I'm also not good at spot-on answering questions I haven't considered previously. Luckily, I have thought about most things people want to ask me about. But I've learned stock answers when I get ambushed, even when it's unintentional. "When do you need the answer by?" is one of my favorites. It causes them to prioritize. But the only lesson I had to learn was to have a snap cover answer at hand.
More often than one might expect, the ambush is intentional. They want to appear smart, or to improve their position at the expense of others. To be prepared for anything is impossible. That's why most public figures practice being ambushed, and not freezing. It took me a few times to get the hang of it, but it's well worth it in the politics of corporate life.
"I'm also not good at spot-on answering questions I haven't considered previously. "
How could he not have considered these questions previously? This is a major issue for Craigslist and they must have had a lot of discussions about it. Being unable to answer questions about about this topic is inexecusable. Maybe his answer would be along the lines of "I don't know about that specific ad but these are our procedures in general ...." would be fine.
Newmark shouldn't beat himself up over failing the trial-by-media-fire. Lyon probably had the story written before she even approached him. Most of us (including former reporters like me) would be no match for a media pro with a particular slant in mind.
And they control the medium too. If Craig gets the answers right they just can cut this part of the film. They could manufacture whatever they want just editing and putting answers out of context.
The modern version of Cardinal Richelieu:
"If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, I will find something in them which will hang him."
I remember watching the original interview on cnn.com [0] and thinking it looked like the reporter wasn't really interested in getting good answers or giving an accurate story to her viewers, but was just going for a "gotcha".
She seems to have the same strange misunderstanding of large-scale websites that people sometimes voice regarding youtube or google. At one point he asks if she reported an ad she's questioning him about. She says "why do I have the responsibility to report this to you when it's your website? You're the one hosting this online." It's as if she's completely unaware of the scale of the system, and expecting Craig to hand-verify each and every ad.
Two days ago, almost all HNers agreed with Rackspace's decision to shut down PandaForm's website because of some user-generated content that seemed like phishing.Almost everyone (including me) was critical of PandaForm
So I find it interesting that all current comments on this thread are critical of CNN. A journalist's job is to ask tough questions. I haven't seen anyone refute the fact that a huge amount of sex trafficking (of minors and adults) hapens through Craig's List.
In the post, Craig talks about his "support for our troops and veterans" and his support for "Net neutrality". That support is great, but it is irrelevant when it comes to the question of sex trafficking of minor girls.
So why should journalists not ask tough questions of the founder of Craig's List ?
There's a line between "tough questions" and "stupid questions." The reporter was pretty clearly asking the latter.
Something like "wouldn't it be possible for you to filter ads based on keywords that suggest illegal activities," or "couldn't you use the same techniques that other companies use to block spam to block illegal content" would have been tough questions. But she didn't ask any of them; instead, she asked a facile 'gotcha' question about a particular post, in an obvious attempt to get him to say something embarrassing.
It was a cheap, pandering bit of entertainment TV; if that's what 'journalism' has been reduced to, we ought to wish it a speedy death.
Here's the list, can you tell me which question you thought was stupid, and why?
1. Can people trust that children are not being sex-trafficked on Craigslist?
2. What are you guys doing to protect these girls?
3. [Craigslist says its screen these ads manually, but] look at this ad. It says young, sexy, sweet, and bubbly. Clearly here she writes $250 an hour. I mean what do you think she's selling in her bra and underwear? A dinner date? And she's in her bra and underwear?
4. Why do I have the responsibility to report this to you when it's your Web site?
(Disclaimer: I don't use craigslist, I've been to the site <10 times in my life, so I'm making assumptions about what's available to the end user in terms of reporting issues. If I'm wrong, I apologize in advance.)
In my opinion:
1 is unfair. You can't say with 100% certainty that any popular website is immune from something like that, so he can't say "yes". He certainly can't say "no" without making the site look bad. So how does he answer?
2 is unfair. If you ask about a specific ad, they can look in the system and say "that ad was placed on X, it was reported as problematic by a user on Y, we checked it on Z and reported it to the police." If you say in general "what are you doing about 'these girls'" then you're making him look bad by saying "I don't know 'which girls' you're referring to." Again, if you don't give him a chance to make a proper answer, then you're not really being fair as a reporter.
3 is similarly unfair unless he's at his computer and can give you the information. Obviously the post in question is crossing the line, but what do you expect him to do about it right then? If they manually screen the ads, then someone's not doing their job right, but can you say with 100% certainty that everyone at CNN is doing their job right 100% of the time?
Finally, 4 is unfair because if she'd actually reported the thing using the proper channels, then the post would have been gone before she'd have time to put together her story. But that would go against her interests, so it's much better to ambush him in person with an ad he's never seen before.
On the other hand, if the question is the less-personal and less-exasperated "why do you rely on your users to police your site?" then that's a fair question.
The underlying question for this reporter is this: Is your goal to get answers? Or is your goal to embarrass him for ratings?
I am totally acting as a devil's advocate here, I haven't dug into this enough to have formed a proper opinion:
2 is unfair. If you ask about a specific ad, they can look in the system and say "that ad was placed on X, it was reported as problematic by a user on Y, we checked it on Z and reported it to the police.
The problem in this imaginary chain of events is "it was reported as problematic by a user on Y". What the hell is the user doing reporting it? Why aren't there dedicated staff?
These guys are reported to make $150 mill a year with just 32 staff. That they're not picking up on this shit is just plain negligence.
