Is this a problem? If you write articles saying that you don't like me, I probably won't send you any free stuff or invite you round to my house. They're a consumer electronics and software company, not a government department. If they don't want to talk to you or send you any free stuff, that's up to them and I'm 100% fine with that.<p>Why do you need to visit them or get free equipment from them to write articles anyway? Wait for it to be released to the public like everyone else.
Apple has a long history of manipulating the press in other ways too.[1][2]<p>So, this doesn't really surprise me.<p>[1]<a href="http://www.zdnet.com/blog/apple/apple-prs-dirty-little-secret/12291" rel="nofollow">http://www.zdnet.com/blog/apple/apple-prs-dirty-little-secre...</a>
[2]<a href="http://www.macobserver.com/tmo/article/how_apple_does_controlled_leaks/" rel="nofollow">http://www.macobserver.com/tmo/article/how_apple_does_contro...</a>
In every field there are dishonest people you want to avoid dealing with. So I'm sure every company more than about a year or two old has encountered reporters they'd never want to talk to again, beyond things like press releases that go to everyone.
Trade journo here (not tech). No need for blacklists in some/many/most segments. Upset corp. hatchetman calls publisher, says either the offending reporter goes or our ads do. I haven't seen a whole lot of publishing backbone/pushback out here lately. (Not that that's changed much.)<p>Flipside is fancy junketeering, with publishers letting corporations host journos for new product events or 'market updates' held in resort destinations. That's the list journos want to be on, 'but it doesn't impact our objectivity.'
I was with him on the "blacklisting people in the press is bad" thing. When he started comparing it to the red scare you really have to worry about his connection to reality.
Gosh. If I could laugh I would have been doubled over. Does the author really think that Apple put this much thought into not letting certain journalists into new coverage. This is pretty much a thought of a conspiracy theorist, Apple surely doesn't think about communist conspiracies from the 1940s, they merely think you're either a bad journalist or one who is consistently unfair. The detail in which the linked article puts forth is ridiculous. It's over-analysis at it's most laughable.
Now consider how the government does the same thing to the press and how it affects political coverage especially the notion that the media is a check on power.
Having working with PR departments of various companies, almost all had some sort of blacklisting/whitelisting for journalists and media outlets. Seems to be perfectly normal because the job of those departments is to influence media coverage to be positive and widespread. Working with some journalists is more effective than working with others and some have proven in the past to not be worth spending time (and money) on.<p>Mike Elgan concludes: "Ultimately, it’s not that big of a deal." True, but then readers should ask: Why is he writing a big column singling out Apple for this behavior? Eyeballs?
>> "If wasn’t on Apple’s “blacklist” already, this post would surely get me on it. It’s totally worth it."<p>Really? You make money writing about Apple and you think it would be worth it to intentionally piss them off and get blacklisted? I can understand writing a bad article about a bad product and getting blacklisted because you don't want to lie in a review but a conspiracy piece that also mentions how the Chinese government jails journalists makes you look worse than Apple. If I was in charge of giving out invites to journalists at Apple I'd exclude you, not because you wrote something negative, but because you wrote something really over the top and pretty crazy.
Reminds me of when CNET was blacklisted by Google for publishing Schmidt's personal info that was available on Google searches after he downplayed privacy.<p><a href="http://boingboing.net/2009/12/09/google-ceo-says-priv.html" rel="nofollow">http://boingboing.net/2009/12/09/google-ceo-says-priv.html</a>