Mainstream Media Compliments Techrights on Its Work
Today our search facility is officially a week old (it's actually months old, but we polished it some more until it was ready to go live, then go public).
Yesterday we received a lot of Web traffic because the mainstream media is catching up with EPO Cocainegate (there's no denying that it happened; even the EPO now tacitly admits that).
Yesterday I also spoke to journalists over the telephone (they actually complimented me, saying that when I reported on was very important, unique, and qualifies as investigative journalism defying the SLAPPs).
One of them said that when he searched the Web for any information on substance abuse at the EPO (which is a reality, not merely a theory) my articles were the only ones showing up. But Google isn't "the Web" and this site isn't "the Web" either. We're sometimes self-contained when it comes to suppressed topics:
Our work isn't done. Aside from chatting with media we'll start speaking to European politicians when the time is best. We want actual accountability. We're not there yet. █