Just because we as programmers are used to dealing with huge data sets doesn't actually mean this problem isn't policable with a couple of people.
They could pay a couple of students minimum wage to vet all their adult adverts.
In the old days the vet would be in the phone call placing the order for an advert. Just because it's now all handled by a computer in the form of a web form so staff costs are reduced doesn't mean there's any less responsibility on the company. It's a cost. You pass it on to the advertiser.
> What the hell is the user doing reporting it? Why aren't there dedicated staff?
Because that's how the site works. Period. It's a community-policed bulletin board. Is there something inherently wrong with that?
> They could pay a couple of students minimum wage to vet all their adult adverts.
There may be liability issues here. If they declare, "we are policing the site to get rid of all potentially illegal posts," and then they miss one, they could get sued by the victim.
CL itself explicitly says that for adult services, they have a manual review process for each ad that includes reading the ad, verifying a credit card, and placing a phone call to the number used to place the ad. They are not trying to get by on common carrier status.
The criticism is that these measures don't seem to be sufficient, that coordination with law enforcement has been piecemeal at best, and that CL does not invest more (or all) of the profit from these ads back into anti-trafficking measures.
Yeah, good point. That invalidates the second half of my argument.
I wonder though about the interview segment with the law enforcement guy. Wouldn't they prefer CL just post everything and not vet the posts for possible illegal activities? I mean, think about it: it's a public forum where people are willing to outright advertise the illegal activities they're willing to provide. It sounds like a law-enforcement wet dream.
So not really a user of craigslist -- may have found an apartment a few years ago, but never visit it. Here's my response:
1. It's impossible to say that about anything. Can you trust that children are not being sex-trafficked at walmart & mcdonalds?
2. This is a good question.
3. Asking him to speculate on an ad is stupid. She could be a stripper or something else, hell now I'm speculating... maybe that was the only picture she had
4. This relates to number 2. If they say that they scan those that have been reported by users since there are a lot more users than staff then it's everyones responsibility. If you see something that's wrong you should report it. In much the same way we don't expect pg to review every post and news story -- there is a way for us to report by flagging.
1. I "trust" that WalMart and McDonald's at least aren't willingly making money from sex-trafficking. If a representative of one of those companies were asked the same question, I'd have zero problem with them saying something like "we do whatever we can to stop it". CL gets paid for these ads and claims to police them. It's a different standard.
3. Head on over to CL and tell me how hard it is for you to find a similar ad that's clearly for prostitution. It's a completely fair question, even if it does have a surface similarity to unfair gotcha-style questions.
People complain about sex-trafficking and prostitution on Craigslist. But CL didn't invent or newly-enable any of it. It all just concentrated from local newspaper classifieds. And I guarantee that CL is doing more to vet ads than any newspaper ever did.
Clearly, CL is going above and beyond their legal requirement to vet these ads. Any article of substance on the topic will lay that out plain as day.
So why do you feel it necessary to imply that you can't "trust" them, or that CL is willingly profiting from prostitution or human trafficking?
It all just concentrated from local newspaper classifieds.
Would you grant that sufficient concentration would make it a different class of problem?
Clearly, CL is going above and beyond their legal requirement to vet these ads.
Okay, so what? Nobody serious seems to be claiming anyone from CL should go to jail. The only argument I've heard is that whatever CL is doing isn't working, and they need to do more to actually address the problem. People certainly have the right to make this argument, don't they?
So why do you feel it necessary to imply that you can't "trust" them, or that CL is willingly profiting from prostitution or human trafficking?
If it's true that CL is willingly profiting from sex ads, and it's true that sex ads on CL are a primary tool of sex traffickers, and it's true that CL knows this, how is it not then the case that CL is willingly profiting from sex trafficking? I'm not saying or implying that it's their goal or their desire to do so, but the bottom line is that they are, and they could be doing more so that they aren't.
> 4. Why do I have the responsibility to report this
> to you when it's your Web site?
Because you're a human being?
How is seeing an ad for underage prostitution, and not reporting it because "it's someone else's responsibility," any different then seeing an assault in progress on the street and claiming that it's the police's responsibility to get involved in that, and not yours?
If someone just ignores a murder/assault/robbery in-progress we would think of them as an asshole, so why is this reporter different? Because she's a journalist?
Craigslist charges money for these ads and claims it manually reviews them. Presumably the person walking by a murder/assault/robbery isn't witnessing a crime the perpetrator asked and paid the owner of the alleyway for permission to commit.
So that completely absolves her of responsibility? If she sees an underage prostitute on the street does she forgo calling the police and complain to the pimp that he didn't do a good enough job of checking if she was underage or not?
This is not to defend Craigslist, but to say that if she didn't report the crime to anyone she is just as guilty. Just because she is a reporter following a 'hot story' doesn't make her any less responsible for ignoring a crime that she could have helped to prevent. I don't like the idea that since the ad was posted on Craig's site, then he is responsible for it, but someone that actually saw it and knew that something was awry, and did nothing can take some sort of moral high-ground.
You're taking it for granted that she didn't report the ad, though the question doesn't necessitate that that's the case. Even if she didn't, though, her guilt doesn't absolve Craigslist, and it doesn't make the question invalid, though it probably could be worded better.
I specifically used the example with the pimp to try and convey the idea that I'm not absolving Craigslist of anything. In that example, you wouldn't absolve the pimp of all blame for putting the underage child on the street-corner.
