As a blogger who works in both old and new media, I have to agree with Mhays. Sometimes it's easy to attribute a tip. Sometimes it's impossible. By the time you see something in half a dozen places and hear about it from a variety of other sources, all you know is that there's "buzz." Maybe you can find out who had it first; maybe not.
Somewhere way back there was discussion here about how nobody really "discovers" restaurants. Just because you were the first person to write about a place on LTHForum does not mean that nobody else knew about the place. Even in the case of Matsumoto, I suspect that quite a few people in the Japanese community heard of it before we did. (For that matter, Cathy2, if you're going to gripe about "veiled attributions" why then leave uncredited the "one
media critic (who) offered specific sources"? See, it's not so easy, is it?)
VI, bloggers as well as forum participants all complain that traditional news media "steal ideas" from them. Meanwhile, old media types complain that bloggers and forums quote news stories and divert traffic without contributing any added value.
But really this kind of thing all dates back to way before the internet. Big newspapers always got story ideas from little newspapers and broadcast took ideas from print media and vice versa -- each putting their own spin on it.
I wish I had a nickle for every time versions of stories that first broke in the weekly newspapers I used to work for later appeared, with the same sources, in the Trib or Sun-Times. They weren't plagiarizing -- they did their own reporting -- but we knew they would never have known about the incident or source if we hadn't covered it first. Occasionally, we got an "As reported in
Lerner Newspapers" plug, but not often. And I'd be lying if I said that we never took stories from the dailies and re-reported them from our hyper-local angle.
That's journalism as usual, and one reason why "scooping" the competition has always been a prime goal.
What's different is that now there are all these new players who believe that once they put their "intelligence" out in the public eye, they still have some sort of claim on the very concept. That's a kind of Ivory Tower way of looking at it, but it doesn't fly in the news biz. If you're writing a dissertation, you put a long list of footnotes at the end, referencing every single source you drew your notions from. Nobody has room for that in an 8-inch news story.
And how many "hat tip to Tom's Blog via Dick's Forum from a Tweet by Harry" laundry lists can anyone stand to read, anyway?