2005-2014

7 July 2005

Govt okays Cabinet decision on portfolio investment in media

The government today notified the June 16, 2005 decision of the Union Cabinet, which allowed foreign portfolio investment in Indian print media and printing of international editions of foreign newspapers in India. It has also notified increasing the levels of syndicated content to 20 per cent. The notification said permission will be granted only in cases where equity held by the largest Indian...

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7 July 2005

Guidelines for foreign investment in print media notified

NEW DELHI: The Government notified on Wednesday changes in the print media guidelines, approved by the Cabinet in mid-June, that seek to facilitate greater foreign presence in print media through printing of facsimile editions of foreign newspapers and periodicals, and enhancement of the syndication limits in Indian newspapers. Also, greater flexibility has been allowed in the foreign investment...

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7 July 2005

Judith Miller Goes to Jail

This is a proud but awful moment for The New York Times and its employees. One of our reporters, Judith Miller, has decided to accept a jail sentence rather than testify before a grand jury about one of her confidential sources. Ms. Miller has taken a path that will be lonely and painful for her and her family and friends. We wish she did not have to choose it, but we are certain she did the right...

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7 July 2005

BSNL broadband to get richer with more services

Broadband customers of Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd (BSNL) have a lot to cheer about as they would soon be able to enjoy content rich surfing with access to Internet Protocol (IP) and time shifted television, video-on-demand, voice and interactive messaging and next generation gaming. In the first step towards enriching content, BSNLwill invite Expression of Interest (EOI) from content providers next...

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7 July 2005

Convergence: Triple play broadband

India is speeding towards the broadband revolution, says Sudhir Narang*, senior VP, service provider and government, Cisco Systems, India & SAARC. After wireless, broadband is expected to be the next big revolution to sweep India. The day isn't far away when Indian consumers will have access to triple play broadband at their doorstep - whether home or office. Globally, broadband remains hot...

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7 July 2005

Norms for FDI in print media notified

The Government notified on Wednesday changes in the print media guidelines, approved by the Cabinet in mid-June, that seek to facilitate greater foreign presence in print media through printing of facsimile editions of foreign newspapers and periodicals, and enhancement of the syndication limits in Indian newspapers. Also, greater flexibility has been allowed in the foreign direct investment (FDI)...

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6 July 2005

Internet takes on South Korea's powerful newspapers

Seoul - In South Korea, print newspapers used to be the "media king" that once held society together, but the rise of the Internet has undermined the role of the dailies as the major opinion leaders and is cutting into their ad revenue, industry sources say. Up until 2000, almost six in every 10 adults started the day with reading a newspaper. Politically, the major papers had earned their stars...

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6 July 2005

Readers Remember Ads That Interrupt Copy

ONLINE READERS REMEMBER ADS BETTER when they appear in the middle of articles than in the beginning, but give more credibility to ads that appear at the start of an article--below the masthead and before the byline--according to a study by researchers from the University of Missouri-Columbia School of Journalism and University of Kansas School of Journalism and Mass Communication. For the study,...

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6 July 2005

'Financial Times' Tops List of World's Best Papers; 'NYT' Slips

The Financial Times topped a list of the world's best newspapers, according to a survey of executives, politicians, university lecturers, journalists and advertising professionals conducted by a Swiss-based consultant. Among 1,000 respondents from 50 countries, 19.4 percent chose the FT as the best paper, according to the survey by Zurich-based Internationale Medienhilfe... The New York Times...

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6 July 2005

So is media outrage out?

For anyone observing the Indian media scene these are strange and contradictory times. On the one hand, there appears to be a boom underway. Two new 24-hour news channels are being launched in addition to the several already on air. Three new English language dailies will soon be vying for the attention of the Mumbaikar. Media houses are allocating massive budgets for publicity and market research...

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