Coincidentally, the Washington Post weighed in today with the story Foodie Free-for-all, for which I was contacted a few weeks ago. It mentions the strict Chowhound policy that posters cannot write about free meals at all, which probably comes as news to some people.
Here's a few of the excellent comments we got:
- "I think that any blogger, food or otherwise, should have a posted "code" and then follow it," says Cybele, pointedly following up with "That's my first impression of opinions after reading over it today. (I'll have to check back at the site in a month before I can do a full review.)"
- Also rather acerbic was Sku, who wrote "I fully support this effort to import the stodgy practices of print jouralism to blogging. After all, that's part of the reason why the print journalism world is thriving."
- Jonah said, "My first impression, to borrow a term, is that this Code of Ethics is well intentioned, but misguided. Who defines what "fair" is?"
2 comments:
They posted an update.
http://foodethics.wordpress.com/2009/05/02/clarifying-the-food-blogger-code-of-ethics
It includes full encouragement to steal intellectual property. (Yeah, you can take photos from other places on the net. Might wanna credit them, especially if you don't want to bother with permission cuz you're busy.)
I commented on Saturday and they said they'd take a look at it.
Thanks for your really thoughtful post. As me mentioned in our update, this is going to be a living document. We're trying to balance all of the food bloggers who approach their work casually and those who take themselves a bit more seriously and finding that very hard to do. We're working on amending the photo elements to reflect copyright law. The last thing we want is to be encouraging people to steal. But we both have full time jobs, and want to make sure we finish our research before we update things again.
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