Thursday, June 30, 2011

Loeb Award for Julia Angwin and Wall Street Journal Team

I interrupt my usual flow of news about Vermont Yankee for a moment.

Our daughter, Julia Angwin, headed a team of Wall Street Journal reporters that won a prestigious Loeb award two days ago.

According to the Poynter Institute blog, the Loeb awards are considered the most prestigious award in business journalism. The winning category was Online Enterprise.

The series that won, What They Know, is about how on-line consumers are tracked on the Internet. For example, Dictionary.com was installing 234 tracking files (including cookies, flash cookies and beacons) on your computer whenever you visited. Most of these files were from third party vendors planning to sell your data. (I say "was installing" because Dictionary.com may have changed their ways after the Wall Street Journal story appeared.)

Due to the What They Know series, privacy concerns are becoming more visible to Congress, and consumers can expect higher levels of personal privacy in the future. We are very proud of Julia.


2 comments:

  1. Congratulations.

    As I said on Rod Adam’s blog regarding the concerted political effort to replace reliable nuclear with plants powered by fracked methane: “Also, some sharp investigative reporter needs to follow the money trail that leads from the gas wells to the politicians. They need to be able to track it through the various NGOs, foundations, and PACs that provide for (technically legal) laundering.”

    Perhaps you know someone?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for the note! It would be great if Julia would do this investigation.

    But I usually can't persuade my grown children to do my bidding. We raised our kids to think for themselves. In retrospect, this was probably a mistake ;-)

    ReplyDelete

All comments are moderated. * * * Anonymous comments are strongly
discouraged on this blog * * * Use your Blogger or OPEN ID. Don't have one?
Get one free at Open ID * * * Comments
that contain spam, personal attacks, or the usual list of anti-social
content will go in the bit bucket.