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Ethan Bauley

Really top notch, Simon!!!!!

Kevin O'Hare

Hi Simon

The example of the police G20 protest shows how things have changed so much in 25 years. Then, there were similar claims about police not wearing their numbers and allegations of brutality during the miners strike. None of the mainstream newspapers could ever prove any of these claims.
Now ordinary people have been empowered by web 2.0 technology. Videos taken on mobiles can lead the evening news. Police who break the rules can now be caught; this is better for all of us, not least majority of police who don't behave like this. It is far easier to lose a reputation than win one back and the Met and City police will take a long time to recover from the damage done by their behaviour at the G20 protests.

Simon Collister

@Ethan - thank you very much. glad you liked it.

@Kevin - Yes. Couldn't agree more. It really is a major shift in managing reputation. Have you seen Cory Doctorow's take on it in the Guardian last week? His argument is slightly more cynical, but I also agree:

"Transparency on its own robs as much hope as it delivers, because transparency without justice is a perennial reminder that the game is rigged and that those in power govern for power's sake, not for justice."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2009/apr/29/cory-doctorow-police-transparency

Nick

looks like the barclays lawyers have even cracked down on the wikileaks link.
great piece all the same.

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