I have both written for and continue to enjoy reading ANN. Levi's articles have been absolutely top-notch stuff.
The issue here is obviously the discomfort people are going to have reading fan fiction that makes assumptions about prime fiction that cannot be confirmed. IMO, the level of support from CCP for broad and dynamic prime fiction does not match the potential of the setting. When I see players, like Saxon and Levi, taking the initiative and creating deeper "real-time" fiction in such a high quality way, I want to absorb it and make it part of how I imagine New Eden.
There is a fine line, however, in terms of how much liberty a non-canonical piece takes with the setting. Once it's crossed, no matter by how little a distance, the entire thing is simply unbelievable. Everyone is going to draw that line in a different place, but the easiest way to cross it for almost everybody is to portray canonical actors or forces doing something that there is no observable evidence for in-game. Another way to do it is to RP a genuine Mary Sue.
If I wrote a news article about Jacus Roden's zany golfing trips, it might be funny but it would certainly cross the line of believability for almost everyone and be ignored. Same goes for claiming the Ishukone Watch came in last in the Haadoken Summit because of an errant banana peel left on the arena floor or any such canon-breaking assumptions taken in fan fiction. The rule also extends to elements of the prime fiction that are not currently fleshed out but are likely to be developed in the future.
Everything else--and New Eden has a lot of room for "everything else" outside of what we get in the trickle of PF news and events--is fair game (until some intrepid but blind writer with the golden halo of "CCP" before his screen name swoops in from nowhere and stomps it to bits).
The best comparison I can make of this situation is to the Star Wars films (the original three which are like Herko Kerghans and the prequels which are like TonyG) and the
Star Wars Expanded Universe. While Expanded Universe is generally considered canonical, the point I'm making with it is one of scale. There was a lot of juicy material in the six Star Wars films, and alone they certainly flesh out a rather broad fictional universe, but in the Expanded setting you get orders of magnitude more. Within EVE, players are best positioned to provide the equivalent "Expanded" material by their in-game actions, roleplay, and fan fiction.
you're never going to get anyone who disagrees with the implications of an article to accept it as canon
No, you will get
some people, and if you're inclined to accept an expanded view of New Eden that incorporates some or a lot of the non-canonical fan material, those are the one's you'll get to play with you. The rest will probably ignore it or complain about it for a while and then ignore it. Some will write you off, but most will still be willing to RP with you within strictly canonical terms.
But like I said to Simon Coal a few weeks back in our conversation about the Intaki calendar and holiday cycle Saxon wrote up, if the fan material is so well done, why
wouldn't you want to play along?