, bringing the toll from the attack to three.

Citizen reportage and Flickr


Citizen reportage and Flickr 09/11/2004 06:34 PM
FlickrBlog

blog.flickr.com/flickrblog/2004/09/pictures_of_jak.htmltrack this site | 4 links


Citizen Alterna Watch


Citizen Alterna Watch 08/03/2004 12:39 PM

citizen_alterna.jpg image

What these Alterna watches from Citizen lack in understated class they make up for with loads of gee-wizardry, including time (I know!), calendar, stopwatch, temperature, and chronograph functions. Wait, that's time, too. Basically, you don't care; they have lots of dials and you love them, so quit yelping. If I'm reading the pricing correctly, they seem to be about $225 apiece, which actually seems extraordinarily reasonable considering how much is packed in there.

Read - Product Page (Babelfished) [CitizenJP via BoingBoing via TRFJ]


Citizen Rolls Out Pair of Printers


Citizen Rolls Out Pair of Printers 06/28/2004 12:18 AM
Weighing only 1.18 pounds and measuring 5.7 by 4.4 by 1.6 inches, Citizen America's new PD-24 printer is designed for printing on the go.

Spam, the Nazi hunter and Citizen Joe


Spam, the Nazi hunter and Citizen Joe 09/07/2004 01:10 AM
Salon Sep 7 2004 4:24AM GMT

Bayosphere Citizen Journalism Pledge


Bayosphere Citizen Journalism Pledge 06/22/2005 02:38 AM

Dan Gillmor has created a Citizen Journalist Pledge for contributors to Bayosphere.

Citizen Journalist Pledge

By submitting this form, I agree to be accurate, complete, fair and transparent in my postings on Bayosphere. I will operate with integrity.

I work in the community interest.

I report and produce news explaining the facts as fairly, thoroughly, accurately and openly as I can.

  • Fair: I'm always listening to and taking account of other viewpoints;
  • Thorough: I learn as much as I can in the time I have, and point to original sources when possible;
  • Accurate: I get it right, checking my facts, correcting errors promptly and incorporating new information I learn from the community;
  • Open: I explain my biases and conflicts, where appropriate.
I may also provide reviews (such as a critique of a movie or book) and commentary with a point of view based on facts, but I will have no significant financial or otherwise direct connection (membership, affiliation, close relationship, etc.) with an interested party.

If I do have such connections, I'll disclose them prominently, and my work may be labeled and/or categorized appropriately.

I agree, as an active member of this community, to help uphold the integrity of this pledge by challenging and reporting inappropriate postings or abuse.

I think this is a reasonable pledge. One real difference between a citizen journalist and someone who isn't is whether they make such a pledge or at least agree to adhere to principles like this. I will also agree to a pledge.

One modification that I would have to make is conflict of interest disclosures. We've talked about this quite a bit on this blog. At one time, I started disclosing conflicts on every post, but people thought it sounded boastful. Lately, I try to make it clear by saying "we" or "I" when it is an organization that I am involved in, but assume that most people who read my blog understand my primary affiliations. Most of them are disclosed on my wiki page. Any new affiliation or minor affiliation to something I am writing about will be prominently disclosed.

The only other type of article that may not fit "citizen journalism" are posts where irony or some joke is the point of the post. I used to think that such material would be obvious, but I find that irony is often missed an taken seriously. I don't have a good solution for this.

Comment - TrackBack

Citizen-soldier demoted for bl0gging


Citizen-soldier demoted for bl0gging 02/05/2005 09:25 PM
Cory Doctorow: Rick Prelinger sez, "Jason Hartley, writer of the widely read and acclaimed blog Just Another Soldier, writes here how he was demoted to E-4 and fined as a result of his blog. If you haven't seen Jason's blog, it's well worth reading: the perceptive, sometimes disturbing and often self-deprecating words of a citizen soldier." Link (Thanks, Rick!)

"Citizen journalists"? Try partisan
hacks


"Citizen journalists"? Try partisan
hacks
04/08/2005 09:27 AM
Right-wing bloggers shrieked that the GOP Schiavo memo was a "liberal media" fraud. Now that they've been proven wrong, are they apologizing? Why, no!

Humanist transhumanism: Citizen Cyborg


Humanist transhumanism: Citizen Cyborg 04/11/2005 11:03 PM
Cory Doctorow: I've just finished a review copy of James Hughes's "Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must respond to the Redesigned Human of the Future." I was skeptical when this one arrived, since I've read any number of utopian wanks on the future of humanity and the inevitable withering away of the state into utopian anarchism fueled by the triumph of superior technology over inferior laws.

