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Left Beating Right for Online Viewers

Left Beating Right for Online Viewers, Thanks to Huffington Post

According to comScore, a company that tracks Internet traffic, Dems are controlling not just the House, Senate, and White House (oh, and more governorships), but they're also tops on the Web.

This is primarily thanks to the king (or should we say queen) of the political blogs -- The Huffington Post. Left-leaning sites collected 6.4 million unique views in April, as compared with 4.8 million for blogs on the right. But of those leftist blogs' 6.4 million visits, 5.6 million can be attributed to The Huffington Post, which crushed its nearest rightist competitor the Drudge Report. For it's part, Drudge collected 1.7 million unique views in April. That's, of course, nothing to shrug your shoulders at, but it's not even close to the juggernaut that is HuffPo.

Right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson (famous for his role on CNN's Crossfire, wearing bow-ties, and getting chewed out on TV by Jon Stewart for ruining political discourse in America) will be launching his own site styled after HuffPo, but with a right-wing slant. Carlson hopes to close the gap between right and left in the battle for online readers, and compete with Ariana Huffington's brainchild. But, if his past career is anything to go by, he'll garner some cheap attention for a while, until someone (like Jon Stewart) points out that he is in fact just a "big dick." At which point he and his bow ties will go back to doing what they do best: Whining on second rate, basic cable news shows. [From: paidContent.org]

Huffington Post Casually Ripping Off Other Sites?


With tons of blogs out there, it's no surprise that people will occasionally lift the content of others without giving the proper credit. On a small level, it's certainly not the end of the world, but when a leading Web site starts thieving from other popular publications, things can get a little hairy. That's exactly the situation the Huffington Post has found itself in after being accused of pilfering posts by the Chicago Reader.

The problem stems from HuffPo's new Chicago-focused site reusing entire concert previews from the Reader, Time Out Chicago, and The Onion's Decider without permission. To avoid complete plagiarism, it included links to the original story, which it said is good promotion for the destination sites. Reader editor Moser is definitely not a fan, saying:

You want to do a post that says, "According to Jessica Hopper, Bon Iver rules, check 'em out, go here for the info," fine. But taking an entire concert preview is bush league. Doing it as a practice is just beneath contempt.

HuffPo claims it was just an editorial oversight and has since changed the posts to a format resembling other aggregators like Digg and Google News, but the Reader has the screenshots to prove their case. We can't imagine it'll be stealing from any other local publications soon, but it's worth keeping an eye on the Huffington Post to make sure. If nothing else, it could start a pretty sweet Web war. [Source (See? We take this seriously, too): Wired via Propeller]

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