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Palin and politics: lots to talk about

Backspin By Mark Gibbs , Network World , 10/03/2008
Gibbs
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You had some interesting responses to last week's Backspin on Palin's e-mail woes.

Quick recap: Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin had her Yahoo e-mail account broken into using some basic social engineering techniques, and some of the contents were subsequently published.

What I didn't have space to go into last week was why these idiots broke into her account in the first place: According to Wikileaks, where the news broke on Sept.16, the attackers are from an Internet activist group called "anonymous" (how creative is that?) and they did it because they believed media comments that Palin had used "pseudo-private e-mail accounts to avoid Alaskan freedom of information laws."

Regarding my charge that Palin was naive when it came to e-mail, reader George Holowko said, "I don't feel this demonstrates naivety, but, rather, it places Palin in the same league as most Americans, and NOT some kind of elitest group that expects or requires special treatment."

I was using "naive" in the literal sense of "not knowing," but I find it surprising that apparently the entire Republican Party couldn't think through these kinds of issues. And isn’t it the case that running for the post of vice president is, de facto, elitist?

Reader Matthew Lazarow said, "given the position that Palin is trying to obtain you would definitely think she would have access to someone in the 'Czech Republic' to tell her which mushrooms are good and which ones are not." Indeed. Why is there no equivalent of Karl Rove managing their technology strategy? If there isn't then isn't that a serious oversight?

Reader Bailey Edward agreed that breaking into Palin's e-mail was wrong and commented that, "I would have loved to have seen what someone would have done if a Democrat's e-mail was cracked and stuff was leaked. I bet there would be a huge investigation and it would have been labeled a 'hack.' "

This was, in fact, labeled by most of the press as a hack. I didn't think it deserved that label because it was so simplistic. But let's not assume the powers that be didn't step in because the issue did, after all, quickly sink out of sight. Given the leaked messages indicate Palin was, in fact, using private e-mail services to avoid Alaska's freedom of information act, having the issue disappear like the Cheshire Cat is a very good outcome.

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Palin Emails and the Bias of the AuthorBy Lawson on October 15, 2008, 2:33 pmEven the individual who accessed the Governors emails stated that no smoking gun was found. There was no indication that she was using the email account for state...

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Governor Palin leaked emailBy frazierl on October 15, 2008, 1:51 pmWhere do you gather that the Governor was using her private email to conduct business. Every indication has been that that was not, in fact, the case. Even the person...

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