But Hughes's work is much subtler and more nuanced than that, and was genuinely surprising, engaging and engrossing.

A couple years ago, my friend John Gilmore -- who advocates for marijuana law reform -- introduced me to the idea of "cognitive liberty," the freedom to choose your state of mind. The cognitive liberty cause encompasses the movements to legalize "recreational" drugs and to limit the power of the state to subject "mentally ill" people to involuntary pharmaceutical therapy (and, when it is still practiced, involuntary physical therapies such as lobotomies and electroshock).

Cognitive liberty resonates strongly for me. Like other forms of personal liberty, it is not without its perils -- when friends of mine were involuntarily medicated during acute incidents of schizophrenia, mania or depression, the interventions seemed like a good trade-off at the time (rampaging, irrational, out of control friends who are treated with meds that make them capable of reasoning with those around them are good poster children for "cognitive coercion"), and friends who've fallen down the well of addiction and ended up with ruined lives or even lives cut short are a strong warning against unbridled cognitive liberty.

But then there are friends whose touch of madness sends them on flights of brilliance, friends whose casual glass of wine, joint or hallucinogen use have made them happier, better adjusted, and more creative and fulfilled. What's more, my friends who've ODed, been committed, or who live with addiction haven't been helped by prohibition -- far from it. Some are in jail, some are medicated insensible, some are living lives of dangerous poverty.

The idea of cognitive liberty is very tempting, but I have an instinct that there's an approach to it that is grounded not in libertarianism, but in Canadian/European-style social democracy.

"Citizen Cyborg" takes the social democratic approach not just to cognitive liberty, but to the parcel of questions that follow on from it as technology allows us to charge our minds and bodies. When we can choose our children's' sex, modify our genomes to eliminate some forms of mental and physical disability, when we can modify our bodies and minds to improve them beyond the normal human baseline , when we can even use technology to make dolphins and great apes as smart as precocious children, what then?

Surely the ability to determine your own genome, the ability to choose to modify your physical self and to make the choices for your children are as fundamental civil liberties as the right to speak and assemble and otherwise author your own destiny.

But the traditional "transhumanist" movement has come out of the libertarian right, advocates of an unbridled market without government intervention. And much of the opposition to transhumanism hasn't just come from the religious right, but from the left, too -- lefties who see transhumanism as likely to produce a troubling, divisive caste system, or to make us all beholden to corporate interests like Monsanto who bind us to subscribing to patented GM lifeforms that we require to sustain our lifestyles.

Hughes's remarkable achievement in "Citizen Cyborg" is the fusion of social democratic ideals of tempered, reasoned state intervention to promote equality of opportunity with the ideal of self-determination inherent in transhumanism. Transhumanism, Hughes convincingly argues, is the sequel to humanism, and to feminism, to the movements for racial and gender equality, for the fight for queer and transgender rights -- if you support the right to determine what consenting adults can do with their bodies in the bedroom, why not in the operating theatre?

Much of this book is taken up with scathing rebuttal to the enemies of transhumanism -- Christian lifestyle conservatives who've fought against abortion, stem-cell research and gay marriage; as well as deep ecologist/secular lefty intelligentsia who fear the commodification of human life. He dismisses the former as superstitious religious thugs who, a few generations back, would happily decry the "unnatural" sin of miscegenation; to the latter, he says, "You are willing to solve the problems of labor-automation with laws that ensure a fair shake for working people -- why not afford the same chance to life-improving techno-medicine?"

The humanist transhuman is a political stance I'd never imagined, but having read "Citizen Cyborg," it seems obvious and natural. Like a lot of basically lefty geeks, I've often felt like many of my ideals were at odds with both the traditional left and the largely right-wing libertarians. "Citizen Cyborg" squares the circle, suggest a middle-path between them that stands foursquare for the improvement of the human condition through technology but is likewise not squeamish about advocating for rules, laws and systems that extend a fair opportunity to those less fortunate (say, by offering special patent rules to the developing world allowing poor nations' scientists to freely reuse the patented pharmaceutical inventions of the rich north to solve local needs.)

