Sony Blackballs Blog Over PS3 Rumor 219
Earlier today Kotaku ran an article looking at the possible future of PlayStation 3's online component. They detail a form of Sony Mii, with achievements accruing in an actual room as you succeed in playing games. During their correspondence with Sony as preparation for the story, the company asked them very specifically not to run the story. They then threatened to pull PR support for the site if they ran the story. When the story went up anyway, Sony followed through with its threats: "So, it is for this reason, that we will be canceling all further interviews for Kotaku staff at GDC and will be dis-inviting you to our media event next Tuesday. Until we can find a way to work better together, information provided to your site will only be that found in the public forum. Again, I take absolutely no joy in sending you this note, but given the situation you have put me into, I have no choice. - Dave Karraker, Sr. Director, Corporate Communications, Sony Computer Entertainment America." Update: 03/02 02:27 GMT by Z : I am happy to be able to add that Sony and Kotaku made up after what sounds like a lengthy phone call. 'Good on you' to both Mr. Karraker and Mr. Crecente.
And then... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And then... (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
This story had nothing to do with my decision not to buy another Sony product, I have been not buying Sony products for over a year now.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Nutshell (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Nutshell (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Indeed it is. Thanks for the clarification.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Your neighbor happens to be the guy all the cool people come to talk to. He gets all the gossip, and people like to listen to what he says. He's very careful to label rumors as such.
But the rumor isn't leprosy, as that could be considered a danger to the community. (Whether it is or isn't, isn't at issue here.) Instead, the rumor is that you're getting a pool. But you REALLY want to be the one to tell everyone. You neighbor, gossip
Re:Nutshell (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Waaaaaaah (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
n people can keep a secret only if n - 1 are dead.
Re: (Score:2)
Play by their rules, or else (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Blackballed? (Score:2)
In other words, I'm totally justified in not letting you play with my ball. It's only when I try to stop you from using any balls, or play in any game I'm related to, that it becomes blackballing.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Play by their rules, or else (Score:5, Interesting)
It can be argued whether Kotaku was smart to act the way they did, but they are certainly right - and Sony wrong - from a moral perspective. The big mistake was the Sony PR guy threatening to blackball. To Kotaku, that must have been a sure sign they were sitting on some hot stuff. It would have been stupid not to publish at that point.
Re:Play by their rules, or else (Score:5, Insightful)
Agreed. And Kotaku has no right to future insider information.
This isn't about rights, it's about relationships.
Re:Play by their rules, or else (Score:4, Interesting)
Sony needs positive press a lot more than Kotaku needs help finding Sony stories; empirically, they were finding stuff Sony wasn't giving out even to the people they were supposedly helping out.
Sony just pissed off every video game blogger in the world. Kotaku just showed real class.
It's about relationships, and Sony doesn't understand any relationship but "you suck our cock and pay for the privilege". This is working against them now.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I still honestly don't think Sony did anything wrong. No one has a right to their information. And Kotaku is just doing what works for themselves. No big surprise or class there.
But I think Sony would have been smarter to quietly 'X' Kotaku's name off their buddy list rather than get all pissy about it.
Re: (Score:2)
Kotaku has a fair degree of credibility to the core gamer demographic,
Re: (Score:2)
Sure, they have no obligation to give out freebies and exclusives -- but saying they're being withheld just because they don't like a story the journalist ran? Petty and juvenile.
Of course, even past the threat: It is just plain dumb of Sony to deny information to a company that could be generating buzz for them.
Re: (Score:2)
I agree, Sony did nothing wrong. What they did was not smart. With all the trouble they've had in the last year, the last thing they want to do is piss off any gamers or gamer news sites.
If they'd done exactly as they did, but didn't TELL them they were doing it, none of this would be an issue. This is simple PR, and Sony has failed even in that arena.
2 years ago, I'd have been seriously considering getting in line for a PS3. I love(d) my PS2 and had a ton of fun with it. But their att
Re: (Score:2)
This isn't about rights, it's about relationships.
