News

1 July 2002

Journalistic Blogging

Dear journalist, fear not the blog. Embrace the blog. Weblogs are online journals consisting of brief entries displayed in chronological order on a page (see "Online Uprising," June). They are usually (but not always) written in a conversational voice and usually (but not always) peppered with links and references to other sites. If you've visited Jim Romenesko's MediaNews (poynter.org/medianews)...

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28 June 2002

Tehelka.com's offices searched by police

RSF protested the search carried out at the head office of the website Tehelka.com. "The fact that this search was conducted on the very same day that the website's editor was due to give evidence of capital importance in an inquiry into a corruption scandal shows that the Central Bureau of Investigation [CBI] and the government are stepping up the pressure that has been exerted on the management...

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28 June 2002

Life with FDI

As the dust settles on the Tuesday announcement by the Government of India to open the window to FDI in print, it's time to take a quick look at the scenario that is likely to emerge. But before that here is the implication of the June 25 announcement. What has the Government actually done? The Government has allowed 26 per cent foreign direct investment in the news and current affairs segment in...

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27 June 2002

Who let the magazine down?

The recently released National Readership Survey (NRS) maintains that readers prefer newspapers/dailies to magazines. Surprised? Well, check out the figures. From 93.8 million in 1999, the readership base in India is down to 86.2 million for magazines in the current year, representing a drop of 8 per cent. In contrast, from 131 million in 1999, the readership base for newspapers/dailies has...

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18 June 2002

Official reason for Kashmiri journalist's arrest is challenged

The hearings resumed in the Geelani case on 18 June. The journalist had been remanded in custody for a further three days on 15 June. According to V.K Ohri, Iftikhar Geelani's lawyer, the documents seized from his client's home had been available on the Internet since 1993. Reporters Without Borders (Reporters Sans Frontières) called today for the release of Kashmiri journalist Iftikhar Ali...

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11 June 2002

Kashmiri journalist arrested and charged

On 11 June 2002, RSF called for the release of Kashmiri journalist Iftikhar Ali Geelani and suggested his arrest was an attempt to restrict coverage of events in Kashmir. "Charging a Kashmiri journalist under the Official Secrets Act in the present circumstances would seem an effort to intimidate any media which tries to report independently on the conflict in the province," said RSF Secretary...

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5 June 2002

Assassination attempt against a journalist in Kashmir

Reporters Sans Frontières (RSF-Reporters Without Borders) expressed its serious concern over the attempted murder of the journalist Zafar Iqbal in Srinagar. The organisation for the defence of press freedom has asked, in a letter sent today to the Chief Minister of the State of Kashmir, Dr Farooq Abdullah, for an investigation to be opened rapidly by the local police in order to identify the...

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1 June 2002

Is It Journalism?

There are a couple of ways to achieve chart-topping success in online news. The conventional route is to link a team of new-media journalists with a print or broadcast heavyweight. And then there's Yahoo! News. Yahoo! News (news.yahoo.com), the third most popular news site in the U.S., needs no reporters and creates no stories. It is the ultimate aggregator of online media, republishing the work...

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1 June 2002

Does Size Matter?

Chances are you won't bother to read this article. It is just one long block of text, after all, unbroken by alluring pictures, snappy captions, or eye-grabbing infographics. You can't click it. You can't flip it. All you can do is read it. And reading a full magazine article – as opposed to scanning, perusing, surfing – is so twentieth century, so retirement home, so William Shawn. Hal Espen, the...

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1 June 2002

Online Uprising

Full disclosure: I like bloggers. This is partly because my life as a freelance writer makes me naturally sympathetic to their independence of media institutions, partly because I find the bloggers' (short for Web loggers) endless links and commentary about stories in papers I wouldn't ordinarily see quite useful, and partly because my own political bent (hawkish, impatient with P.C. hand-wringing...

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