I don't have a problem with a reporter asking hard questions. I have a problem with reporters who are more interested in getting video that makes the reporter look heroic, than they are in getting answers to tough questions.
Anyone seen any evidence this reporter made any attempt to continue to ask those questions at a later time. Or did she stop the interview the second she saw Newmark looked bad at the same time she yelled the questions once.
If Craigslist itself claims that it can and does screen these ads, then why is it out of bounds for CNN to point out that it apparently can't or doesn't? That's not CNN "misunderstanding large-scale websites", that's CNN trying to expose a claim from Craigslist itself as false.
Ok reporter lets take a look at your backyard. CNN will blatantly sensationalize and falsify stories just to get ratings. Then turn around and blame the sources when they are caught.
Your the one reporting the story Ms. Reporter, why aren't you verifying? Who here is really profiteering from base human impulses?
Sure, it's easy to come up with a "proper response" after the fact, but how about when you've been blindsided by a reporter with a microphone and camera in your face?
On one hand the reporter is blaming Craig for providing the canvas for people to write bad things; on the other the reporter is actually doing the lying and manipulating to get paid.
This is like blaming the business owner for the comments graffiti artists put on his walls. Even if he does his best to wash them off whenever he finds them.
CNN is invested or in a joint venture with Washington Post, right? Have they cleaned up the "massage" ads that their own columnist figured out were a front for prostitution in 30 minutes of research? Any timetable on that? The article was, hmm, ten years or so ago.
The best advice for dealing with the possibility of being "ambushed", or otherwise being made to answer awkward questions, comes from the British television series "Yes, Prime Minister".
(Prime Minister Hacker speaking to Bernard Woolley, his hapless Principal Private Secretary who has made unwise remarks to the press after being ambushed):
"If you have nothing to say, say nothing. But better, have something to say and say it, no matter what they ask. Pay no attention to the question, make your own statement. If they ask you the same question again, you just say, 'That's not the question' or 'I think the more important question is this:' Then you make another statement of your own."
So his thought out response after the fact was to say the reporter was playing "gotcha"? What a cheap answer.
How about coming out and saying you weren't the right one to speak with BUT you did the research and here are the answers to all of your questions. He can't do that because the underlying report was right in many ways. Crying foul because you're a geek does not resolve the issues in the report.
Im a geek and have trouble with questions in public sometimes too but if you want to follow up because you were caught on the spot then do so with specific answers to the questions answered. Instead we see him crying and giving the same old canned answers.
A key point she made was that law enforcement never got a call regarding underage girls. She asked if he ever contacted the police as they'd promised to do. He gave no answer then and none in this whiney response. Whatever your feeling is about prostitution aside, they promised to crack down underage girls. Maybe we should give the geek a few more minutes to think it over...
I know I'm going to get downvoted to oblivion by saying this, but the only reason we're upset by this is because we "know and love" Craig Newmark. If CNN did the exact same thing to a BP exec and got the same kind of answers, would anyone be criticizing them? Or would we be too busy falling all over ourselves pointing out what an asshole the executive was? (No, I'm not calling Newmark an asshole)
This was hardly "gotcha" journalism. If Craigslist says they report these kinds of ads but the relevant authorities say they never receive those reports, that's an actual problem, and CNN has every right to report it, and to question the folks in charge. Newmark's trying to say "Aww, shucks, I just do customer service these days", but the reality is it is his site, he is on the board, and if women and minors are getting hurt because CL fails to adequately police the adult ads it charges money for, then Newmark deserves to sweat over it as much as anyone.
I generally love Craigslist, and I generally hate CNN, but sorry, the shoes are on the other feet for this one.
They edited out how she introduced herself to him, and edited in him standing there paused thinking about the difficult question that was just sprung on him without warning. She was almost certainly very friendly and casual in the beginning, and then she waylays him when he's not ready.
Does he have an obligation to know how his ship is running? Yes. But she took advantage of the fact that he hasn't taken "public relations training" or whatever and is basically a decent guy. What he'll do now is learn the standard PR deflecting non-answer in case something like this happens, and then give a prepared statement later. That's a shame, and that was absolutely distasteful gotcha journalism.
I agree that the editing and production was typical of the CNN I know and hate. But the questions strike me as fair, and it's been a contentious issue long enough that anyone at the top of CL should be well-prepared to deal with them. As much as I hate CNN (and I do, with a passion), it's not their responsibility to coddle millionaires who charge money for sex ads, regardless of how likable, well-intentioned, or geeky they are.
> They edited out how she introduced herself to him, and edited in him standing there paused thinking about the difficult question that was just sprung on him without warning. She was almost certainly very friendly and casual in the beginning, and then she waylays him when he's not ready.
That's why Newmark should have recorded the interview and published it himself.
He has just as much right to report on their conversation as she does.
That's why Newmark should have recorded the interview and published it himself.
He'd have to record his every moment in public to be ready for a surprise Q&A session. Though perhaps that could become another stock delaying tactic: "Could you wait for a moment while I get my independent recording of this exchange started?"
While the reporter's methods were questionable and she was going for a gotcha instead of real dialogue, it does seem that Craigslist's public-messaging about controlling underage prostitution and their real response are 2 different things. They're saying they're on it, but they're not really doing much.
