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  <id>tag:dashes.com,2009:/anil//1/tag:dashes.com,2009:/anil//1.7237-</id>
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  <title>Comments for Healthy Skepticism</title>
  <subtitle>A Blog About Making Culture</subtitle>
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    <id>tag:dashes.com,2009:/anil//1.7237</id>
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    <published>2009-08-25T19:31:01Z</published>
    <updated>2009-08-25T21:29:19Z</updated>
    <title>Healthy Skepticism</title>
    <summary>I&apos;ve been putting a lot of speculative ideas out lately; It&apos;s nice to see some healthy (and respectful) criticism from people who are skeptical about...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>Anil</name>
      <uri>http://anildash.com/</uri>
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      <![CDATA[<p>I've been putting a lot of speculative ideas out lately; It's nice to see some healthy (and respectful) criticism from people who are skeptical about what I'm saying.</p>


<p>Gautham Nagesh <a href="http://www.gnagesh.com/2009/08/twitterversy-skeptic-or-realist.html">followed up on</a> my <a href="http://dashes.com/anil/2009/08/continuing-the-conversation.html">earlier post</a> and fairly criticized the recent government websites I praised as being too tentative and unproven to merit the praise I'd given them. Interestingly, I had a throwaway half-sentence saying "I think Gautham and I just disagree about government's role in general", and Gautham interpreted this as a bit of an attack on his journalistic integrity, by implying that he wasn't being impartial about the story. That certainly wasn't my intention, but more importantly I think I just forgot (being a blogger myself) that Serious Journalists still care a whole lot about that idea. For what it's worth, I think it's great when journalists have a clearly disclosed partiality about a story.</p>

<p>Similarly, Mitch Wagner talked about my post a bit on InformationWeek's Government Blog, saying I'm "<a href="http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2009/08/us_government_g.html">being excessively optimistic, because the Obama White House's record on transparency is decidedly mixed at best, as noted by the Washington Post in a May editorial.</a>" A fair criticism, though I think I was highlighting these recent efforts by the government as signals of intent to use the web well, rather than declaring Mission Accomplished. Hence, most <em>interesting</em> startup of 2009, not most <em>successful</em>. I went into this a bit further in this <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/technology/2009/08/the_new_tech_startup_the_us_government.html">interview I did with Maggie Shiels</a> for the <span class="caps">BBC'</span>s tech blog:</p>

<blockquote>

<p>"I am not a Polyanna about this, " Mr Dash told me.</p>

<p>"I don't think necessarily everything that comes out of this will be immediately great. It will take people some time to understand the potential there is for something great to happen.</p>

</blockquote>

<p>On a less critical note, I did like that <a href="http://blog.inc.com/archives/2009/08/the_most_intere.html">Inc's take on my post</a> mentioned the success that private companies have had with similar <span class="caps">API </span>and data efforts; That was an analogy I should have made more explicitly and prominently in my own post.<br />
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