A minor controversy has arisen following the appointment of Cazenovia resident Karl Zinsmeister as President Bush's chief domestic policy advisor. (Thanks to Dave L. for the tip)
In 2004, Zinsmeister was interviewed by the Syracuse New Times, and he chose to republish the New Times article on his own magazine's web site.
All of that is normal, of course, but the problem is that he reposted the article without permission, and he altered the contents to change quotes that were attributed to himself in the original article. Intense research on Zinsmeister when he was tapped by the President for the advisor position resulted in larger publications like the New York Sun finding the discrepancy. As a result, the Washington Post has coined the verb "Zinsmeistered", interpreted as silently changing stories in the media to reflect what you wish they had said instead of what they actually did say.