News:
Government lab unites science journalists
Posted by Ivan Oransky
[Entry posted at 16th August 2006 04:55 PM GMT]

Earlier this week, I and several other editorial staffers here at The Scientist started receiving Emails titled ?User Quarantine Release Notification? from an ?inel.gov? address, presumably from the Idaho National Laboratory. Nothing terribly unusual about such spam, which requested that we click on a link to view a list of all of our quarantined messages. Someone had been attacked by a virus.

What happened after that, however, was more unusual: The New York Times? George Johnson responded to the message with a message of his own, saying he was puzzled to be getting the Emails. That made it clear that the original address was actually a group mail address for some kind of list.

That list, it turned out, included a number of prominent science writers, some of whom responded to George (and everyone else) and began an electronic conversation: Time?s Michael Lemonick, The Wall Street Journal?s Marilyn Chase, Johnson?s Times colleague Claudia Deutsch, and Natural History?s Peter Brown, among others. ?Nice to meet you? was mixed in with ?We should get matching bowling shirts? and ?WE ARE ALL BEING SPAMMED, SO LET'S PLEASE GET OVER IT AND STOP THE CHAIN OF REPLIES.? One correspondent said he had tried to contact the Idaho lab?s system administrator, to no avail.

Government spam, it turns out, can bring together even the most hard-charging reporter competitors.

For FREE access to this news story and more, you must register.

Not yet registered? Get free access
 

The article you are attempting to read is only available to registered users of The Scientist. Registration is FREE and only takes a few seconds.

 
 

Email

Password

> Forgot Password?
> FAQ
> Subscribe

 
Not yet registered? Get free access
 

Create your MyScientist account and access all of The Scientist's free content, tools and life science email newsletters, including:

 

> The current month’s print issue

> Daily & Bi-weekly e-mail newsletters

> Newsblogs with breaking headlines

> The Scientist Community

> Exclusive web extras

> The Scientist Careers

 

Premium content from The Scientist Archive, a comprehensive resource of over 22 years of past life science coverage, is available only by subscription. Subscribe today and get unlimited access

 

 
LATEST NEWS