It's difficult to pin the blame on Craigslist since they are simply a medium of communication; prostitution is something that will happen regardless of the communication media available. Before Craigslist, it was newspaper classified ads or Yellow Pages. Before that, it was a certain neighborhood or brothel. Is underage prostitution more common now with digital communication channels available? I don't think so. Look to India or Thailand or the underage trafficking in other parts of the world. It has gone on since well-before anybody heard of Craigslist, the web, or the internet.
The difference is how easy it is to (a) communicate that you are a prostitute and (b) find prostitutes. In other words, as technology has improved, so have the means to quickly find information that you're looking for, whether that information happens to be what the weather is in Cupertino, or which prostitutes are available in your city.
All that being said, it seems that with Craigslist being the source of more and more of the "where are adult services in my neighborhood?" queries in the 21st century, they have responsibility to make sure that underage girls aren't being taken advantage of. How they do that? I'm not sure. Off the top of my head, I can't think of a good solution if your goal (as it seems Craiglist's is) is to facilitate consensual adult sexual connections. If that's your goal, you don't want to turn away prostitutes by actually verifying their age, because that would require ID-based verification of some kind, which I'm guessing most prostitutes wouldn't want to volunteer (fear of law enforcement, etc.) So short of that, what do you do? Image-verification to verify age? That's next to impossible with so much variation among people.
Prostitution is an ugly world. If I were suddenly given the reigns of control at Craigslist, I think I would turn off adult services, even knowing that within very-short-order another site or sites would pop up to fill the gap. I personally wouldn't be able to sleep at night knowing that even a few people were being exploited because of a communication medium that I created. I guess that's sort of a philosophical debate that needs to be had. Because if you take that to its logical conclusion you shouldn't be able to sleep at night if you created the foundations of the Internet, or the foundations of the Web, or even a communication medium like the telephone. Heck, even going back further, wouldn't that also mean that even creating something like a piece of real estate -- say, a hotel -- is bad because somebody might at some point be exploited at the place you created.
I'll have to give this all some more thought, as I've found myself trapped in a strange place where my logical mind tells me I should have a laissez faire attitude about what I create because people will do bad things with technology and I can't control that, while my "heart" ,for lack of a better word, tells me that if I were in charge of Craigslist I should try to do something. But then I'm back to the, "what should I do?" question. Oh, life.
What happens when the Adult Services posters just start posting in a different area of your site? Just because you turn it off doesn't mean they'll leave.
Why does Craigslist bear the responsibility for making sure underage girls aren't exploited? Doesn't that responsibility ultimately lie with law enforcement and the folks actually committing crimes?
Then there is the whole argument about whether the criminalization of prostitution (as opposed to regulation) makes it that much easier for young girls to be victimized in the first place.
The point being. This is complicated stuff. What about the consenting adults who have used the adult sections of Craigslist to great effect?
I would have no issues with conscience if I ran Craigslist.
Why doesn't local law enforcement just use Craigslist as an easy way to find these people and put them behind bars? It's not like these things are being broadcast to a select group of people in a back{room,alley}. They are being broadcast to the world on a public forum. Law enforcement can just search the ads, arrange meetups with the people and bust them. It's not like these people will stop doing what they are doing because Craigslist prevented them from posting an ad.
To be honest, I have a hard time feeling bad for Craig.
Craigslist made him millions (yes, yes, we all know the story about how he wants to keep CL intentionally small, spurning potential hundreds of millions in profits - but still, he's a millionaire). Part of his money-making strategy is charging prostitutes to post sex ads.
So he can use "I'm a socially inept geek" excuse as long as he wants, I think it's only fair that he is asked some tough questions about it.
To be honest, I have a hard time feeling bad for Internet Service Providers.
ISPs have made millions. Part of their money-making strategy is charging child pornographers to upload child pornography.
So they can use the "I'm a common carrier" excuse as long as they want, but I think it's only fair that they are asked some tough questions about it. Why can't a team of lawyers review every packet flowing over the public Internet to make sure that nothing "bad" is going on? It sounds simple to me, someone who loves children but has no idea how the Internet or computers work.
Sounds pretty dumb, doesn't it? Why is Craigslist not held to the same (non-) standard as the ISPs? Why don't we just censor the entire Internet For The Children!?
Becuase Craigslist supposedly filters these ads. I'm not saying Craigslist should filter these ads. I'm saying they already do filter these ads. So if there are still problems the question becomes, why does your filtering not work?
Your ISP is doing no such thing (well, unless it's Comcast)
Craigslist has manually screened every adult services post since May 2009. In a blog post last month, they noted: "before being posted each individual ad is reviewed by an attorney licensed to practice law in the US, trained to enforce craigslist’s posting guidelines, which are stricter than those typically used by yellow pages, newspapers, or any other company that we are aware of. More than 700,000 ads were rejected by those attorneys in the year following implementation of manual screening, for falling short of our guidelines."
This is why the news industry is dying. Too much bullshit.
The story is: Craigslist says they do X - explain what X is.
We verified with Y & Z and they say that have not received any reports/information inline with X. So then they contact craigslist and ask them questions:
1. When did you implement X
2. How is it going?
3. Do you have any metrics/success stories.
4. Who do you contact? (Follow up with them to verify)
5. When we talked to Y & Z they said that they weren't contacted by you can you explain why that is. Since by your own policy X that is what should have been done.
Then I may have learned something. Hell you could even through in some stats so I know how big the problem is -- is it 1 out of 100, 1 out million etc.
Instead you get people posting on the internet interviewing in cars, and ambushing someone who doesn't have time to research anything at all. Perhaps if they ambushed the head of program X they would know the relevant details, but that person might not even exist.
