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paidContent:UK: Subscription service SubHub secures new funding

October 15th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Magazines, Online Journalism

SubHub, a system for niche magazine publishers and individual writers to charge for online access to their content, has received first-round venture funding.

According to paidContent:UK’s report, this brings the total investment in the company to $1.2 million since it was set up in 2004 ‘in between the original and current paid content trends’.

Full story at this link…

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FT.com: The Daily Beast one year on

October 15th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Online Journalism

The Financial Times carries an interview with Tina Brown a year after the former Vanity Fair editor launched website The Daily Beast.

Brown discusses site stats, the challenges of online journalism, expansion plans and encouraging her writers to go into print – in books rather than magazines.

Full story at this link…

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Times Archive Blog: How did the press win the right to report on parliament?

October 15th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Press freedom and ethics

A timely post from Times Online’s Archive Blog (via @currybet) given this week’s Trafigura/Carter Ruck/Guardian story on the background to the press’ right to report on parliament, starting in the 18th century.

Full post at this link…

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The Onion: Kidnappers driving up newspaper sales

October 15th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Newspapers

A little light relief for a Thursday – The Onion’s report on how kidnappers now account for 93 per cent of newspaper sales…

“According to a source who wished to remain anonymous, there is an ineffable quality to the printed page that kidnappers cannot get from its digital counterpart. Though there are other methods for proving the date of grainy, home-made videos, the source said that newspapers add a certain gravitas to abductions that news websites do not.”

According to the Onion, newspaper groups are now targetting kidnappers with their advertising, with recent spots including a popular ski-mask manufacturer and real estate ads for abandoned warehouses.

Full (fake) story at this link…

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Ad Week: Digg to expand advertising network

October 15th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Advertising, Editors' pick

Social bookmarking site Digg is expanding its advertising programme starting with publishers that receive large amounts of traffic from the site, Ad Week reports.

The site will add to its existing trial of users voting for ads they want to see by allowing advertisers to aggregate feeds of user-submitted stories on a particular subject and pull these stories together around their advertisement.

Full story at this link…

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Trafigura update: Jack Straw to examine use of ‘super injunctions’

The justice secretary Jack Straw will examine the use of so-called ‘super injunctions’ following yesterday’s Trafigura-Guardian row, the Prime Minister, Gordon Brown told MPs in Parliament today.

As reported by PA Mediapoint on Press Gazette, Gordon Brown called secret injunctions, which not only banned reporting of a story but also the existence of the ban itself, an ‘unfortunate’ area of UK law.

Since yesterday’s events which saw Carter-Ruck abandon an attempt to stop the Guardian publishing a tabled question for Parliament, Peter Bottomley, a Conservative MP, told the house he was reporting Carter-Ruck, the law firm acting on behalf of Trafigura, to the Law Society, on the grounds that no lawyers should be able to inhibit the reporting of Parliament.

Carter-Ruck has disputed the Guardian’s account of events published on Monday evening, in a statement available via its website [Full contents at this  PDF link].

“There has never been any question of Trafigura applying for an injunction that had as its purpose the prevention of publication of any matter arising in Parliament.  No such application has ever been made,” it stated.

“Nevertheless, as formulated (and as The Guardian apparently accepts) the Order would indeed have prevented The Guardian from reporting on the  Parliamentary Question which had been tabled for later this week,” the statement said.

The Guardian stated in an editorial today that they were told not to report the question, in line with an existing order. “When we became aware that the existence of this order had been mentioned in a parliamentary question we sought to vary the terms of the injunction. We were advised by Carter-Ruck that publication would place us in contempt of court,” stated the Guardian.

Private Eye was the first publication to publish Paul Farrelly’s question, the fortnightly magazine proclaimed in a story on its site.

“The MP’s [Paul Farrelly] intention to test this conspiracy of silence [secret 'super-injunctions'] by asking questions about it using parliamentary privilege was revealed in Private Eye 1246, which went on sale on 29 September – a full two weeks before the Twittersphere caught up with the story.”

“There is an emerging culture of anonymity in which justice is not even seen to be done, and that is an unfortunate, rather dangerous trend,” said Ian Hislop, the magazine’s editor.

“I thought Private Eye’s job was to expose this. That is why I decided to publish the MP’s questions as the first item in the parliamentary column in yesterday’s [Tuesday] edition of Private Eye,” he said.

