News

27 October 2005

APME panel: Online is most promising revenue prospect for newspapers

SAN JOSE, Calif. - To survive in the age of blogs, iPods and Craigslist, newspapers must capitalize on their credibility and local strengths while figuring out how best to make money from their new media ventures, a panel of industry experts said Thursday. The task is hardly simple as newspapers struggle at the same time with declining print readership, dwindling revenue growth and smaller staffs...

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27 October 2005

Thirty per cent say they have reduced Internet use

Internet users are demanding more of websites while becoming less trustful of them, and adjusting their behaviour in response to what they see as real threats online. Almost a third say they are cutting back their Web use, says a survey report by Consumer Reports WebWatch. GOOD BUY: Twentynine per cent online shoppers say they have cut back on how often they buy on the Internet. The report, Leap...

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27 October 2005

Express reporter gets Kurt Schork Award

Indian Muzamil Jaleel was among three reporters who were awarded the Kurt Schork Awards in International Journalism in New York on Wednesday. The other two awardees, Canada’s Patrick Graham and Poland’s Pawel Smolenski, were selected for their reporting from Iraq. Muzamil Jaleel © KSMF Underwritten by the Kurt Schork Memorial Fund and Reuters, and administered by the Columbia University Graduate...

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27 October 2005

TV reporter attempts suicide over Nerul rape case

A freelance journalist who was involved in the broadcast of rape allegations last week against a Navi Mumbai police constable, which led to the lawman's arrest, tried to commit suicide on Wednesday alleging mental harrassment by the police. TELECASTING ASPERTIONS: The Nerul policeman was arrested after a mobile conversation with the alleged victim was telecast on Sahara Samay. Pawan Bhargav was...

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27 October 2005

Vendetta against Murdoch goes from manic to malicious

IN terms of brazen spin, Stephen Mayne's reports of the News Corporation annual general meeting in New York were classics. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black! Mayne, doubling as a reporter and shareholder activist, accused News of indulging in brazen spin, yet he was incapable, or unwilling, to keep his own passions and conspiratorial opinions under control. Mayne, the former owner of the...

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27 October 2005

Web 2.0 Cracks Start to Show

Spam, scams and scatterbrains -- the same problems that plagued the old internet are cropping up again in a new wave of technologies known collectively as Web 2.0. But this time around, proponents say Web 2.0 has been better engineered to withstand the troubles that wrecked Usenet, BBSes and free e-mail. The cycle is so predictable, it's almost a natural law: Every new internet movement popular...

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27 October 2005

Think Again: Post-Katrina Press: Same as it Ever Was

For a brief moment in early September, it looked like the United States was about to have a long-overdue national conversation about race and poverty. While the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans flooded and thousands of poor – and predominantly black – residents waited on rooftops to be rescued or stumbled their way to the Superdome in hope of assistance from the authorities, for once a bright light...

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27 October 2005

Boot Yahoo

One of the standard arguments for the superiority of "free enterprise" is that in the wake of economic freedom -- defined as the freedom of capital to enrich itself -- political and other freedoms follow in its wake. There are a few problems with this argument: first, it is often framed in the broad sweep of history, looking ahead at decades or even centuries. Most people don’t have centuries or...

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27 October 2005

Google May Try TV Ad Sales; 'Dream On,' Say Media Buyers

October 27, 2005 -- Google, the company that dominates online advertising, would like to try its hand at buying and selling television ad time. Google, already dabbling in print ads, recently confirmed that it's "mulling" ways to extend its ad-brokering system to television spots as well. If Google succeeds, it would mark a major turning point for an industry that has rebuffed other attempts at...

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26 October 2005

Afghanistan: Harassment of journalists likely to increase

The recent jailing of an Afghan magazine editor is raising concerns about the issue of press freedom in Afghanistan. Ali Mohaqiq Nasab, editor of the "Women’s Rights" monthly, was found guilty of publishing articles that were deemed un-Islamic. On 22 October, he was sentenced to two years in prison. The United Nations, the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, and several international...

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