Photo by Steve Jurvetson
It was curious to find out that the ombudsman of the Washington Post had been made redundant, as pointed out in an open letter from Ralph Nader [1]. The Washington Post, which rejected the leaks from Bradley Manning and did a lot to serve CIA agenda (or beam propaganda to China as part of a deal with the government), is now owned by the head of Amazon, which also has a massive new contract with the CIA (to help store data about people, nations, and so on). It is worth remembering Amazon's proximity to Microsoft as well. The trend-setting media (more influential than Michael Bloomberg's Bloomberg and perhaps even the New York Times) is now literally owned by a man whose net worth is $28.9 billion. Previously, before this embarrassing scandal, Bill Gates' wife was on the board of the Washington Post, but it wasn't ownership of the whole. At least we now know who the Washington Post needs to serve, as per the steering managers.
Mr. Bezos would do well to reestablish the longtime ombudsman post which was abolished in March of this year, presumably to save money. For an ombudsman's role is not just to be an internal critic at the paper but also to be the reader's coherent voice on the ways the Washington Post is being managed.
The confirmation of Tom Wheeler as chairman and Michael O'Rielly as a commissioner ends a deadlock over the appointment of two key FCC executives, after Republican lawmakers withdrew their opposition.