2005-2014

8 September 2005

It's a Web Buying Spree for Big Media

Sharon Keating, a lawyer in New Orleans, grabbed her laptop as she fled Hurricane Katrina with her family in a three-car caravan. For the past 11 days, Keating has been blogging about her evacuation on the home page of About.com, a Web site owned by the New York Times Co. Tiny details brought her account to life, such as her husband waking in a hotel and saying, "I don't own a pair of socks," and...

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8 September 2005

Where is media outrage over purported government attempts to restrict Katrina coverage?

A September 7 Reuters article reported that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) "asked the media not to take pictures of those killed by Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath" and "refused to take reporters and photographers along on boats seeking victims in flooded areas." FEMA's actions, along with further reports that the government is obstructing journalists in New Orleans, have drawn...

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8 September 2005

Yahoo for mails, Google for searches, Shaadi for matchmaking

NEW DELHI, September 8: Yahoo, Indiatimes, Rediff, MSN and Sify have emerged as the established generic portals in a recent survey of popular websites. Google, Naukri and Shaadi among others have earned good niche audiences. The study also found that most popular Net activities are social and professional interaction, keeping track of news and events, check for sports and cinema content...

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7 September 2005

Veni, midi, vici. Guardian is out to win

All eyes in the media next week will be turning toward The Guardian - and you haven't always been able to say that in recent years. All the paper's rivals have been watching like hawks and sharpening their talons in case its imminent Berliner format enjoys the benefit of the new and starts to claw back sales from The Times and The Independent. Advertisers who are awake will want to be present in...

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7 September 2005

TV is the unblinking eye that brings clarity

Every day -- sometimes every hour -- brings dramatic change and unimaginable repercussions as television follows the Hurricane Katrina fallout. Much in the same manner of Sept. 11 coverage, it has become one of those events where history is televised and it's nearly impossible to look away. And because television is this nation's shared experience and remains the most powerful medium on the planet...

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7 September 2005

Journalism in Yemen: A Battle for Truth in the Age of Terror

A United Nations Development Program report recently said that Yemen is "infested with corruption" throughout all sectors including corruption monitoring agencies, and the Yemeni government lacks an effective system of exposing and checking corruption. Rampant corruption is a logical consequence of the concentration of power in Yemen: Ali Abdullah Saleh is the president, the head of the military...

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7 September 2005

Yahoo’s cooperation helped China jail journalist: RSF

A French media watchdog has said information provided by Internet giant Yahoo Inc helped Chinese authorities convict and jail a writer who had penned an email about press restrictions in his country. The text of the verdict in the case of journalist Shi Tao - sentenced in April to 10 years in prison for "divulging state secrets abroad" - shows that Yahoo! Holdings (Hong Kong) Ltd provided China’s...

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7 September 2005

New Orleans and Mumbai: a study in contrast

It is not only the shocking incompetence of the US authorities in dealing with the disastrous aftermath of Hurricane Katrina that has surprised people in India. What is no less disturbing is the complete collapse of law and order over vast areas in America's Gulf Coast region. The contrast between what happens in India during such a time of trouble is too stark to be missed. In America, the...

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7 September 2005

CBA broadcasting awards 2006

Applications are invited for the annual CBA awards for Television and Radio programmes. Applications can be team or individual entries except for the Journalist of the Year and Elizabeth R Awards and all programmes or projects should have been shown or completed between January and October 2005. Completed forms should be received at the CBA Secretariat by October 15, 2005. Details should be...

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7 September 2005

Canadian NGO to provide international media trainers

A new NGO plans to provide its experienced journalism trainers to projects in emerging democracies around the world. Based in Canada, the Media and Democracy Group is inviting other organizations to submit proposals for cooperation. The group’s plan is to tap its network of trainers for programs that can help foster better, more reliable journalism in places where it is needed most. According to a...

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