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Published on November 28, 2008, Jeffrey Rosen’s long and comprehensive New York Times article about Google, YouTube, and the question of censorship is a milestone in recent journalism. A lawyer himself (and a professor of law at George Washington University), Rosen is well equipped to discuss the legal ins and outs. He writes admirably clear prose and knows how to order his points for narrative and drama. In addition, he has the New York Times behind him when he seeks to gain access to the web executives who are making the decisions. These executives include all the current top brass at Google. As he secures an in-depth interview with the mighty deputy general counsel Nicole Wong herself, journalists from less powerful organizations can only look on in wonder. A freelancer would be lucky if she volunteered the time of day, and no blogger, of course, could even dream of getting within a mile of her door, let alone through it. At her headquarters in the Mountain View Googleplex, California, Nicole Wong receives Rosen face to face and gives him the low-down. But the questions are asked on his terms, and she is forced into some uncomfortable answers.