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#Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – work experience tips

February 15th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Top tips for journalists

Here are some key pointers on how to make the most of work experience placements, compiled by student journalist Andy Halls. His website also features employer expectations of those on work experience, from Journalism.co.uk owner John Thompson. Tipster: Rachel McAthy.

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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Forty-four new media, editorial and communications vacancies this week on Journalism.co.uk

February 14th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Jobs

These are the latest editorial, PR and media job opportunities from this week on Journalism.co.uk’s jobs board

Copywriter
Create online copy that makes complex technical services easy to understand. As a writer with an interest in technology, you’ll not only help our customers get the most from their phones; you’ll also strengthen the relationship they have with Three
Salary: £21K-£27K
Three
Maidenhead, England
>>more

Mergers and acquisitions deal reporter
mergermarket’s research division is looking to hire an entry level deal reporter with strong foreign language skills to be based in London.
Salary: £20K (annual discretionary bonus + benefits)
Mergermarket Ltd
London, England
>>more

Production assistant
Are you passionate about punctuation? A stickler for spelling? Mad about magazines?
Salary: Competitive
Future Publishing Ltd
Bath, England
>>more

Journalist
The Guzelian press photography agency needs a journalist to generate more stories for our talented photographers.
Salary: DoE
Guzelian Ltd.
Bradford, England
>>more

Picture editor
The Guzelian picture agency needs a pro-active picture editor to organise the diary, supervise photographers, taste stories and market its work to national news and picture desks.
Salary: DoE
Guzelian Ltd.
Bradford, England
>>more

Click on the link below to see more.

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Cameroon journalist fighting deportation has hearing delayed until March

February 14th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Legal

Cameroon journalist Charles Atangana, who is fighting deportation from the UK, will have to wait until March to find out whether he can stay in the UK after a judicial review hearing was withdrawn following the submission of new documentation to the Home Office.

According to a release from the union today, Atangana is currently pursuing a fresh asylum claim which has been rejected by the Home Office already but given the right to appeal.

Atangana, who is a member of the National Union of Journalists, claims he was tortured and detained for his writing in his home country, which he fled in 2004.

The economics and current affairs reporter was due to be deported back to Cameroon in August last year but was granted a reprieve following an ongoing campaign by the NUJ.

His appeal will be heard at the First Tier Tribunal at Taylor House on 14 March.

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Guardian: Telegraph calls in private investigators over Vince Cable leak

The Guardian reported over the weekend that the owner of the Daily Telegraph is understood to have called in a private investigative firm look at the leak of Vince Cable’s comments about Rupert Murdoch to the BBC.

The comments, which the Telegraph had decided not to include in its report, were published by the BBC’s business editor, Robert Peston, on his blog.

Telegraph Media Group said today that it does not comment on internal security matters.

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BetaTales: Can the story of traffic accidents be told in a new way?

BetaTales takes a look at a new project based on traffic accident data from journalists and programmers at Norwegian media house Bergens Tidende.

Accidents are apparently common fare in the Western part of Norway, with frequent news reports of collisions on the region’s narrow, winding roads.

With this in mind, journalists at Bergens Tidende approached the Norwegian Public Roads Administration armed with the Freedom of Information Act, eventually getting access to a database of all road accidents in the country.

The database turned out to be a journalistic goldmine: It contained details about 11,400 traffic accidents all over the country, all neatly arranged in an Excel file. Not only did the database give the exact position of each accident, but it also included numerous details, such as how many were killed and injured, the seriousness of injuries, driving conditions, type of vehicle, type of street, speed limit, time of the day, etc.

Still, most journalists would at this point probably have been happy to take a look at the database, extract some of the relevant accidents and made a couple of news stories based on them. In Bergens Tidende, though, the journalists instead were teamed up with programmers. Within a few weeks all the traffic accidents in the country had been put on a big Google map with endless ways to search the database.

Full story on BetaTales at this link.

“Killing Roads” project from Bergens Tidende at this link (Norwegian).