“The questions mentioned a recent court case in which we were defendants and concerned a matter on which I had given evidence to a parliamentary select committee. It seemed to me impossible that, in 2009, there could be any reason why we would not be allowed to publish privileged material available from the House of Commons. I saw the questions on the parliament website and I could not think of any judicial ruling which could overrule parliament, so I went ahead. That’s what we’re for.”

But the UK injunction on the report referenced in Paul Farrelly’s question remains.

“The issuing by the courts of so-called ‘super-injunctions’ is rightly controversial and  a matter of growing concern,” MP Paul Farrelly said in a statement yesterday.

“That is why, using parliamentary privilege, I tabled these questions to Jack Straw at the Ministry of Justice as a matter of urgency.”

“The practice offends the time-honoured ‘rule against prior restraint’, which safeguards freedom of expression in this country. It also fails to protect whistleblowers, acting in the public interest. The huge legal bills involved in fighting cases, too, have a chilling effect on legitimate investigative journalism.”

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‘Individualised’ newspapers launched at Ifra Expo 2009

October 14th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Newspapers, Online Journalism

You might think now is not the right economic climate in which to launch a new print title, but digital document management company Océ and founder of the Digital Newspaper Network, is taking its chances with a new venture, ‘niiu’.

The premise is that readers choose the content: niiu will publish different news and blog stories online and users select their favourites to go into  a personalised paper, delivered to its subscribers daily. It’s a concept Océ has patented, it states.

The team thinks that print will attract its audience: “Even young people prefer to read on paper. With the niuu concept we bridge the gap betweek web and print,” said co-founder of niuu Wanja S. Oberhof, in a press release.

Berlin is the first market for niiu, but it plans to expand the concept to other places, such as Hamburg or Munich, he said.

Online-print precedent

Another example of online-to-print has been launched in beta by TheBlogPaper. Its idea is to publish blogs, photos and comments on the website and put the highest rated and most discussed content into a printed paper newspaper.

French site and publication Vendredi.info also publishes online material in print, but both these models produce one version, not individualised content.

Niuu launched its first issues on Tuesday (October 13), at the Océ stand at the Ifra Expo 2009 newspaper exhibition in Vienna. It hopes to gain 5000 subscribers within the first six months.

It launches at 1.80 euros per issue, with a reduced price for students. Or a pre-pay voucher of 45 euros  is available.

Whether it will be a gimmick or goer remains to be seen. Guardian media blogger Roy Greenslade has strong doubts.

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Keep It Legal: BBC’s £1m libel bill

October 14th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted by in Broadcasting, Editors' pick, Legal

The discovery that the BBC has paid out almost £1 million in costs and damages for libel from current affairs programmes in two years has shocked the Sunday Express, but not Richard Sharpe, writing on ETC’s Keep It Legal Blog.

“The BBC received 71 complaints about libel since January 2008 and spent £121,000 on lawyers to defend itself, says the Sunday Express.

“Consider just one fact about the output of the BBC: over 78,000 radio hours in its past financial year over 10 radio networks. And it has 8 TV networks also pumping out hours of viewing.

“Current affairs is a central part of the BBC. The BBC spends £4.5 billion on operating expenditure, putting out those radio and TV hours, putting up the websites and all the support needed to do that.”

Full post at this link…

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Index on Censorship: Simon Singh wins leave to appeal in BCA libel case

October 14th, 2009 | 2 Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Journalism, Legal

Popular science writer Simon Singh has been granted leave to appeal in the libel action brought against him by the British Chiropractic Association, reports the Index on Censorship.

Full story at this link…

Singh is due to participate at an event at City University tomorrow, Thursday October 15:

Panel discussion: ‘Science Fact – science journalism and libel law’

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Legal safety questions for bloggers

Two blog posts that raise the question of legal risks for bloggers:

  • “To what extent does where you run your blog from and / or host it impact its legal situation? asks Sunny Hundal of Pickled Politics, using his own and Guido Fawke’s blog as examples.

“The [US-based] Online News Association is surveying digital journalists to gauge the need for low-cost Media Liability Insurance coverage, which includes libel, defamation, copyright and other publishing torts.

“If ONA determines enough need and interest, we will work to provide a program tailored for digital journalists under the ONA name.

“Please take a few moments to complete the following survey. If you aren’t in need of Media Liability Insurance, please forward this to someone who might be.

The survey will close on Friday, October 16.

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