I'm not really sure how Craigslist is supposed to stop these ads. I believe they require a credit card, which should only be available to people over 18.
As someone noted, you can't just look at the ad and determine age. And while prostitution is illegal, escorting is not, nor is a massage from a naked lady.
To me it would seem there are two main cases where Craig could report an incident:
1) An ad openly states that the person providing service is under 18.
2) The person in the ad is known to be under 18, e.g., previously arrested.
But short of that, it's not clear to me what Craig could do here. Although, if I were Craig, I'd probably remove the sections altogether. It frankly just doesn't seem to be worth the hassle. I can't believe they make much money from it, and it does cast a slightly dirty tint on the site.
If Amber had done her homework, she would have known
ambushing me with questions I am not qualified to answer,
or even the right person to ask, would not get CNN’s
viewers the accurate information they deserve.
This proves his naivety more than whatever happened in the interview could have. Believing CNN gives a damn about conveying accurate information to its viewers is like believing in Santa Claus.
I don't think it's right how, in his "defense", he crouches behind "borderline Asperger's".
I'm about to briefly rant on it because I think a lot of less rich and less notorious nerds and geeks in my industry make the same, lame, bullcurse excuse whenever they can.
He remarks: "I don’t have a normal person’s ability to sense when someone might be looking to take advantage of these shortcomings."
You know what? I cry BullCurse.
If you watch a tape of the interview, it's pretty clear (at least to me) that he knows damn well - from the start - that he's in a "gotcha" interview. He starts off highly defensive. Eventually she pins him on a question that as a freaking board member of the corporation, and its founder -- he really ought to be able to yet was not prepared to handle. If it were not a privately held firm, the stock would have justifiably fell on his performance. If he depended on being elected to the board - he might be in trouble.
It may very well be the case (and personally, I believe it is) that Craigslist is taking a fairly sane albeit difficult to explain approach to the issues here. I don't think they are an evil hub in that regard.
To cower behind "Oh, it's my borderline Asperger's and the mean lady tricked me...." that gives me some doubt about Craigslist's concern and competence in this area.
Pardon me, but: that was dumb, Craig. Dumb arrogant, not dumb Asperger's.
Listen carefully, she's even more clueless than you think. She says "posting", not "hosting". Personally, I am surprised how terribly Craig handled this - the appropriate response was simply "Just as the phone company can't police the calls used for illegal acts, there is no way we can police a service of millions of users, but we try. Stopping crime is the role of the police department (that's what taxes are for)".
Here's the thing: You pay CL a fee. CL has a review policy. CL reviews and then posts your ad. Posting. That ain't hosting: CL has explicitly taken some deeper editorial responsibility there.
Does a newspaper "host" or "publish" classified ads? Can classified ads in papers still be used to advertise illegal activity? Sure, they can. IMO, CL's best defense would have been to go grab a copy of a typical independent news weekly -- one that has all the personal and prostitute ads in the back.
What are you talking about? So if I pay someone to broadcast something, they are responsible if I use it to break the law? If I photocopy a book, is Xerox responsible? How is this any different from the reasons for common carrier regulation?
it is a very disturbing trend - the carriers, be it for example Craigslist or Rackspace are more and more expected (and they actually [self/forced to] obey the expectation to the ever increasing degree) to perform censorship of their users' information flows. Once you cross that line, for all the good intentions, say fighting prostitution or internet phishing/scam, the difference between for example adult services posts, doubtfully looking surveys or political speech is just a mere technicality.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 158 ms ] threadMore often than one might expect, the ambush is intentional. They want to appear smart, or to improve their position at the expense of others. To be prepared for anything is impossible. That's why most public figures practice being ambushed, and not freezing. It took me a few times to get the hang of it, but it's well worth it in the politics of corporate life.
How could he not have considered these questions previously? This is a major issue for Craigslist and they must have had a lot of discussions about it. Being unable to answer questions about about this topic is inexecusable. Maybe his answer would be along the lines of "I don't know about that specific ad but these are our procedures in general ...." would be fine.
The modern version of Cardinal Richelieu: "If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, I will find something in them which will hang him."
She seems to have the same strange misunderstanding of large-scale websites that people sometimes voice regarding youtube or google. At one point he asks if she reported an ad she's questioning him about. She says "why do I have the responsibility to report this to you when it's your website? You're the one hosting this online." It's as if she's completely unaware of the scale of the system, and expecting Craig to hand-verify each and every ad.
[0] http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/crime/2010/08/03/cra... - during the last half of the clip
So I find it interesting that all current comments on this thread are critical of CNN. A journalist's job is to ask tough questions. I haven't seen anyone refute the fact that a huge amount of sex trafficking (of minors and adults) hapens through Craig's List.
In the post, Craig talks about his "support for our troops and veterans" and his support for "Net neutrality". That support is great, but it is irrelevant when it comes to the question of sex trafficking of minor girls.
So why should journalists not ask tough questions of the founder of Craig's List ?
Something like "wouldn't it be possible for you to filter ads based on keywords that suggest illegal activities," or "couldn't you use the same techniques that other companies use to block spam to block illegal content" would have been tough questions. But she didn't ask any of them; instead, she asked a facile 'gotcha' question about a particular post, in an obvious attempt to get him to say something embarrassing.
It was a cheap, pandering bit of entertainment TV; if that's what 'journalism' has been reduced to, we ought to wish it a speedy death.