Bergens Tidende multimedia journalist Lasse Lambrechts talks about “Killing Roads”:

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Observer: Readers’ editor defends paper’s use of private investigator

Earlier this month, Journalism.co.uk reported that the Observer would be seeking to distinguish between the case of ‘Operation Motorman’ and the phone-hacking scandal, after ‘confusion in the media’.

Operation Motorman was an investigation launched by the Information Commissioner’s Office in 2003 into the use of private investigators to obtain personal information, claiming that evidence documented “literally thousands of section 55 offences” (Data Protection Act) with more than 300 journalists identified.

At the time the Observer released a statement to say that yes, the Observer has used the services of an outside agency in the past, “and while there were strong public interest defences for most of those cases, it is possible that some of the inquiries did not sufficiently fit that criteria”. As a result editor Roger Alton said action was taken to ensure “no inquiries will be made through outside agencies unless I believe that there is a compelling public interest to do so”.

However, following recent events in the separate phone-hacking investigation and speculation surrounding this, the Observer this weekend published a piece from its readers’ editor Stephen Pritchard, reinforcing its position that there “has never been any suggestion, let alone evidence, that the Observer has undertaken, commissioned or in any way been involved,” in phone hacking.

In relation to the issues surrounding Operation Motorman, current editor John Mulholland is said to have confirmed that Alton’s previous instruction “stands today”. Pritchard also outlines the sorts of stories journalists were using the services in relation to:

Former reporters told me they were working to uncover illegal arms deals, drugs trafficking, Islamic terrorism and political intrigue; stories they believed to be in the public interest that went on to appear in the paper. They said that the names that turn up in [Steve] Whittamore‘s register were people who would be, in the main, hard to find; individuals who would not make themselves available for interview. They felt it was right that they should attempt to find those people and put allegations to them. Sometimes, they would be up against tight deadlines and would use Whittamore because he was quicker at finding phone numbers or converting numbers into subscriber addresses.

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A look at the Guardian Hacks SXSW event

The Guardian played host to designers, developers and journalists at the weekend for its “Guardian Hacks SXSW” event. (The raw data reveals that there were 82 developers, 12 girls and 12 ‘full beards’, among other things.)

Guardian information architect Martin Belam takes a look at some of the day’s hacks on his blog:

The hack that appeared to draw the most gasps from the assembled journalists in the room, and consequently won, was Articlr, which was presented by Jason Grant. It was a back-end tool for easily monitoring social media and rival coverage of a story in real-time, and then simply dragging-and-dropping elements from external sites into a story package. With a bit of geo-location goodness thrown in. I fully expect the feature request to be on my Guardian desk by about 11am this morning…

Plus you can see full coverage from the Guardian at this link and related Twitter goings on using the #gsxsw hashtag.

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OJB: Three things the BBC has done for online journalism

February 14th, 2011 | 1 Comment | Posted by in Broadcasting, Job losses, Online Journalism

Three weeks on from the announcement that the BBC would cut 360 jobs as part of a 25 per cent cut to its online budget, Paul Bradshaw looks at three things the corporation has done for online journalism.

1. Web writing style

The BBC’s way of writing for the web has always been a template for good web writing, not least because of the BBC’s experience with having to meet similar challenges with Ceefax – the two shared a content management system and journalists writing for the website would see the first few pars of their content cross-published on Ceefax too.

Even now it is difficult to find an online publisher who writes better for the web.

Full post on Online Journalism Blog at this link.

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#Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – multimedia tools

February 14th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Multimedia, Top tips for journalists

Multimedia: Adam Westbrook has compiled this list of free tools for journalists working in multimedia, from recording and editing programmes to frame counter and video transcoder technology. Tipster: Rachel McAthy.

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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#jpod: The week’s top news stories from Journalism.co.uk, 11 February 2011

February 11th, 2011 | 1 Comment | Posted by in Journalism, Podcast

Listen below for this week’s news round-up from Journalism.co.uk senior reporter Rachel McAthy and sign up to our iTunes podcast feed for future audio.

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