Hughes is a Buddhist whose children struggle with genetically-influenced disorders like ADD and Tourette's, and his life seems much taken-up with the cause of transhumanist humanism. He is the executive director of the World Transumanist Association, and he teaches health policy at Hartford, CT's Trinity College. The work is sprinkled with references to science fiction and is very concerned with the way that transhumanist ideas were prefigured in the genre and have leaked back into modern sf. I don't know that he's convinced me to become a transhumanist activist -- I feel like the work I do with EFF works to safeguard a lot of rights dear to the transhumanist heart anyway -- but the analytical tools this book has provided me with have made me re-examine my own political identity. Book Link, References Link

What's in PressThink's Pocket? Citizen
Journalism!


What's in PressThink's Pocket? Citizen
Journalism!
04/05/2005 01:46 AM
Al Gore's network; CanWest's new daily for the young; Merrill Brown's truthelling; Roch Smith, Jr's 101 sites; BluffingtonToday's debut; and the Greensboro clan gets busy.

CITIZEN MEDIA INITIATIVE LIST


CITIZEN MEDIA INITIATIVE LIST 04/04/2005 01:47 PM

Judith Meskill may have her famous "Soc ial Networking Services meta" list - but we (ourmedia.org) made it onto the new CITIZEN MEDIA INITIATIVE LIST. Along with our Bryght/sister org - NowPublic.com.

Keep by the CyberJounralist.net.

Now this does not condone in any way or admit that I call myself a journalist. But I'm proud of the job that JD has done - and now we just need ot fix all the bugs.

In case some of you are wondering as to "what happened this weekend" - the Internet Archives database was down, thereby knocking us out of the box.

But we'll have better reporting features coming up AND we're talking to several big players about joining our 'registry' of media - so we'll have other repositories that are part of the party.

The Internet Archives is mirrored in Amsterdam and Alexandria, Egypt - but no amount of redendancy, mirroring and all that good stuff will save yah from Murphy.

:-)


CREDIT: Citizen News Services


CREDIT: Citizen News Services 03/13/2003 07:32 PM
Type in the words "war" and "Iraq" on Yahoo! and a list of two million sites pops up. Search Google for "peace protest" and you get 788000 entries. ...

How to succeed as a citizen media editor


How to succeed as a citizen media editor 03/24/2005 08:43 AM
How to Succeed as a Citizen Media Editor (OJR)

ojr.org/ojr/stories/050322glaser
track this site | 4 links


Shoshana Zuboff: From Subject to Citizen


Shoshana Zuboff: From Subject to Citizen 05/05/2004 05:26 AM
Getting the feudalism out of capitalism.

PR Plan to Boost Citizen Use of E-Gov
Sources


PR Plan to Boost Citizen Use of E-Gov
Sources
09/06/2004 03:55 PM
BeSpacific Sep 6 2004 8:16PM GMT

Bobby Fischer Now Legal Citizen of
Iceland


Bobby Fischer Now Legal Citizen of
Iceland
03/23/2005 12:44 AM
Technocrat.net Mar 23 2005 3:59AM GMT

Can News Organizations Train Citizen
Journalists?


Can News Organizations Train Citizen
Journalists?
04/14/2005 04:59 PM
With all the talk recently about "citizen journalism" and getting everyone to report on news events as they occur, many in the traditional media are dismissing these citizen journalism efforts as being "not journalism" or just plain "bad." Generally, though, those who are responding this way are probably doing so because they actually feel threatened by these efforts. A smarter move might be to embrace the efforts, and while recognizing that many of the citizen journalist reports will have problems, look for ways to help improve them. The folks at E-Media Tidbits are suggesting that traditional news organizations actively look into training so-called citizen journalists. They can complain all they want about the quality, but this is an opportunity to actually help improve that quality. The idea is that a "trained" citizen journalist gets some sort of status that makes it easier for their material to rise to the top. While it's not clear if this particular suggestion really does make sense (or if it's just a way of trying to add another layer of "certification" to the process), it's still good to see some at least thinking about ways in which traditional news organizations can work with these new efforts -- rather than simply scoffing at them and pretending they don't exist.

Analysts see Hurd as ‘solid citizen’
leader for HP


Analysts see Hurd as ‘solid citizen’
leader for HP
03/30/2005 12:32 PM
Analysts see the selection of NCR Corp.’s Mark Hurd to lead Hewlett Packard Co. as a solid move by the company to regain its footing after the departure of Carly Fiorina.

Exploring J2ME: Being a good mobile
citizen


Exploring J2ME: Being a good mobile
citizen
09/27/2002 10:41 PM
CNET Sep 27 2002 10:03PM ET
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