Hacking Hacks and the Cops, Readers and Pols Who Looked the Other Way
Holman Jenkins on the News Corp hacking scandal.
I've recently come to the opinion that journalists ought to come with warning labels. But then so should just about everybody.
Had police pursued obvious wrongdoing and jailed a few journalists back in 1999, a lot fewer British citizens would have been victims of privacy invasions. Those who've likened the hacking scandal to Britain's Watergate are onto something. After the Watergate break-in, behavior that had been tolerated, routine and abetted by official agencies became, overnight, untolerated and prosecuted. Remember, it was the FBI's No. 2, blowing a whistle on his own agency, who played "Deep Throat" to the press.It would never occur to me to hack into someone's phone messages to get information for a news story. But if somebody else hacked into somebody's phone messages and found out some juicy interesting stuff, I admit I'd probably read it.
I've recently come to the opinion that journalists ought to come with warning labels. But then so should just about everybody.
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