News

12 October 2006

Journalism fellowship keeps Yahoo money despite criticism

A journalism fellowship at Stanford University will keep a $1 million grant from Yahoo Inc. despite criticism of the company’s decision to turn over information on journalists to Chinese authorities. The Yahoo money given to the John S. Knight Fellowship is slated to bring one journalist to campus each year for the next decade from countries where the news media is restricted. Some former Knight...

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12 October 2006

Law lords give media shield against libel in landmark ruling

Britain's highest court handed a protective shield to investigative journalism yesterday, when it ruled in a landmark judgment that newspapers and broadcasters who act responsibly and who are reporting on stories of public importance need not fear libel actions. The ruling in favour of a "public interest" defence for important stories brings English libel law more in line with that of the United...

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12 October 2006

Times Online plans revamp

Times Online, the website of the Times and Sunday Times, is planning a major redesign and relaunch. The overhaul, scheduled to happen within the next few weeks, follows a recent revamp of the website's travel section to include a search engine that readers use to create tailored web pages on selected holiday destinations. Similar changes are understood to have been planned for other sections on...

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11 October 2006

IFJ Calls for "New Media Vision" in Challenge to Indian Government over Jobs and Quality Crisis

The International Federation of Journalists today issued a challenge to the Government of India to provide a strategic vision of the future of the country’s media in the face of what it describes as a “growing and profound” crisis within Indian journalism. In a letter to the Indian Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, the IFJ says that action is urgently needed to manage the dramatic expansion of...

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11 October 2006

Journalist held without charge for 3 weeks by Iraqi forces

New York, October 11, 2006—The Committee to Protect Journalists today demanded that Iraqi authorities release Al-Hayat correspondent Kalshan al-Bayati, who was detained in Tikrit three weeks ago. Al-Bayati has been held without charge since she went to the security forces headquarters in Tikrit on September 18 to retrieve a personal computer confiscated during a raid on her home, according to CPJ...

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11 October 2006

Time spent on media in India down

The second round of the Indian Readership Survey (IRS) by Hansa Research and the Market Research Users Council (MRUC) shows that while there has been an increase in overall media consumption, the frequency and the time spent on such consumption has declined over the last few years. All categories expect the internet have registered a decline in the average consumption time. While the readership of...

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10 October 2006

Kidnapped Iraqi journalist discovered in Baghdad morgue

New York, October 10, 2006—The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the reported murder of an Iraqi journalist, whose body was identified in the Baghdad morgue today, a week after he had been kidnapped by unidentified gunmen. The Journalistic Freedoms Observatory, an Iraqi press freedom organization, said the body of Azad Muhammad Hussein, 29, a reporter for the Iraqi Islamic Party-owned...

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10 October 2006

Activist journalist gunned down in Nigeria

Aids activists and journalists are mourning the death of Omololu Falobi, founding member and the director of Journalists against AIDS (JAAIDS) Nigeria. He died from injuries sustained in an armed robbery on Thursday. Falobi was shot by robbers on his way back from speaking to young entrepreneurs on the importance of social responsibility. He passed away this Sunday. A multiple-awards winning...

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10 October 2006

Russia: Two Journalists Die In Contract Killings A Year

MOSCOW, October 10, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Anna Politkovskaya's death bears many trademarks of a contract killing. If it is determined that is the case, she will join a staggering list of 12 fellow journalists who are believed to have been slain by hired killers since Russian President Vladimir Putin came to power in 2000. The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), which recently named...

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10 October 2006

Ads seen dragging on US newspapers' earnings

NEW YORK, Oct 10 (Reuters) - U.S. newspaper publishers are expected to report tepid quarterly results this month as a weak housing market, slower economy and the Internet weigh on advertising revenue. Gannett Co. Inc. (GCI.N: Quote, Profile, Research), the largest newspaper publisher in the U.S., will kick off the season this Wednesday with analysts expecting an 11.5 percent drop in profit to $262...

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