QUICKLINK   Colorado · September 28, 2009 · Internet regulation

Web sites with anonymous comments denied university press passes

Keywords: Access to places; Anonymous commenters; Anonymous Speech; Internet

Share:
· Facebook
· LinkedIn
· Email
Print
Link

A recent story on a football game in the INDenver Times highlighted a Colorado University press policy that limits which Web sites are granted press passes to cover athetic games.

INDenver Times said it had turned off the online comments section on a story about Colorado University's win against the Wyoming Cowboys because the school will not give press passes to Web sites without a print or broadcast component unless they prohibit the posting of anonymous comments, the Denver Westword's news blog reported on Friday.

"Credentials are a privilege, not a right," Dave Plati, the school's director of sports information told the Westword.  "Why should I credential you if your name is Ralphie 2000 or something like that, and you won't tell us who's criticizing us? Comments were created for intelligent, back-and-forth banter. But when they turn into . . . insulting coaches and players' personal lives, that's when I draw the line. To me, that's not legitimate media."

Plati said the university's policy to issue press passes to TV stations and mainstream newspapers that allow anonymous comments was "a little bit of a gray area" but the school did so because the outlets had larger staffs to oversee and remove slanderous postings.

 

Brooke Ericson, 5:22 pm


Comments: (1)

Comment by Not giving my name because I don't have to, Fri, Oct 2, 2009, 12:13am

This is what happens when you let politically correct crybabies run things.

Oh, and screw it, I'll give my name. Marc Randazza.

 


Submit a comment

Name (what you want displayed):

Comment:

Please note: comments with hyperlinks will be rejected.

Email (only if you want to be notified of new comments):



Reporters Committee home

Send comments & tips

Subscribe by email

RSS feed

Follow us on Twitter

Find us on Facebook


News categories:

Broadcasting

Freedom of information

Intellectual property

Internet regulation

Libel

Newsgathering

Prior restraints

Privacy

Reporter's privilege

Secret courts

State open government


News keywords:

[list alphabetically]

Public Records

Shield Law

Open Records

Subpoenas

Confidential source issues

Defamation

E-mail

FOIA

Sealed records

Legislation

Internet

Secrecy

Sealed cases

Lawsuits

White House

Police

Privacy

Libel

FOIA reform

Photography & videotaping

List all keywords




Search:

Limit by date:

Fr:

To:

Category

Sort by
relevance
date