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Are games bloggers less trustworthy than 'real' journalists? photo

In November of last year (that's last year, not today as some outlets might lead you to believe), the Federal Trade Commission took a worrying interest in online media, singling out game bloggers in particular as outlets that need to disclose whenever they receive free items pertaining to reviews published by their site. The New York Times, (late to the party as most newspapers are), has agreed with the assessment, basically insinuating that bloggers are far less trustworthy than real journalists.

"The readers of his blog are unlikely to expect that he has received the video game system free of charge in exchange for his review of the product, and given the value of the video game system, this fact would likely materially affect the credibility they attach to his endorsement," states the FTC in one of its examples. "Accordingly, the blogger should clearly and conspicuously disclose that he received the gaming system free of charge."

The FTC seems to believe that this is only necessary for bloggers and not other forms of media, indicating that a site like Destructoid is somehow far less trustworthy than your average print rag. The New York Times goes even further, implying heavily that blogs work to please sponsors: "But unlike postings in most journalism outlets or independent review sites, most companies can be assured that there will not be a negative review: if [blogger Colleen Padilla] does not like a product, she simply does not post anything about it."

Hit the jump for my thoughts. 

This is an interesting issue that is going to see a lot of overreaction, but first of all, the major problem here is how one distinguishes bloggers and journalists. It's become a very gray area, especially since many bloggers have found themselves to be more trusted than more so-called "journalists." I'd personally take the words of any blogger over some hack writer for a dishrag tabloid like The Daily Mail or The Sun.

These days, it's both unfair and untrue to imply, as The NY Times has done, that bloggers are somehow less trustworthy than "real" journalists. After all, purveyors of aged news like the NY Times and sensationalist news stations like FOX News, often have to worry about corporate sponsorship and pleasing ad networks far more than bloggers, who are generally independent and free to express their own opinion. To say that it's bloggers who have tainted opinions, when it's "professional" news outlets that are very clearly ruled by marketing, is somewhat hypocritical. 

That's not to say that bloggers are, themselves, angels. You get a lot of liars on sites like Tumblr, who will just spit up any old crap in the name of freebies and attention. The point is that you can't really separate bloggers and journalists, and then state that one group is more truthful than the other. Both sets of media have their angels and devils. 

As far as the FTC goes, I personally find it very disturbing that a government-operated body wants to exert control over the Internet. Sadly, it's an inevitability that one day the Internet will be as regulated and restricted as television and print media, but I would hope that we still have a few years of free enterprise left online. While The NY Times would like to color our impression of blogs and imply that a lack of accountability (not that print media ever takes responsibility) could lead to corruption, I embrace the freedom that blogging gives us, the ability to say whatever we want. 

The FTC states that people have a right to know when they're being "pitched to," which I find hilarious coming from an organization that allowed those duplicitous corn syrup commercials to run. I guess lies and misinformation are okay when they're government-sponsored lies and misinformation. It's alarming to me that blogs are being painted as the untrustworthy ones. Neither the FTC nor print media have an excellent reputation.

As far as games "journalism" goes, all I can say is that, again, I'll trust the opinions of an outlet that simply gets free games than an outlet that works to get hot exclusive reviews and buys its way to the top of the food chain. The FTC and NY Times would somehow have us believe that Gamespot is more trustworthy than an enthusiast blog. simply because one is "professional." As far as I recall it was a "professional" outlet that fired one of its editors for giving a game a negative review.

I just think the FTC has this the wrong way around -- focusing on the accountability of bloggers more than big corporate outlets. It's the big boys who I'd be keeping an eye on, not the little guys who hold themselves accountable to no overbearing company, nor has a marketing department to worry about.

The FTC of course is mainly focused on personal sites written by unpaid hobbyists, but even so, it's a bit cheeky to hold these small enthusiasts more accountable than professionals. While some people are misinterpreting the FTC's guidelines and thinking all blogs are being thrown under a bus, I think the truth of the matter is even worse a little. Why should we make small hobbyists accountable? Let them do their thing. 

