March 25, 2008 2:44 PM PDT

Al Gore bars press from RSA talk next month

Remember, folks, it's Al Gore's Internet. We're just using it.

Gore is scheduled to give a keynote speech on April 11 at the RSA Conference in San Francisco. RSA says as many as 17,000 people showed up at last year's conference, and it's reasonable to assume a large chunk of this year's crowd will try to squeeze into Gore's keynote speech. These are security types, engineers, marketers, PR flacks, and so on--many of whom have their own blogs, Flickr accounts, and Twitter feeds where they'll share details about Gore's speech (assuming he says anything interesting).

This cozy, stylish and handsome CNET fleece could be yours: be the first to send along a link to a video of Gore's you-may-not-record-this speech at RSA next month.

Which makes it bizarre that Gore has demanded--as a condition of giving the keynote speech--that press be barred from the room. As Kim Zetter wrote for Wired.com: "Video recordings, broadcasts and photography are also prohibited."

Gore might have gotten away with it a decade ago. And, to be sure, he has the right to negotiate that requirement with RSA. But nowadays, when tech-savvy audience members, who each coughed up some $3,670 for registration, are outfitted with digital cameras and recording devices (including on mobile phones), any speaker who insists on this requirement is foolish or naive.

You decide which category Gore falls into.

This isn't the first time that Gore has insisted on a $100,000-or-so speaking contract that prohibited press from attending. He did it at a speech at Augustana College (billed as "free and open to the public"). He did it at a speech last year to the American Institute of Architects convention, which the San Antonio Express-News crashed and wrote up anyway.

His standard speaking contract says "closed press" and "Vice President Gore will accept no interview requests" and "Vice President Gore does not permit taping of his speeches." It's especially ironic given Gore's joint ownership of Current TV, which relies on user-submitted content.

Does anyone really think Gore's Don't-Record-Me Ban will work at a conference of 17,000+ gadget-outfitted security geeks? Thought so. So here's my offer: A free News.com (or CNET, depending on what we have in stock) baseball cap or fleece--your choice--to the first person who e-mails me a link to the video of the astonishingly publicity-shy ex-veep at RSA next month.

P.S.: The Gore-Internet quote from nearly a decade ago, according to CNN's official transcript: "During my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet." (And no, for you conspiracy buffs, mentioning that doesn't make me a Bush administration acolyte.)

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 18 comments (Page 1 of 2)
And so this is news because?
by gerrrg March 25, 2008 3:21 PM PDT
You forget, many members of the Supreme Court follow suit. Shouldn't a person have the right to control their image, or should they allow the press to shape it for them? After all, it is the free press that continues to screw up the quote about the internet that Al Gore has become infamous for. Or perhaps it is the other way around...it is the Al Gore quote that the press has become infamous for?
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Sour grapes
by amigosito March 25, 2008 4:12 PM PDT
I love how reporters get all indignant when they are shut out of obvious story opportunities. Declan is class a-1 for digging up the tired old "Al Gore says he invented the Internet" line...I can almost hear the Beavis and Butthead laughter oozing out of that snide "p.s." Perhaps the author just needed to pad the word count on this lightweight non-article.
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*rolls eyes*
by colorado_jones March 25, 2008 4:18 PM PDT
Declan, your columns are generally worth reading and I will continue to read them in the future, but... Give it a flippin rest already! Some of us know the full story on Gore's important role in the history of the internet and we are tired of you flogging the issue (not to mention the man). Regarding the RSA conference- of course he knows it'll be reported on. Did it occur to you that it's closed just to thumb his nose at the press? Maybe he even had you in mind specifically. I certainly can't blame the man on that one.
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Wrong emphasis on this story
by krosavcheg March 25, 2008 4:41 PM PDT
The real story is that the RSA is paying 100G to this flim-flam man for a speech.
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Why bother to invent the internet
by Pete Bardo March 25, 2008 5:00 PM PDT
if you don't understand its power and potential? Oh, that's right, he ran for President under the same conditions. :)
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Secrecy - or attention-grabbing?
by TieMeDown March 25, 2008 5:15 PM PDT
Of course Mr. Gore may be neither foolish or naive. Maybe he realizes that a boring get-a-big-name-for-our-keynote talk at a geeky encryption conference won't get either respect from the geeks or interest from the public, so what better way to announce it than to ask to ban media and ensure that it gets widely reported?
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You've been had
by Mike8134 March 25, 2008 7:55 PM PDT
Come on now. What is absolutely the best way to make sure whatever speech you're making gets the widest possible coverage? Tell people they can't cover it. Telling thousands of the smartest geeks in the world that they can't record or broadcast a speech is like waving a red flag in front of a herd of angry bulls on steroids. It will be all over the Web in about five minutes, proably in 3D holographs somewhere. Which is just fine from Mr. Gore's standpoint. He gets far more publicity than the speech would have otherwise garnered, at the same time he has maintained the legal fiction of trying to protect his copyright interest in his words and image. Same for the organizers of the conference. Next he'll try to get his speeches banned in Boston.
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Roots
by Tablloyd March 25, 2008 8:00 PM PDT
before politics, gore was a reporter for the nashville tennessean. wonder how he would have covered this!
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You may be surprised to learn....
by charlie cooper March 25, 2008 8:48 PM PDT
that both Vint Cerf and that raging liberal Newt Gingrich credit Gore for playing a vital part in clearing the way for what eventually grew into the latter day Internet infrastructure. I don't have the URL handy but there was a terrific piece not very long ago on Gore (I believe in Vanity Fair, though my memory's hazy)
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Sensitive to criticism
by riredale March 25, 2008 10:58 PM PDT
I think the real angle is that Gore is riding high on the Man-made Global Warming wave, and there are numerous new findings that show it to be largely BS. He doesn't want to give up his lofty perch and is trying to isolate himself from questioners.
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  • About The Iconoclast

  • Declan McCullagh has covered politics, technology, and Washington, D.C. for over a decade, which has turned him into an iconoclast and a skeptic of anyone who says: "We oughta have a new federal law against this."

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