So Kotaku posts Sony's fluffy PR pieces an hour after everyone else, but in exchange gets to post any real news days before anyone else is "allowed" to? Sounds like a good deal to me.
Severing all relationships with an information portal is the nuclear option. Sony resorted to the nuclear option over a rumor that was already in the public eye anyway. Sure, Kotaku could have avoided publishing th
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Exactly.
Trust and respect build relationships. Treating everyone as your adversary and see how much you can "score" against them will not make you friends, even though all you did was "legal" and "within your rights".
For example, if you works in IT dept of a company, and one guy comes to you and ask you about a rumor of a potentially very disruptive new IT policy. Without confirming the rumor, you ask that guy "don't spread such rumor", and then that guy g
Re: (Score:2)
I don't think the word 'unethical' means what you think it means.
PR is about three things:
1. Advocating and disseminating one point of view.
2. Crisis avoidance
3. Damage control
Sony's PR people were doing #2 when they first asked Kokatu not to publish that story and again when they threatened to blackball the site.
Re: (Score:2)
Anything published on Kotaku ends up on every gaming blog on the internet. That's probably why Sony didn't want the rumor appearing on such a prominent and well-regarded site to begin with. It would repeatedly cited as fact even if it was not, and Sony has had previous negative experiences with similar blog-fueled rumors in the past. While their response is excessive, it's certainly not unexpected.
Kotaku won't really suffer for this; they're widely perceived as being very biased in favor of Nintendo's pr
Re: (Score:2)
Sony didn't tell them what they can and can not publish. They just told them that there would be a consequence of they did publish... namely they would not get anything other then press releases from Sony from that point on. That is a perfectly fair thing to do.
I don't know what Sony said exactly to the blog, but what they should have done was offer a deal. In exchange for not publishing the rumor, Sony should have
Re: (Score:2)
*spits*
Seems fair to me. She wants to get all up in her man's face, she oughta expect a couple black eyes. Yup!
Re: (Score:2)
I guess it comes as no surprise which Sony chose to go with. I don't think anyone's saying Sony weren't entirely within their rights, I think we're just saying they were really, real
Re:Play by their rules, or else (Score:4, Insightful)
I wish honesty (harsh honesty, but honesty nonetheless) wasn't news, but these days it is.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Exactly. Mod up. (Score:2)
This wasn't some kind of exclusive content or interview. It was a rumor.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
It's all politics, whether it's government or business.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Since when do BLOGS dictate who SONY gives non-public information too?
Re: (Score:2)
And will continue not giving them anything. So what's the problem?
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
#1: It is morally questionable. Yes, Sony is a big, evil corporation. That doesn't change the fact it was wrong.
#2: It was a stupid play on Sony's part. They were bluffing on the guess that Kotaku would fold and not publish. They didn't and Sony got nasty. Kotaku published that too.
#3: The best way to confirm a rumor is to threaten over its publication. If Sony would have said "No comment" or "
Re:Play by their rules, or else (Score:5, Insightful)
Since when is Sony forced to extend special favours to a site that has refused a request?
Sony isn't dictating what the blog can and cannot post, they're merely saying that if they post something they don't like, they'll stop giving them access to inside information. Seems fair enough to me - or would you expect Sony to continue treating them as they were no matter what the blog posted about them?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
If I want to read Sony press releases, I can do so on Sony's website. Video-game journalism needs to be a lot more independent - it's been an industry mouthpiece for too long.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Since those BLOGS started getting special information news favours from SONY.
If a prostitute is sucking your cock you don't punch her in the mouth. The blog should have been aware of who was greasing their pole, and refrained from balling up their fist.
Re: (Score:2)
nicely done!