If the FTC did want Destructoid and other paid blogs to disclose every little thing we receive, that would be fine in and of itself, if rather invasive. However, it's the singling out of bloggers and not "real" journalists that would piss me off. We are not the ones who should be scrutinized, and besides which, I think our readers are smart enough to know that we already get review copies and the occasional bit of swag. We've never denied it, and we've often made fun articles whenever we get cool stuff. That's more than can be said for the average magazine, that rarely ever discloses a thing. 

If somebody wants to believe that review copies color our opinions, that's up to them. We can't convince them otherwise. We're not going to stop accepting review copies, because we're an indie site and until one of these morally outraged readers offers to spend the necessary several hundred bucks per month for the review team, we're not going to go out buying every single videogame under the Sun.

I think our track record speaks for itself, however. Just check out Metacritic and see how our scores stack up to those of more "trusted" outlets. You can't ever say that a free review copy guarantees a high score from Destructoid. Just check out the Resistance: Retribution review or the Warriors Orochi 2 review. Both of those games were given to me. 

I'll continue to trust bloggers more than "real" journalists, and I'll continue to call myself a blogger. The word "journalist" is a word I'm ashamed of, and it's thanks to just how untrustworthy journos have become. People ought to perhaps consider that the next time they put bloggers under a microscope.


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78 comments | showing # 51 to 78

Chilly's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 16:26
Chilly
Me thinks someone's not getting their share of free stuffs *coughNYT*.
KIDA26's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 16:27
KIDA26
@ pizzapartyandurmomshosting:

Yep, I live in a bubble.. you nailed it. Come talk to me when you learn the difference between their and there. Two wrongs don't make a right... Blck Dove's response was wrong, and yours was too. You sound like an ignorant jackass.
Sentry's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 16:34
Sentry
Jim Sterling - I think you're underselling your relevance and/or credibility. The shape of opinion is a fundamental aspect of news-gathering entities and influential "blogs" alike.

Whatever the composition of Destructoid's basic parts, I consider it be worthy of the term "news site".

Just like I consider Fox News to be hacks.
Los255's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 16:40
Los255
I would like to see a list of what the FTC sees as more professional and trustworthy than others.
Jim Sterling's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 16:56
Jim Sterling
When did this thread become about racism btw?
Sentry's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 17:17
Sentry
Every internet thread is about racism.
Tubatic's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 17:20
Tubatic
I HEARD THIS THREAD WAS ABOUT RACISM WHO'S SIDE SHOULD I BE ON GUYS?!

I've been itching to use my new blues white racism card... :D :D :D
Elsa's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 17:41
Elsa
Nicely written!
... though it's a complex issue.
Inmortal2k9's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 18:00
Inmortal2k9
Destructoid is far better than any other fuckin videogame site or print mag.
ShadowKirby's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 18:06
ShadowKirby
It's easy to say bloggers are better than journalists when you compare Dtoid to Fox or the Daily Mail but what about gaming journalists like the one on Gamasutra that make researches and check their sources. Not telling that are not doing it but some are.
Happymeowmeow's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 18:35
Happymeowmeow
I know I'm being naive, but why must it be taken for granted that blogs over a certain popularity have to get their games for free? Isn't it always a matter of choice?
Ah I'm just spinning my racist wheels here. It's not like objectivity is some quantifiable thing. A homeless dude blogging from a litter box can still hate Italian cinema. Maybe his dad used to beat him with a large prosciutto.
Or he just hates Italians because he's racist like that
Blackhat's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 18:36
Blackhat
I'd assume thing like Zero Punctuation would put a lot of holes in this theory. As long as we aren't using IGN "It's a 7!" style sites, most seem trustworthy. Plus, as long as they talk about the gameplay itself, you can tell what is good and what isn't.
protomark's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 19:50
protomark
i can't fully trust a game reviewer who is also a game journalist. i'm not talking about "free games," i'm talking about getting press exclusives, which means more site traffic and clicks, which means more ad revenue. Publishers do not throw that shit around - at least, it would not be smart of them to do so. A news site/popular blog who is friendly to publishers might get some friendliness in return. implied incentive.

Then again, i really have no clue what the hell i'm talking about
Laird's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 20:28
Laird
"Are games Bloggers less trustworthy than 'real' journalists?" In a word: no.

