Difference between revisions of "Grant Steinfeld"

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(Dismissal from the project: removed inflammatory and opinionated statements)
(The current NDA violation stuff borders on libel, unless someone can prove it. I thinks its better to note the speculation exists, and leave it at that. We aren't a court here.)
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==Dismissal from the project==
 
==Dismissal from the project==
  
In July 2006, Steinfeld was shut out of the project, but still had access to Bukanator's e-mail accounts.  Without informing the creators of Lonelygirl15, he went to Candace Murphy, a reporter with the Oakland Tribune newspaper and whose Web site is ''[http://www.insidebayarea.com/columnists/candacemurphy Inside Bay Area]'', and told her that Lonelygirl15 was a production and encouraged her to hack into the Lonelygirl15 e-mail accounts to learn the identity of [[the creators]].
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In July 2006, Steinfeld was shut out of the project, but still had access to Bukanator's e-mail accounts.  Without informing the creators of Lonelygirl15, he went to Candace Murphy, a reporter with the Oakland Tribune newspaper and whose Web site is ''[http://www.insidebayarea.com/columnists/candacemurphy Inside Bay Area]'', and told her that Lonelygirl15 was a production and suggested that she could hack into the Lonelygirl15 e-mail accounts to learn the identity of [[the creators]].  Steinfeld was unwilling to disclose the identify of the Creators himsef, however, and Ms. Murphy thus concluded she had no story.  
  
He later told a different version of the story to [[Virginia Heffernan]] of the ''New York Times''.  Steinfeld claimed that he grew tired of running the site and dropped out of the project after fans discovered that the site had been registered before the first Lonelygirl15 video was posted on YouTube.
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Steinfiled later told a slightly different version of the story to [[Virginia Heffernan]] of the ''New York Times''.  Steinfeld claimed that he grew tired of running the site and dropped out of the project after fans discovered that the site had been registered before the first Lonelygirl15 video was posted on YouTube.
  
Some of Steinfeld's photography of the shooting of the early Lonelygirl15 episodes was published in the ''New York Times'', and was briefly available on Steinfeld's personal web site.  While both interviews he gave to ''Inside Bay Area'' and the ''New York Times'' violated his Non-Disclosure Agreement, the specific terms of Steinfeld's NDA are unknown, and it is unclear if his release of the photography violated the NDA.
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Some of Steinfeld's photography of the shooting of the early Lonelygirl15 episodes was published in the ''New York Times'', and was briefly available on Steinfeld's personal web site.  As it is understood that all original members of the lonelygirl15 team signed Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs), some have speculated as to whether Steinfeld's actions violated his NDA.  However, the terms of that agreement have never been disclosed.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
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[[Category:Cast and crew]]
 
[[Category:Cast and crew]]
[[Category:Fired People]]
 

Revision as of 05:04, 8 December 2006

Grant Steinfeld, a.k.a. Bukanator was an early participant in Lonelygirl15, and shot some still photography of the filming of the first episodes of Lonelygirl15. He was an employee of the creators rather than a creator himself, in charge of designing some of LG15's online content.

Steinfeld is a San Fransisco area software engineer who also very briefly played the role of Bukanator, who was a fictitious early fan on YouTube who started LonelyGirl's first fan site, lonelygirl15.com and moderated the phorum.

Dismissal from the project

In July 2006, Steinfeld was shut out of the project, but still had access to Bukanator's e-mail accounts. Without informing the creators of Lonelygirl15, he went to Candace Murphy, a reporter with the Oakland Tribune newspaper and whose Web site is Inside Bay Area, and told her that Lonelygirl15 was a production and suggested that she could hack into the Lonelygirl15 e-mail accounts to learn the identity of the creators. Steinfeld was unwilling to disclose the identify of the Creators himsef, however, and Ms. Murphy thus concluded she had no story.

Steinfiled later told a slightly different version of the story to Virginia Heffernan of the New York Times. Steinfeld claimed that he grew tired of running the site and dropped out of the project after fans discovered that the site had been registered before the first Lonelygirl15 video was posted on YouTube.

Some of Steinfeld's photography of the shooting of the early Lonelygirl15 episodes was published in the New York Times, and was briefly available on Steinfeld's personal web site. As it is understood that all original members of the lonelygirl15 team signed Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs), some have speculated as to whether Steinfeld's actions violated his NDA. However, the terms of that agreement have never been disclosed.

References