News

12 October 2005

Only 12 per cent of users are aware of RSS

Even as the big Internet players are falling over each other in a bid to have a slice of the RSS (really simple syndication) pie, the reality of user survey statistics shows that market is not that yummy yet. Two recent surveys have demonstrated that the awareness of RSS is low even in a country like the United States (US). But yes, the scope is tremendous. While users of more advanced RSS...

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12 October 2005

Google lays out plan to change the world

Google Inc. hopes to eclipse its success as a company by committing nearly $1 billion to help solve problems including poverty and environmental destruction. The Mountain View search engine formally unveiled its philanthropic plans Tuesday with the introduction of Google.org, an umbrella organization charged with making the world a better place. Google's founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin...

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12 October 2005

NY Times reporter completes testimony in CIA case

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Under pressure from prosecutors, a New York Times reporter testified on Wednesday to a federal grand jury investigating the leak of a CIA operative's identity about a previously undisclosed conversation with a top aide to Vice President Dick Cheney. In her second appearance before the grand jury, Times reporter Judith Miller was questioned for more than an hour after turning...

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12 October 2005

FIFA imposes restrictions on press coverage of World Cup 2006

Those planning to cover the football World Cup in Germany next year may have to wait until the crowds have gone home. FIFA, football's international governing body, announced its rules for press coverage today and included a ban on publishing digital images of the games for one hour after the final whistle. FASTEST GOAL: According to the rules, a picture shot in the first minute of a game cannot...

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12 October 2005

Government decrees additional curbs on news media

Reporters Without Borders today roundly condemned a government ordinance issued at King Gyanendra’s behest on 9 October that imposes drastic new curbs on the Nepalese news media. The ordinance bans all news broadcasts, criminalizes all press offences, imposes a ten-fold increase in fines for press law violations, and forbids the news media to cover "subjects that could have negative effects for...

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12 October 2005

EU says internet could fall apart

A battle has erupted over who governs the internet, with America demanding to maintain a key role in the network it helped create and other countries demanding more control. The European commission is warning that if a deal cannot be reached at a meeting in Tunisia next month the internet will split apart. At issue is the role of the US government in overseeing the internet's address structure...

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11 October 2005

65% readers believe magazines sell editorial plugs

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- While marketers are pushing for print’s answer to product placement, it turns out that most magazine readers already consider it rampant. A study released yesterday by Starcom USA found that 65% of the consumers believe that advertisers pay for editorial mentions. Readers receptive Moreover, Starcom found, readers are receptive to reading about brands in articles. Nearly 83...

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11 October 2005

Icahn vs. Time Warner management

NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Financier Carl Icahn launched a new attack Tuesday against the management of Time Warner Inc., arguing in a letter to shareholders that the media company's board needs new outside directors due to past mistakes. The letter, which was included in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing by Icahn early Tuesday, said the board is not taking enough steps to enhance...

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11 October 2005

Yahoo puts blogs at par with mainstream media news sources

Internet giant Yahoo has put blogs on an equal footing with news. The company has included blogs on all its news searches giving a major boost to personal journals that aim to compete with traditional journalism. Yahoo has created a three-tier system for finding news that starts with the links to top ten stories and related photographs produced by mainstream news organisations on the site. The...

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11 October 2005

World Press Photo celebrates 50th anniversary of most sought-after awards

The photo was of a motor-cross competitor taking a tumble from his motorcycle. The year, 1955. The award – the first ever World Press Photo of the Year. Almost every year since has seen a contest and a winning image. Some of the photos have become legion – a naked girl running after a napalm attack in Vietnam; a Buddhist monk who has set himself alight; a lone demonstrator standing in front of...

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