For the internet watchers out there, especially the movie buffs among you, there is a fascinating argument going on over at movie site aintitcool.com – which perhaps marks the moment when a once subversive, funny and non-conformist site finally found itself at odds with its readership for becoming too successful and therefore mainstream.

The summary of what happens revolves around a Harry Knowles review of the Star Wars animated film The Clone Wars – which was posted and then taken down, prompting talk of a conspiracy.

One of the site's best know writers Moriarty penned an abrasive and, perhaps unwise response to the community's angry reaction explaining that the review had been pulled because it was under embargo, and if they ran it they would find their access to previews of films restricted by the film industry.

Aintitcool, of course, was created by using moles and rumour to get movie news (that was often under embargo) to its readers first.

Keeping 'the man' happy

But times change and what once was a site that fed off of the scraps and flourished, is now growing fat on the movie industry itself – and the threat of the industry removing its seat from the table is now big enough that the site will risk its relationship with its very readership in order to keep 'the man' happy.

Let's get this straight – Moriarty's response is honest and heart-felt and it makes a lot of sense to a site that needs advertisers and access to movies to flourish. But will it survive if it continues to piss off its readership by being seen as more beholden to the industry than their desire for knowledge?

As commenter Cedar-room says in the comments to Moriarty's piece: "The question is now - do you just not give a shit anymore about telling the truth? Do you prefer to live inside the studios pockets or is the shit they are threatening you with so damn apocalyptic that posting those reviews just ain't worth it? In all seriousness - the entire credibility of AICN hangs on this very question. So can you please explain?"

No longer a community site?

It's a view that may well represent a large section of the community that has made Aintitcool flourish. And in choosing to follow an embargo, Aintitcool may just have told the fans that it is no longer a site for the community, but a mainstream movie news website just like the press that it has pipped to the post for years by breaking the rules.

Indeed, that very same press have no doubt been frustrated for years that their adherence to the embargos puts them at a distinct disadvantage to the sites that are prepared to potentially cut off their nose to spite their face.

My first job out of university was as one of the original team of a site called planetfootball.com – which made its mark as a football rumour website. To my knowledge, even back when we started we never made up a story – but we would repeat stories that I have no doubt that, for instance, the Italian papers made up to fill their pages.

It was fun, exciting and ultimately successful – the site quickly grew in popularity and was part of the Sports Internet takeover by BSkyB.

Changes

For a few brief weeks life carried on as normal, but then we had Sky's legal teams tell us what we couldn't do, our access to football grew and so did our reluctance to risk our newfound contacts and invites by upsetting football clubs.