Stephen Colbert vs. Arianna Huffington: what their spat is really about
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Stephen Colbert and Arianna Huffington are grown-ups, right? Yeah, well, in a channeling-their-inner-digital-child sort of way.
The two are in the midst of an electronic sandbox spat over who is poaching whose online content without properly paying up. Each is one-upping the other with cute moves and fancy talk.
But Mr. Colbert, the Comedy Central host, is never clowning about an issue without something else on his mind, longtime satire experts point out. So, what the heck is going on as these two masters of Internet self-promotion continue to lob 鈥渃yber sand鈥 at one another?
The 鈥渇eud鈥 bubbled up earlier this week when Colbert complained about The Huffington Post, Ms. Huffington鈥檚 website, embedding his videos on the site without sending along proper payment. 鈥淚 have yet to receive my percentage of the Huff bucks,鈥 he complained to his studio audience.
Colbert then posted The Huffington Post on a new website he dubbed 鈥淭he 鈥淐olbuffington Re-post.鈥 Ms. Huffington returned the favor with a newly christened site, 鈥淗uffbert Nation.鈥
Now, Colbert is cautioning his audience against clicking on the 鈥渞eposted repost,鈥 saying, 鈥淚t鈥檚 like a Russian nesting doll of intellectual theft.鈥
It may be tempting to call for a tired-baby timeout. But all Comedy Central has to do to resolve the issue is deny permission, points out intellectual-property lawyer Mitchell Stein, a partner at Sullivan & Worcester in New York. 鈥淭he Huffington Post can鈥檛 embed video from any site if that site doesn鈥檛 give permission,鈥 he says.
Assuming that permission is actually being granted in this case, what鈥檚 the real beef?
鈥淭his is really about Colbert raising the issue of what original content really means in today鈥檚 Internet-savvy world,鈥 says Amber Day, author of the just-published book, 鈥淪atire and Dissent: Interventions in Contemporary Political Debate.鈥
Colbert is also drawing attention to the opposite of original content 鈥 the websites (including The Huffington Post) that aggregate content produced by other websites. By raising this issue, says Ms. Day, Colbert is pushing his agenda of getting people to think about where their opinions and ideas really originate.
This is his way, she says, of asking the question: If everyone is just quoting everyone else, 鈥渨ho is actually doing original thought?鈥
This question lies at the heart of the Internet鈥檚 next big evolutionary stage, says social-media expert and tech entrepreneur Michael Hussey, CEO of PeekYou.com. The goal of using other websites鈥 content, he says, is to maximize the position of one鈥檚 own website in the search-engine listings. This is a commonly used technique known as 鈥渟earch engine optimization鈥 and can boost ad revenues online.
Other people鈥檚 content is a huge attention-grabber for a content-aggregating website such as The Huffington Post. 鈥淭hey are masters of the tool,鈥 Mr. Hussey points out. This is a main reason, he adds, that AOL recently scooped up the six-year-old site for $315 million and made Ms. Huffington the head of all AOL content.
But Google, the largest Internet search engine, has been under pressure to cut back on search results that don鈥檛 point to the original sources, Hussey says. If Google begins to de-emphasize sites that are based on aggregating other people鈥檚 content, he adds, this could be a game-changer for sites such as The Huffington Post.
鈥淎ll those people who just bought stock in AOL better pay attention,鈥 he says.
But if an 鈥渆veryone is doing it鈥 ethos governs much of what is aggregated on the Internet, there are still lines between what is legal and illegal, points out media expert Paul Levinson, author of 鈥淣ew New Media.鈥 We may be in a fluid stage in our concept of intellectual-property rights, but 鈥渢hat doesn鈥檛 mean you can simply profit from the work of others with no limits,鈥 he says.