I'm always pretty confused when people blur the line between reviewing and journalism. Journalism is supposed to be about objective truth (what passes doesn't always meet this criteria, though). Reviewing is about subjective opinions. Yeah, if you report on some new game coming out, you're doing journalism. But if you review a game, you're not.
Sentry's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/13/2009 20:51
Sentry
@Laird - Well-stated.
DaedHead8's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/14/2009 01:14
DaedHead8
I had something interesting to say but then racism happened and now I'm laughing with Sentry and Tubatic.
sohnvonben's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/14/2009 01:22
sohnvonben
ah....I love reading your articles....
Chronic Logic's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/14/2009 02:56
Chronic Logic
This is all rubbish. The real question is "Are amateurs more trustworthy than professionals?
Sexualchocolate's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/14/2009 05:15
Sexualchocolate
Aha! That explains it!

Sony made Jim pay for his PS3!
sluxi's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/14/2009 06:20
sluxi
Well, seeing that I don't exactly highly trust the gaming press for neutral reviewing these days in light of recent events and constant high scores for well known franchises I don't see this so much as a problem for gaming-focused blogs. The worst they can be is just as bad as the regular gaming press.
Tye The Czar's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/14/2009 09:00
Tye The Czar
@SnakeDude4Life:
You are very correct. In fact, Corporate Media are the ones who have complete control on what news they want you to see and don't.
For example: Rupert Murdoch, boss of News Corporation, is the owner of Fox, Fox "News"(LOL Fair & Balanced), Wall Street Journal, IGN, and even MySpace. Also, did you all know that they have been hacking into people's personal information in order to get stories. And FTC is going after independent game journalists?
Go to http://stopbigmedia.com/ to help stick it UP the man's.
kjohnson1585's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/14/2009 12:46
kjohnson1585
As a budding blogger myself, I think that blogging in itself is a "twist" on traditional journalism. Granted, we haven't had legit, objective journalism in a while, but while journalism is pretending to be objective while its not, blogging at least embraces that free-subjective elements, aggregating news while defining an opinion on it. The GOOD blogger writes his/her opinions coherently, using solid arguments (or genuinely funny humor) to make his/her point. The blogger, ie, is more a decent writer than a journalist. It's ultimately up to you if the blogger provides content and a style that you enjoy seeing.
mikeyed's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/15/2009 01:34
mikeyed
The problem is that it's really up to a reader to be responsible about what they're reading (to make a decision about the reliability of said the material in question) and not the job of the government's to regulate what is being written. So bloggers can still flourish on their own and work their way up to the credibility of any amateur college-graduate journalist.

Thus it makes little sense to say that any given blogger is less dependable than any given journalist since an environment that thrives on competition (such as the blogosphere or college) should eventually produce equatable results. Sounds like there's a little bit of the "invisible hand" in my theory here, but it should basically apply. Basically.

The readership has to decide what sources of news are dependable. However, with a world where censorship pervades every major media outlet, no one can be trusted.

This sounds like a movie trailer...

Jim Sterling VS the FTC & the New York Times. Let the word smiting begin!
Qraze's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/15/2009 02:15
Qraze
i love you Jim but you ain't no journalist and i'm very glad you point that out. once you added "hit the jump for my thoughts" it became an editorial. in fact, dtoid don't have any journalists, just editors. does anyone know how to jump report a story without adding some stupid one-liner or personal opinion for traffic? i know you get paid to review and that's a personal opinion/judgement but who on dtoid can just give us a straight truth on a subject? you write what you write became neiro wants the traffic and you know how to get the traffic. if duke nukem is canceled i just want to know that, not some bullshit theories on why perhaps and make some jokes on it at the expense of the truth.

this industry is bullshit, the developers lie, the publishers lie, the media covering it lie. all at the expense of my wallet. and people wonder why video game journalism can't/won't exist.
mbradley1992's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/17/2009 04:31
mbradley1992
I agree. I think Gamespot are the biggest damn sell-outs in the gaming media. Joystiq is right on their heels.
Daniel Benoy's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/17/2009 14:13
Daniel Benoy
If internet regulation gets bad, we'll probably see a lot of anonymous gaming blogs showing up on Freenet. http://freenetproject.org/
Electrium's Avatar - Comment posted on 07/19/2009 23:27
Electrium
They can't shoot their government beams over my internet! They just can't!
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