Thursday, June 2, 2011

A High-Tech Schmear

What's a guy named Weiner to do? Mostly rise above the pokes and jokes and try not to erupt when things come to a head.


But what do you do when several determined forces align to actually try to take you down? Especially when the normal arbiters of what stories have legs and will lead have lost any sense of professionalism? And have decided to follow the absolute lowest scum to call itself a journalist since Pulitzer and Hearst sold their souls for a penny a paper? It turns out taking the high road doesn't always work.


On Friday night, a seemingly deeply-disturbed individual who had been obsessed with Rep. Anthony Weiner for quite some time, tweeted that he had evidence that the member of Congress had sent a picture of his member to a young woman follower via Twitter.


To whom did he release this screenshot of the tumescent tweet? Why to said aforementioned scum. Said scum began an assault to lower the Member's standing in the eyes of the public that ought to have fizzled prematurely over a long holiday weekend, but oddly, it just got bigger.


Instead of practicing their craft, the pillars of the Fourth Estate braced themselves and dove right in.


Pundits like Alexandra Petri on WaPo had no qualms about describing some of the women who were following Weiner as "nubile out-of-state houris" as though all young women are breathless Monica Lewinskys hoping for the chance to service a powerful pervert. Even NPR, whom Weiner had forcefully defended against defunding, succumbed to the salacious. Did no one have the common sense to question this story from its dubious origins to its despicable mouthpiece?


Actually, some people did. As seems to be the case more and more often, MSM with all of its resources, experience, and access finds itself getting shamed by handfuls of people with laptops and questions. Firedoglake did this during the Scooter Libby trial. CAAFlog caught a major error in the SCOTUS ruling Kennedy v. Louisiana. Tiger Woods, etc. etc.


Add to that growing list of important impotence, the case of Weiner's wiener. When the Representative of New York's 9th District said he had been hacked, the basic questions of who, what, how, why, where, and when were not asked by those who get paid to ask them, but by bloggers. The most likely answers came from Cannonfire.


I was on Fark when someone linked to the Cannonfire post. Several of us thought the work that Joseph and milowent had done was pretty damn convincing, so we tried it ourselves. In fact, we hacked my Twitter. We got pretty much the same results. Without getting too technical, I'll just say that the only way we could get an image that looked like the screen shot of the one supposedly sent by the Member of his member, was if it was sent by someone else to my yfrog account:
With URL information.
The URL did not show up until after the image had posted to my Twitter feed. So whoever took the screen shot off Weiner's yfrog account knew it was there before it was published. In other words, they put it there.


To give credit where credit is due, Rachel Maddow did a fine segment last night on how a hack would be possible. They seem to have missed the implications of the URLess image, but I'm sure that will get out soon.
Update: Another account of the Fark hack can be found here with a better technical description of what we did.


How does one recover after a long day of being an e-dick? With a bagel and lox from So's Your Mom. The closest I can get to a NY deli.

2 comments:

Fixer said...

Hey, thanks for the heads up about Google Chrome. Didn't realize how bad Firefox had gotten until I installed Chrome.

Opti said...

Hi Fixer! Glad you liked it :)