Integrity

It’s my considered opinion that whether we’re talking about real life or blog-life, the people who have integrity don’t really have to spend any time talking about their integrity. Much has been made of the fact that people like Chris and Doc were given paid trips to Redmond for a Microsoft event and whether or not they could blog about it with any integrity without disclosing that. As I said below, I don’t think it’s that big a deal and here’s why:

I’ve been a long time reader of both of there’s. I’ve met and talked to Chris (I missed my opportunity to meet Doc at Gnomedex this year, by being busy with other people. A regret that I hope to remedy someday.) They both have integrity. When they say something is cool I believe them. When they say something is crap I believe them. They have a large audience because they are both talented, smart, witty, and because they have integrity. I don’t need them to disclose what they got from Microsoft because I know neither of them would allow their writing to be influenced by the gift of a free trip to Redmond. They’d have too much to lose by doing that. The same goes for any blogger in that sort of situation. Either you have integrity or you don’t, and I’ll know whether you do by reading over a period of time, not because you happened to disclose this. Let’s say I went to a site for the first time and the first post I read was about this conference? Would the disclosure of the expenses paid on your behalf change what I would think about your post? Not at all. Did my opinion of what Doc and Chris wrote change because they disclosed it? No not at all. Why? Because in one case I don’t know enough about you and your writing to judge whether you have integrity or not. Your disclosure means nothing to me, I can only judge your integrity by continuing to read your blog over time. And in the second, they have proven to me that they do have integrity, so the disclosure was unnecessary. The bottom line is that disclosures are a very small part of what makes a blogger’s writing trustworthy, it’s just not that big a deal.

Similar Posts

  • Tiger Talk

    If you saw Angela’s post from Friday night, then you probably figured out that we did get the upgrade to Tiger installed on her eMac, and you probably know how much fun she was having with Dashboard widgets. It was a pretty painless upgrade, and once she went to bed Friday night, I spent a…

  • Legal matters..

    Since today is a big day, as far as Supreme Court decisions coming out, it’s only fitting that I hit a couple of legal questions. First, the Supremes did rule that libraries can be forced to use internet filters. Now, personally, I hoped for something better, but thought this would come out this way. (Of…

  • Tech-free weekend

    Yes it’s true, I hardly touched my computers all weekend long. The only time I spent online really was Saturday night, getting the latest inury updates before the fantasy footballl draft yesterday and then last night, checking the meager job listings in various places that we want to live in. After last week I wanted…

  • Bizarre stuff

    So I installed SP1 for Internet Explorer 6 yesterday and immediately had some problems with it. I don’t know how, or why, but immediately after restarting I opened up IE and what sounded like a mangled .wav file played for about 30 seconds, then stopped. But no other sounds will play because the sound device…

  • Stupid!

    You know, spam is stupid, that’s one thing. It’s quite another to send me 160 copies of the same spam message, and it’s even stupider still when it’s an offer to refinance my mortgage and I don’t own a house! #$%@!&* Morons! Follow these topics: Uncategorized

  • Is Gmail doubling storage?

    Given the date, I’m a little skeptical of everything I’m reading today. After reading about Kevin leaving In the Trenches I am on high alert for any kind of April Fool’s joke. But many people seem to think that Gmail is, in fact, upping the email storage. That’s cool with me. Guess I really didn’t…

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)