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CNN Technology: How can EveryBlock’s model be used worldwide?

March 23rd, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Online Journalism

Can ultralocal news and information site EveryBlock’s data-driven model be adopted more widely, asks Steve Mollman.

Related models could see success in Japan and Scandinavia, he suggests.

“The EveryBlock revenue model would play into building local economies perfectly as well, by helping disseminate more localized advertising,” says Japanese market entry and strategy consultant, Tei Gordon, in the piece.

“In this down economy, I think anything that might stimulate local economies would be welcome.”

Full article at this link…

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Paper Cuts: US newspaper lay-offs pass 6,000 for 2009

March 23rd, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Job losses, Newspapers

Paper Cuts, which maps US newspaper job losses, has gone past the 6,000 mark for 2009 (via Fading to Black).

Full post at this link…

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MediaGuardian: DMGT to axe 1,000 from Northcliffe Media

March 23rd, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Job losses

Daily Mail & General Trust has announced possible job cuts of 1,000 at its regional publishing division Northcliffe Media.

The group posted a 24 per cent fall in advertising revenue across its national newspaper division and 37 per cent drop for regionals for Q1 2009.

Full story at this link…

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Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – don’t spam Twitter

News on Twitter: Use Twitter as a new way of distributing content and having a conversation around that news. Don’t spam your followers or ignore them – make it more than an RSS feed. Tipster: Laura Oliver.

To submit a tip to Journalism.co.uk, use this link – we will pay a fiver for the best ones published.

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The Defence Advisory – its role on privacy and the British media

March 20th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted by in Journalism, Press freedom and ethics

This week the Defence Advisory’s (DA) notice secretary, Andrew Vallance, delivered the final lecture of Coventry University’s Coventry Conversations series on how the controversial subject of secrecy is handled to maintain our country’s national security.

The DA is an institution set up to advise media figures on whether new and sensitive information is suitable for publication or whether this would have an adverse impact on national security.

Vallance was keen to highlight that the organisation tries to create a compromise between allowing and pushing for intriguing information to be published and urging the media not to be too specific about subjects that could make British associates easier to target.

The DA ‘provides advice to avoid the inadvertent publication or broadcasting of information that would damage UK national security’, but also ‘facilitates maximum freedom of the media to report in public interest’, he said.

The DA Notice System has five standing notices advising the media against publishing information on Britain’s military operations, weapons, communications, addresses and services.

But in the UK, where secrecy is taken very seriously and is a ‘birth right’ to every Briton, according to Vallance, the effectiveness of the DA is limited by the rapid spread of information on the internet and because its services are only for domestic-based media.

The internet and a fiercely competitive media industry are the Advisory’s main challenges, Vallance said. These two factors combined create a platform for instant communication from media organisations who want the most popular story or angle, which could leave inside information susceptible to dangerous and unexpected predators; to mass audiences who create pressure by craving daily news and revealing details.

The only alternatives to the current system would be to create government legislation preventing media institutions from printing certain types of information, which could effectively transfer the DA’s five standing notices to parliament, posited Vallance.

The other and more damning alternative, according to Vallance, would be to have a ‘media free for all without a security safety net’.

If all currently secret information was released, which would undoubtedly cut costs for data storage and legal proceedings, would anybody actually take any significance from comparing how many weapons country a, b or c has?

In the modern climate, the likelihood is that vulnerable countries would be targeted from figures released in the press, and so although the DA’s system has no authoritative enforcement, it is a hindrance to any media moguls who may contemplate prioritising the financial lure of popularity over national security.

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Motions from Manchester: “This chapel declares it has no confidence in the Scott Trust”

March 20th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Job losses, Jobs, Journalism, Newspapers

The Manchester Evening News National Union of Journalists Chapel has passed the following motions at a mandatory meeting held today, and sent this email to GMG Regional chief executive, Mark Dodson.

To: Mark Dodson
Cc: Paul Horrocks; Jim Banham; Carolyn McCall; Liz Forgan
Subject: MEN NUJ chapel resolutions

Dear Mark,

At a very well attended, mandatory meeting earlier today, the MEN NUJ chapel unanimously passed the following resolutions:

  • This chapel extends its thanks to the Guardian/Observer chapels for their declared support;
  • This chapel deplores the company’s refusal to invoke a 90-day consultation period which could have been used usefully to explore other options and urges it to think again;
  • This chapel declares it has no confidence in the Scott Trust or the GMG board;
  • This chapel believes that Dame Liz Forgan, in her role as chair of the Scott Trust, has a moral duty and responsibility to speak to journalists at the MEN and its weekly newspapers and those at Surrey and Berkshire about how these devastating jobs cuts chime with Trust values BEFORE they are implemented;
  • This chapel supports the weekly newspaper chapels in their decisions and pledges to support them;
  • This chapel agrees to ballot for industrial action, up to and including strike action;
  • This chapel reiterates its willingness to meet management at any time to talk with a view to resolving the current problems.

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NUJ Release: Guardian journalists to back regional colleagues

March 20th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Job losses, Jobs, Media releases, Newspapers

“Journalists on the Guardian and Observer in London have backed colleagues on the local titles in their group who are fighting against massive job cuts and almost certain compulsory redundancies,” reports the National Union of Journalists.

“A joint meeting of NUJ members from the two national titles unanimously agreed a resolution that said: ‘When the chapels in Greater Manchester, Surrey and Berkshire decide on a course of action, we will support them,’” the release states.

Full release at this link…

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Media Release: BBC Trust approves BBC budget for 2009/10

March 20th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Broadcasting, Media releases

BBC Trust approves BBC Executive’s budget plan, which includes steps towards saving £1.9 billion by 2012/3.

Yesterday BBC director-general Mark Thompson said the BBC must cut its budget by £400 million within three years to avoid going over its statutory borrowing limit.

Full release at this link…

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The Media Business: Is the journalism employment ‘crisis’ overblown?

March 20th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Job losses, Journalism

“Most journalists in newspapers do everything BUT covering significant news. They spend their time doing celebrity, food, automobile, and entertainment stories. Look around any newsroom, or just the lists of assignments or beats, and you soon come to realize that 20 per cent or fewer of the journalists in newsrooms actually produce the kind of news that most people are concerned about losing,” writes Robert G. Picard.

Full post at this link…

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Nieman Journalism Lab: Why Wichita Eagle couldn’t cash in on record traffic

March 20th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Advertising, Editors' pick, Traffic

Kansas.com, the site of US newspaper The Wichita Eagle, saw its traffic surge last month, making it the 15th most-visited US newspaper site for February, according to Nielsen Online.

The spike was partly a result of a link to one of the Eagle’s stories appearing on the homepage of Yahoo.

Yet despite this influx of visitors the site can’t monetise such peaks, because of the ‘dirt-cheap remnant advertising’ it runs during such surges, as Nieman reports.

Full story at this link…

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