1. Can people trust that children are not being sex-trafficked on Craigslist?
2. What are you guys doing to protect these girls?
3. [Craigslist says its screen these ads manually, but] look at this ad. It says young, sexy, sweet, and bubbly. Clearly here she writes $250 an hour. I mean what do you think she's selling in her bra and underwear? A dinner date? And she's in her bra and underwear?
4. Why do I have the responsibility to report this to you when it's your Web site?
In my opinion:
1 is unfair. You can't say with 100% certainty that any popular website is immune from something like that, so he can't say "yes". He certainly can't say "no" without making the site look bad. So how does he answer?
2 is unfair. If you ask about a specific ad, they can look in the system and say "that ad was placed on X, it was reported as problematic by a user on Y, we checked it on Z and reported it to the police." If you say in general "what are you doing about 'these girls'" then you're making him look bad by saying "I don't know 'which girls' you're referring to." Again, if you don't give him a chance to make a proper answer, then you're not really being fair as a reporter.
3 is similarly unfair unless he's at his computer and can give you the information. Obviously the post in question is crossing the line, but what do you expect him to do about it right then? If they manually screen the ads, then someone's not doing their job right, but can you say with 100% certainty that everyone at CNN is doing their job right 100% of the time?
Finally, 4 is unfair because if she'd actually reported the thing using the proper channels, then the post would have been gone before she'd have time to put together her story. But that would go against her interests, so it's much better to ambush him in person with an ad he's never seen before.
On the other hand, if the question is the less-personal and less-exasperated "why do you rely on your users to police your site?" then that's a fair question.
The underlying question for this reporter is this: Is your goal to get answers? Or is your goal to embarrass him for ratings?
(EDIT: replacing "stupid" with "unfair".)
2 is unfair. If you ask about a specific ad, they can look in the system and say "that ad was placed on X, it was reported as problematic by a user on Y, we checked it on Z and reported it to the police.
The problem in this imaginary chain of events is "it was reported as problematic by a user on Y". What the hell is the user doing reporting it? Why aren't there dedicated staff?
These guys are reported to make $150 mill a year with just 32 staff. That they're not picking up on this shit is just plain negligence.
Just because we as programmers are used to dealing with huge data sets doesn't actually mean this problem isn't policable with a couple of people.
They could pay a couple of students minimum wage to vet all their adult adverts.
In the old days the vet would be in the phone call placing the order for an advert. Just because it's now all handled by a computer in the form of a web form so staff costs are reduced doesn't mean there's any less responsibility on the company. It's a cost. You pass it on to the advertiser.
And they're not doing it.
Because that's how the site works. Period. It's a community-policed bulletin board. Is there something inherently wrong with that?
> They could pay a couple of students minimum wage to vet all their adult adverts.
There may be liability issues here. If they declare, "we are policing the site to get rid of all potentially illegal posts," and then they miss one, they could get sued by the victim.
The criticism is that these measures don't seem to be sufficient, that coordination with law enforcement has been piecemeal at best, and that CL does not invest more (or all) of the profit from these ads back into anti-trafficking measures.
I wonder though about the interview segment with the law enforcement guy. Wouldn't they prefer CL just post everything and not vet the posts for possible illegal activities? I mean, think about it: it's a public forum where people are willing to outright advertise the illegal activities they're willing to provide. It sounds like a law-enforcement wet dream.
1. It's impossible to say that about anything. Can you trust that children are not being sex-trafficked at walmart & mcdonalds?
2. This is a good question.
3. Asking him to speculate on an ad is stupid. She could be a stripper or something else, hell now I'm speculating... maybe that was the only picture she had
4. This relates to number 2. If they say that they scan those that have been reported by users since there are a lot more users than staff then it's everyones responsibility. If you see something that's wrong you should report it. In much the same way we don't expect pg to review every post and news story -- there is a way for us to report by flagging.
3. Head on over to CL and tell me how hard it is for you to find a similar ad that's clearly for prostitution. It's a completely fair question, even if it does have a surface similarity to unfair gotcha-style questions.
4. I addressed this in a cousin comment.
Clearly, CL is going above and beyond their legal requirement to vet these ads. Any article of substance on the topic will lay that out plain as day.
So why do you feel it necessary to imply that you can't "trust" them, or that CL is willingly profiting from prostitution or human trafficking?
Would you grant that sufficient concentration would make it a different class of problem?
Clearly, CL is going above and beyond their legal requirement to vet these ads.
Okay, so what? Nobody serious seems to be claiming anyone from CL should go to jail. The only argument I've heard is that whatever CL is doing isn't working, and they need to do more to actually address the problem. People certainly have the right to make this argument, don't they?
So why do you feel it necessary to imply that you can't "trust" them, or that CL is willingly profiting from prostitution or human trafficking?
If it's true that CL is willingly profiting from sex ads, and it's true that sex ads on CL are a primary tool of sex traffickers, and it's true that CL knows this, how is it not then the case that CL is willingly profiting from sex trafficking? I'm not saying or implying that it's their goal or their desire to do so, but the bottom line is that they are, and they could be doing more so that they aren't.
How is seeing an ad for underage prostitution, and not reporting it because "it's someone else's responsibility," any different then seeing an assault in progress on the street and claiming that it's the police's responsibility to get involved in that, and not yours?
If someone just ignores a murder/assault/robbery in-progress we would think of them as an asshole, so why is this reporter different? Because she's a journalist?
