cpower wrote:floppymoose wrote:But we've been told by multiple current and former ESPN employees, none of whom wanted their names used, that the specific system used for the ESPN Insider NBA draft rankings pages runs under an entirely different, dynamic process—one they suggest is outdated and a remnant of the old Go.com era—and that the data administration tool used to construct the draft page has "far less oversight and audit records" than ESPN's standard CMS.
http://deadspin.com/sources-espn-really ... 1681858027
That doesn't surprise me since the draft rankings go back to early 2000's. It's just some internal web tool that likely just has a few weeks of we server logs retained at any given time.
except when I examined the source code for the 2003 draft (http://insider.espn.go.com/nbadraft/res ... /year/2003 ), I found the following code which was generated by the so called Omniture SiteCatalyst, now renamed as Adobe Marketing Cloud:
<!-- SiteCatalyst code version: H.21.3 Copyright 1997-2010 Omniture, Inc. http://www.omniture.com -->
There was also trace of using conditions for IE9, which was introduced in 2011. So they do have the proper tools to rework the old data and I would think a 2010 management suite would have enough information to determine who was the man behind this?
I don't see how that tells you anything about what goes into editing the page though. Obviously the look of the page has ben changed since 2003. Obviously it supports IE9. So they changed how they display the content. Doesn't mean they changed how the content is submitted and can be edited.
It's pretty embarassing for ESPN nonetheless.