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Re: Four horsemen skew Internet
This is an off-topic rant. Anyone who wants to make me happy will convince
the NYT to investigate the following question:
How did Magaziner get to be "Clinton's Top Internet Adviser"?
Last I knew, he was the Clintons' "Top Health Care Adviser".
That is, after he was Rick Miller's $1k/hr "Top Wang Labs Turnaround
Adviser", 1 year before they declared bankruptcy. For a guy with such a
string of successes, he seems to keep popping up someplace new.
At 01:33 PM 10/7/97 -0500, [email protected] wrote:
>
>Excerpted from the following NY Times article:
>
>http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/100797encrypt.html
>
>Clinton's Top Internet Adviser Says
>U.S. Encryption Policy Is Unformed
>
>Magaziner took The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal to task for what
>he characterized as sensationalizing negative aspects of the Internet. An
>analysis of the newspapers' front-page coverage of the global computer network
>in the last year, he said, revealed that the four most popular words or phrases
>in such articles were "drug deal," "stalker," "bomb maker" and "pornography."
>Such coverage, he asserted, had led to a popular image of the Internet that was
>fundamentally skewed and that made arguing for market-driven solutions
>difficult.
>
>
>