Re: (Score:2)
a blog has no responsibility to anyone, nor do they need to answer to anyone.
a journalistic site needs to remain professional and unbiased. they need to report the news, and maintain a certain level of integrity.
if kotaku is simply a blog, they did the right thing by not backing down. however, if they are simply a blog they should not be able to benefit from industry perks such as debug systems, prerelease games, exclusive
It doesn't matter if it's a blog or journalism (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:2)
-Rick
Why say anything in the first place? (Score:3, Interesting)
Reacting the way that they did just isn't smart on any level. Something is really wrong with Sony. And I am not jumping on the Sony hating bandwagon either. With all of their problems (rootkits, batteries, flubbed product launches, etc) I don't see how any Sony investor could be happy with the way the company is headed. I would hate to see Sony go completely out of business. We all know that the more competition in the market the better. I honestly think that Sony has become to large. They need to split into separate entities and change their branding accordingly. The Sony name needs to refer to TVs, stereos, Walkmans, and other hardware since that is what Sony is/was originally known for.
Grey (Score:5, Insightful)
We can argue that Kotaku was foolish and that Sony was harsh, but really it looks to me like both companies were doing their jobs.
It's in Kotaku's interest to publish rumors, to not be "under the thumb" of any one company they report on, and to do their journalism in as unbiased and unthreatened a fashion as possible.
It's in Sony's interest to dodge rumors, save important features for display at key media events, and handle their PR in the fashion they feel is best for their image.
Could Kotaku have tried harder to get Sony's blessing on the article? Maybe. Could Sony have been less harsh? Maybe. I don't think this constitutes a mistake on either's part, just a sad end.
Re: (Score:2)
This is hardly "rumor," though.
FTA: "During their correspondence with Sony as preparation for the story, the company asked them very specifically not to run the story."
If they were actually corresponding with Sony about the story then I'd say this looks much more like "proprietary information that, if you guys will just sit tight on it for a few days, we'll show off to you at that conference we invited you to next week."
> to not be "under the thumb" of any
Re: (Score:2)
If they were actually corresponding with Sony about the story then I'd say this looks much more like "proprietary information that, if you guys will just sit tight on it for a few days, we'll show off to you at that conference we invited you to next week."
I think that's a mischaricterization of the story. The article says they got the rumor, and tried to confirm with Sony. That sounds like journalism to me. "So, Mr Chenny, we hear you leaked Ms. Plame's identity" "nyah.. if you print that.. we will cut you out of future information.. nyah". Sure, it's not an important story, but this is Kotaku's beat.. they report on video games. They did their job.
If I feel bad for anyone here, it's sony. They flubbed this one.. Kotaku has played their cards tight here,
Re: (Score:2)
I can see that as a responcible reaction. After all, it wasn't Cheney who outed Plame, It was long time dem
Re:Grey (Score:5, Insightful)
Okay, so here's probably what happens: someone leaks something to Kotaku. Who's leaking it? We don't know; nor do we know why. But they think it's pretty good stuff. So Kotaku pursues the story with their contacts at Sony. Here's the problems:
1. How many new services or products have been announced as "confirmation" of an apparently "off-the-record" story?
2. In their correspondence with their "official sources", was any information about the "rumor" confirmed or denied? If the official source says, "yes, but please keep quiet about it", well, then you've got a worthless source and a privileged one, and -- even if you attribute everything to the "worthless" source --, your decision to publish could have been and probably was motivated by the confirmation through the privileged source. And that's how your privileged source is going to view it.
3. How did Kotaku establish contacts with the "leak"? From the Sony PR perspective, the answer is going to be, "most likely through the access we gave them to our company".
I have no love for Sony here, but Kotaku's argument for a "journalistic ethical stance" is pretty thin. They weren't "just doing their job".
But I guess the competition among game blogs is fierce, as it is for the consoles they write about.
