News

15 March 2005

IRS 2005 R1: Hindi print see dailies grow and periodicals fall in the top players

As far as the Hindi publications are concerned, the top four players are dailies. What proves to be encouraging further for the dailies is the fact that all the four top dailies, Dainik Jagran, Dainik Bhaskar, Amar Ujala and Hindustan have also recorded a further increase in readership. Where Dainik Jagran has grown by a 10,71,000, Bhaskar has grown by 3,88,000, Amar Ujala by 4,25,000 and...

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15 March 2005

IRS 2005 R1: Eng. top 10 publications register drop, HT & Outlook buck the trend

Times of India is the print king and a simple reason is the readership figure of 70,51,000 that it enjoys. Last IRS round however, this figure was 70,98,000, giving the daily a dip of 47,000. India Today takes the second slot. However, the publication drops by 1,49,000 recording a readership of 40,47,000 in comparison to the last IRS figure of 41,96,000. Hindustan Times, the only daily to register...

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12 March 2005

Shiv Sainiks smash up magazine office in Mumbai

Slogan-shouting youth believed to be Shiv Sainiks went on the rampage in the India Today office on Friday, smashing computer screens and destroying furniture with iron rods and sticks. The glass door at the entrance to the magazine’s plush office on the fifth floor of Jolly Maker building at Nariman Point was smashed to smithereens. The Sainiks shouted "Mani Shankar Murdabad" and protested...

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11 March 2005

Social networks: All around the Net, but underused by news sites

In the last two years social networking sites mushroomed across the net, heavily fertilized by hype and the promise of six degrees of connection between socially dispersed people who shared common interests or friends. Now companies actively apply social networking principles to shift more stock and lure more clickthrus to their site. In 2003, social networking sites Friendster, tribe.net and...

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11 March 2005

Libel suit against Washington Post could have major impact on free expression

Reporters Without Borders today wrote to the Canadian justice minister with its position on an important question of law for online media that has been raised by a former UN official's libel action in Canada against the Washington Post, namely can a journalist whose article has been published on the Internet be sued anywhere it can be downloaded ? The Washington Post appealed on 8 March. The text...

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10 March 2005

Scribe assaulted in Chhattisgarh; Opp stages walkout

The main Opposition Congress members staged a walk out in Chhattisgarh Assembly on the issue of alleged assault on a journalist of a local Hindi daily published from Raipur. During zero hour, leader of Opposition Mahendra Karma raised the issue of assault on the Journalist of a Hindi daily by police on Monday night. Alleging that oppression of journalists had increased during Chief Minister Raman...

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10 March 2005

Google News Your Way

News junkies who make the daily pilgrimage to the Google News site now have more control over how they see their news with new customization options, officials said Thursday. The Mountain View, Calif., company added a bevy of new features to its seemingly perpetual beta news site, allowing users to re-arrange the sections on the page, create keyword-driven custom sections and even mix-and-match...

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10 March 2005

HCs stay proceedings against 'The Hindu'

The Punjab and Haryana High Court has stayed the proceedings in a criminal defamation case against the Editor-in-Chief and Publisher of The Hindu, N. Ram, before the Judicial Magistrate of Jagadhari in Haryana. The Magistrate had issued summons to Mr. Ram on a petition filed by Darshan Lal, Haryana State unit chief of the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS). The case came up for hearing before the...

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10 March 2005

Scribes, secretariat staff lock horns

A confrontation between Dehra Dun-based journalists and secretariat employees over entry into the State Secretariat has ended in the two sides lodging FIRs against each other. It all began last week when an altercation broke out after some newspersons working with television channels were denied entry into the State Secretariat by security personnel. Sources said Pawan Negi, a cameraman with a...

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8 March 2005

Some main points from Harvard's "Whose News" symposium

About thirty media heavy-hitters gathered at last week's "Whose News" symposium hosted by the Neiman Foundation for Journalism and The Media Center, to discuss the future of news media, the changing relationships between media and society, and technology's effect on news and information. Here are a few of the principle ideas: Journalism: What we should have (create), what should last (survive)...

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