This is not to defend Craigslist, but to say that if she didn't report the crime to anyone she is just as guilty. Just because she is a reporter following a 'hot story' doesn't make her any less responsible for ignoring a crime that she could have helped to prevent. I don't like the idea that since the ad was posted on Craig's site, then he is responsible for it, but someone that actually saw it and knew that something was awry, and did nothing can take some sort of moral high-ground.
Anyone seen any evidence this reporter made any attempt to continue to ask those questions at a later time. Or did she stop the interview the second she saw Newmark looked bad at the same time she yelled the questions once.
Ok reporter lets take a look at your backyard. CNN will blatantly sensationalize and falsify stories just to get ratings. Then turn around and blame the sources when they are caught.
Your the one reporting the story Ms. Reporter, why aren't you verifying? Who here is really profiteering from base human impulses?
On one hand the reporter is blaming Craig for providing the canvas for people to write bad things; on the other the reporter is actually doing the lying and manipulating to get paid.
This is like blaming the business owner for the comments graffiti artists put on his walls. Even if he does his best to wash them off whenever he finds them.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07...
p.s. Lest I be misread, I am not defending Craigslist here, just annoyed at persistent MSM claims to moral superiority.
Calling someone else's backyard a mess might feel good - but doesn't say anything about your own.
(Prime Minister Hacker speaking to Bernard Woolley, his hapless Principal Private Secretary who has made unwise remarks to the press after being ambushed):
"If you have nothing to say, say nothing. But better, have something to say and say it, no matter what they ask. Pay no attention to the question, make your own statement. If they ask you the same question again, you just say, 'That's not the question' or 'I think the more important question is this:' Then you make another statement of your own."
How about coming out and saying you weren't the right one to speak with BUT you did the research and here are the answers to all of your questions. He can't do that because the underlying report was right in many ways. Crying foul because you're a geek does not resolve the issues in the report.
Im a geek and have trouble with questions in public sometimes too but if you want to follow up because you were caught on the spot then do so with specific answers to the questions answered. Instead we see him crying and giving the same old canned answers.
This was hardly "gotcha" journalism. If Craigslist says they report these kinds of ads but the relevant authorities say they never receive those reports, that's an actual problem, and CNN has every right to report it, and to question the folks in charge. Newmark's trying to say "Aww, shucks, I just do customer service these days", but the reality is it is his site, he is on the board, and if women and minors are getting hurt because CL fails to adequately police the adult ads it charges money for, then Newmark deserves to sweat over it as much as anyone.
I generally love Craigslist, and I generally hate CNN, but sorry, the shoes are on the other feet for this one.
They edited out how she introduced herself to him, and edited in him standing there paused thinking about the difficult question that was just sprung on him without warning. She was almost certainly very friendly and casual in the beginning, and then she waylays him when he's not ready.
Does he have an obligation to know how his ship is running? Yes. But she took advantage of the fact that he hasn't taken "public relations training" or whatever and is basically a decent guy. What he'll do now is learn the standard PR deflecting non-answer in case something like this happens, and then give a prepared statement later. That's a shame, and that was absolutely distasteful gotcha journalism.
That's why Newmark should have recorded the interview and published it himself.
He has just as much right to report on their conversation as she does.
He'd have to record his every moment in public to be ready for a surprise Q&A session. Though perhaps that could become another stock delaying tactic: "Could you wait for a moment while I get my independent recording of this exchange started?"
"What are you doing to protect these young girls?" I would have probably answered along the lines of,
"Protect her from what, getting $500?"
It's difficult to pin the blame on Craigslist since they are simply a medium of communication; prostitution is something that will happen regardless of the communication media available. Before Craigslist, it was newspaper classified ads or Yellow Pages. Before that, it was a certain neighborhood or brothel. Is underage prostitution more common now with digital communication channels available? I don't think so. Look to India or Thailand or the underage trafficking in other parts of the world. It has gone on since well-before anybody heard of Craigslist, the web, or the internet.
The difference is how easy it is to (a) communicate that you are a prostitute and (b) find prostitutes. In other words, as technology has improved, so have the means to quickly find information that you're looking for, whether that information happens to be what the weather is in Cupertino, or which prostitutes are available in your city.
All that being said, it seems that with Craigslist being the source of more and more of the "where are adult services in my neighborhood?" queries in the 21st century, they have responsibility to make sure that underage girls aren't being taken advantage of. How they do that? I'm not sure. Off the top of my head, I can't think of a good solution if your goal (as it seems Craiglist's is) is to facilitate consensual adult sexual connections. If that's your goal, you don't want to turn away prostitutes by actually verifying their age, because that would require ID-based verification of some kind, which I'm guessing most prostitutes wouldn't want to volunteer (fear of law enforcement, etc.) So short of that, what do you do? Image-verification to verify age? That's next to impossible with so much variation among people.
Prostitution is an ugly world. If I were suddenly given the reigns of control at Craigslist, I think I would turn off adult services, even knowing that within very-short-order another site or sites would pop up to fill the gap. I personally wouldn't be able to sleep at night knowing that even a few people were being exploited because of a communication medium that I created. I guess that's sort of a philosophical debate that needs to be had. Because if you take that to its logical conclusion you shouldn't be able to sleep at night if you created the foundations of the Internet, or the foundations of the Web, or even a communication medium like the telephone. Heck, even going back further, wouldn't that also mean that even creating something like a piece of real estate -- say, a hotel -- is bad because somebody might at some point be exploited at the place you created.