Not a Big Deal (Score:2)
I think the more interesting thing here is that they're planning on copying Nintendo and Microsoft's ideas. Its a pretty cool combination of the two ideas though.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
They're both right (Score:5, Insightful)
Hate to say it... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Personally, I really like the PS3 (enough to buy one), but I can also understand why everyone hates it. It's expensive (for a console, but not a BD player) and it seems like the Sony brass doesn't care about their core market, the gamers, who don't have loads of cash oozing out of their pockets.
Re: (Score:2)
As usual RTFA. This isn't like some people are trying to spin it. Kotaku had a normal press relationship with Sony. They had a test unit (ko
Re: (Score:2)
Rumors are reported daily on every game blog (Score:2, Interesting)
Rumor and speculation? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
I guess they bet on Kotaku folding, but I'm not sure what made Sony think the odds were in their favor.
Typical Sony (Score:2, Interesting)
actual room... (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Apple and Sony (Score:3, Funny)
For this Sony went ballistic? (Score:2)
Next up: WHOOPS I guess rumble isn't so last-gen after all.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
The real news here (Score:2)
I think the real news here is that Kotaku actually had a reliable source for one of their stories.
This is what journalism is about. (Score:2)
"What someone doesn't want you to publish is journalism; all else is publicity." -- Paul Fussell
sony is the britney spears of electronics (Score:2)
Resolved (Score:3, Informative)
http://kotaku.com/gaming/sony/sony-and-kotaku-mak
MOD PARENT UP! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Looks like they're friendly once again... (Score:3, Informative)
http://kotaku.com/gaming/sony/sony-and-kotaku-mak
Everyone makes mistakes; I'm glad to see Sony realized their err and wasn't prideful about maintaining their snap decision.
Maybe Sony (and others) will learn from this? (Score:2)
1) The gaming community is extremely connected. Good news travels fast, but bad news is lightspeed. Wait before you do something stupid like blackball a popular gaming website. Maybe it's worth trying the "count to 10 before sending off a nasty e-mail" tactic?
2) More respect needs to be given to the gaming press in general. You can't push them around, just because you happen to be the content provider. Maybe that
Over and done with (Score:2)
He told me his take on the story and his frustrations and I told him mine, in the end we agreed to disagree on some level, but also decided that our readers and gamers in general would be best served if Sony and Kotaku could still play nicely together.
In a nutshell: The story remains up and Sony has re-invited us to the meetings and interviews initially scheduled for the Game Developers Conference.
Re:Close to the mark? (Score:5, Interesting)
I seem to recall Sony saying achievements were stupid and that they wouldn't bother implementing them because no one wanted them, or something to that effect.
Apparently this is more Sony innovation in the "SIXAXIS" sense: bad mouth the innovator when people praise the idea, and then come back and "invent" it themselves and pretend it's some huge new feature, that they'd been planning for years!
I can understand why the may not want "innovation" of that kind leaked, instead preferring to very carefully "manage" the PR to try and pretend this is some great new idea and not just a crappy knock-off of both X-Box Live and the Wii's online services.
Re:Close to the mark? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Right, because
Re:Close to the mark? (Score:4, Interesting)
Either way it's Sony doing what Sony does, finding new ways to create bad press. They wanted bloggers and grass roots stuff happening for them, hell they paid for a couple blogs through advertising, but they don't realize bloggers are gamers, not just the press and they'll give stories to gamers and not put up with Sony telling them not to publish a rumor that they might have.
Now Kotaku is NOT 100 percent right here.... well wait, yes they are, they got a rumor, went to sony for a comment, got none worth publishing other then Sony telling them not to publish it, and then published it. Perfectly fine. But Sony is right to black ball them. However instead of telling them they are blackballed, they should have done it subtly, not talked to them, never grant interviews to them and so on. Doing this just produces a PR nightmare that is added to the list of nightmares that they have to deal with.
On the other hand because of all the other hell Sony has caused themselves, this is a relatively minor problem.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand because of all the other hell Sony has caused themselves, this is a relatively minor problem."