I'll have to give this all some more thought, as I've found myself trapped in a strange place where my logical mind tells me I should have a laissez faire attitude about what I create because people will do bad things with technology and I can't control that, while my "heart" ,for lack of a better word, tells me that if I were in charge of Craigslist I should try to do something. But then I'm back to the, "what should I do?" question. Oh, life.
Then there is the whole argument about whether the criminalization of prostitution (as opposed to regulation) makes it that much easier for young girls to be victimized in the first place.
The point being. This is complicated stuff. What about the consenting adults who have used the adult sections of Craigslist to great effect?
I would have no issues with conscience if I ran Craigslist.
Why doesn't local law enforcement just use Craigslist as an easy way to find these people and put them behind bars? It's not like these things are being broadcast to a select group of people in a back{room,alley}. They are being broadcast to the world on a public forum. Law enforcement can just search the ads, arrange meetups with the people and bust them. It's not like these people will stop doing what they are doing because Craigslist prevented them from posting an ad.
This.
Craigslist made him millions (yes, yes, we all know the story about how he wants to keep CL intentionally small, spurning potential hundreds of millions in profits - but still, he's a millionaire). Part of his money-making strategy is charging prostitutes to post sex ads.
So he can use "I'm a socially inept geek" excuse as long as he wants, I think it's only fair that he is asked some tough questions about it.
ISPs have made millions. Part of their money-making strategy is charging child pornographers to upload child pornography.
So they can use the "I'm a common carrier" excuse as long as they want, but I think it's only fair that they are asked some tough questions about it. Why can't a team of lawyers review every packet flowing over the public Internet to make sure that nothing "bad" is going on? It sounds simple to me, someone who loves children but has no idea how the Internet or computers work.
Sounds pretty dumb, doesn't it? Why is Craigslist not held to the same (non-) standard as the ISPs? Why don't we just censor the entire Internet For The Children!?
Your ISP is doing no such thing (well, unless it's Comcast)
http://blog.craigslist.org/2010/08/manual-screening-matters/
Craigslist also does other stuff, including phone verification for every adult services ad: http://blog.craigslist.org/2010/05/an-open-invitation-to-rac...
As Craigslist notes, this is a lot more screening than any other services does, including classifieds or the Yellow Pages.
The story is: Craigslist says they do X - explain what X is. We verified with Y & Z and they say that have not received any reports/information inline with X. So then they contact craigslist and ask them questions:
1. When did you implement X
2. How is it going?
3. Do you have any metrics/success stories.
4. Who do you contact? (Follow up with them to verify)
5. When we talked to Y & Z they said that they weren't contacted by you can you explain why that is. Since by your own policy X that is what should have been done.
Then I may have learned something. Hell you could even through in some stats so I know how big the problem is -- is it 1 out of 100, 1 out million etc.
Instead you get people posting on the internet interviewing in cars, and ambushing someone who doesn't have time to research anything at all. Perhaps if they ambushed the head of program X they would know the relevant details, but that person might not even exist.
As someone noted, you can't just look at the ad and determine age. And while prostitution is illegal, escorting is not, nor is a massage from a naked lady.
To me it would seem there are two main cases where Craig could report an incident:
1) An ad openly states that the person providing service is under 18.
2) The person in the ad is known to be under 18, e.g., previously arrested.
But short of that, it's not clear to me what Craig could do here. Although, if I were Craig, I'd probably remove the sections altogether. It frankly just doesn't seem to be worth the hassle. I can't believe they make much money from it, and it does cast a slightly dirty tint on the site.
I don't think Craig/CL are profiteers, but I also don't think they should have that section. It's clearly being abused regardless any original intent.
Their defense that plenty of other sites and magazines/newspapers have the same content doesn't fly with me. Take the higher ground.
Maybe not, but I can be upset with her methods. Going after a plausible story is not an excuse for being an asshole.
I'm about to briefly rant on it because I think a lot of less rich and less notorious nerds and geeks in my industry make the same, lame, bullcurse excuse whenever they can.
He remarks: "I don’t have a normal person’s ability to sense when someone might be looking to take advantage of these shortcomings."
You know what? I cry BullCurse.
If you watch a tape of the interview, it's pretty clear (at least to me) that he knows damn well - from the start - that he's in a "gotcha" interview. He starts off highly defensive. Eventually she pins him on a question that as a freaking board member of the corporation, and its founder -- he really ought to be able to yet was not prepared to handle. If it were not a privately held firm, the stock would have justifiably fell on his performance. If he depended on being elected to the board - he might be in trouble.
It may very well be the case (and personally, I believe it is) that Craigslist is taking a fairly sane albeit difficult to explain approach to the issues here. I don't think they are an evil hub in that regard.
To cower behind "Oh, it's my borderline Asperger's and the mean lady tricked me...." that gives me some doubt about Craigslist's concern and competence in this area.
Pardon me, but: that was dumb, Craig. Dumb arrogant, not dumb Asperger's.
Here's the thing: You pay CL a fee. CL has a review policy. CL reviews and then posts your ad. Posting. That ain't hosting: CL has explicitly taken some deeper editorial responsibility there.
Does a newspaper "host" or "publish" classified ads? Can classified ads in papers still be used to advertise illegal activity? Sure, they can. IMO, CL's best defense would have been to go grab a copy of a typical independent news weekly -- one that has all the personal and prostitute ads in the back.