Yes, but given that Sony couldn't even handle a simple maneuver as you suggested, one even the most soci
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Please go back and re-read your quote. Everyone knows social competency and geekness are polar opposites! Maybe Sony's problem is that it is too far advanc
Re:Close to the mark? (Score:4, Insightful)
Mythical Man Month and Game Systems (Score:5, Insightful)
The second generation system is better, you have things under control, learned from your first system, make things a bit better, etc. The SNES had a nice lifespan, could do more out of the box (didn't need lots of custom controllers, etc.), was the NES but better. Genesis was an awesome system, it was a lot of fun, had awesome games, awesome controllers, a good stretch, made Sega money. The PS2 and Xbox 360 were good sequel systems. Backwards compatible, did what the old one did plus more, etc. They learned along the way (Sony came out the gates swinging, fought for each franchise, etc., pushed Nintendo out of several large chunks of the market), MS realized that you need parts where you get price breaks or can buy on the open market, otherwise you can't win the marathon.
The third system is over engineered, over thought, rediculously complicated, expensive, beyond schedule, and a disaster.
The N64 had plastic parts everywhere to put upgrades in, stuff hanging out of controllers, etc. It was shipping cartridges that cost serious money to produce (and had limited space), everyone else CDs that cost next to nothing, etc. While they made money, it was a disaster for a market that they were the leader of... didn't help that Sony was competing with a second system, so they weren't idiotic. The Saturn was the best 2D gaming system ever made, just as console games moved to 3D. It was ridiculously expensive from throwing everything in to avoid a Sega-CD and other upgrade fiasco, and set the stage for Sega's exit from consoles. Sony's third system IGNORES everything that got them there (cheap systems, easy to crank up production, granted the PS2 had some custom hardware, but NOTHING like the PS3), playing around with Blu-Ray, etc. In short, Sony is making every third system mistake, and we're watching it in the marketplace.
I predict that Sony will lose a LOT of money this round, but maintain a leadership position. They need to start selling the machines for $299 and not care how much they lose, and they'll do it, but it will be a REALLY REALLY expensive mistake. The PS worked because it was cheap and the R&D was already sunk. The PS2 carried the first gen system forward as just a better Playstation. The PS3 is a third system nightmare.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Sony's in even more trouble than I thought.
Re: (Score:2)
It's another story entirely, but I blame the privileged status given to corporations in this country (which is now the model for the world). A corporation gets all the benefits of the individual without any of the responsibilities. Sony tried to spin the release
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Was this "Evil" for Sony? I don't know if I'd go that far. But it was most certainly stupid. Kotaku isn't the end all of v
Re:And I should care why? (Score:4, Informative)
This was not insider information.
This was not information from SONY.
This was information from an anonymous source.
This was reported as a rumor from an anonymous source.
They called SONY to inquire about the rumor before publishing.
SONY neither confirmed, nor denied, the rumor, but instead threatened the blog if the blog should run the article.
The blog ran the article.
SONY followed through on threat.
{-- end of story --}
{-- begin commentary --}
SONY should have confirmed the rumor, and then asked the blog to wait for the okay to run the story as being the official word of SONY, or else face the wrath of SONY and lose their insider access. That would have been in the spirit of the agreement between the blog and SONY.
Punishing a blog for publishing an rumor from an anonymous source is just another bone-headed SONY move.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Well, who the **** cares what Sony wants? I don't recall asking my news sources to filter everything based on whether or not Sony wants it out there.
That said: Of course it would be easy for MS and Nintendo to copy the feature. It's easy because they already have these feature
Asked to remove, sure ... but blacklisting? (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, I'm sure there are times where a "No comment" isn't enough. Maybe it's leaked confidential information. Or someone broke an NDA. In those ca
Re: (Score:2)
The corporate English was much better than the self-proclaimed journalist's English:
The first comma should be a colon and "effect" should be "affect". I love the way so many bloggers rant about being journalists without bothering to learn the most basic tool of a journalist's trade - the language.