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#followjourn – @ruudelmendorp Ruud Elmendorp/freelance video journalist

September 30th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Recommended journalists

Who? Ruud Elmendorp

Where? Ruud is a freelance video journalist based in Africa

Twitter? @ruudelmendorp

Just as we like to supply you with fresh and innovative tips, we are recommending journalists to follow online too. Recommended journalists can be from any sector of the industry: please send suggestions (you can nominate yourself) to rachel at journalism.co.uk; or to @journalismnews.

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The top 10 most-read stories on Journalism.co.uk, 24-30 September

September 30th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in About us, Traffic

1. Orwell Prize will not pursue Hari over failure to return money

2. ITV apologises after video game footage used in documentary

3. Five tips from a radio journalist who reports solely from an iPhone and iPad

4. BBC News wins top online journalism award

5. Hearsay, a non-Facebook way of social news sharing

6. Tweet, Like and Google +1 buttons: lessons in privacy

7. Frost/Nixon voted best broadcast interview of all time

8. BBC America scoops Emmy for North Korea report

9. Labour criticised over call for journalists to be ‘struck off’

10. Johann Hari offers to repay Orwell Prize money

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#Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – free collaboration tools for journalists

Over on Journalism.co.uk’s event site for news:rewired, technology correspondent Sarah Marshall runs through ten free collaboration tools for journalists, to enable journalists to work with each other creatively. Tools on the list include online video editing platform Stroome, data social network BuzzData and sharing document platform DocumentCloud.

See the post in full here.

news:rewired – connected journalism takes place on 6 October at MSN HQ in London, where digital journalism experts will discuss the opportunities for collaboration in the newsroom and with the wider community.

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How news sites can apply to be included in Google News Editors’ Picks

September 30th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Online Journalism, Search, Traffic

Google News UK has had a makeover. The site today (Friday, 30 September) launched a new Editors’ Picks feature, enabling publishers to highlight content within Google News; and several new features, including increased personalisation of the site.

Editors’ Picks is a new section of the Google News homepage, displaying original content that publishers have selected as highlights from their publications.

Google told Journalism.co.uk that publishers can select long-form investigative features, photo slideshows, interactive maps, charts or other content to engage readers of online news.

The Telegraph, the Guardian, BBC News, Channel 4 News, Metro, the Daily Mirror, and the Independent already have content available, and the product is available for publishers at this link, (which Journalism.co.uk has today used to apply to be included in Editors’ Picks).

Users can use the slider feature to increase or decrease the amount of news they receive from a particular outlet.

 

In a release, Madhav Chinnappa, Google’s head of news partnerships in Europe said:

We’ve been working with partners for some time now to create innovative new ways for them to engage readers of news online. Editors’ Picks gives publishers a place to bring together the best of traditional and digital journalism; promoting long-form stories and experimenting with new formats.

 

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#jpod: Out of Africa – inspiring stories for aspiring foreign correspondents

September 30th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Freelance, Podcast

If you are one of those people who has dreamed of becoming a foreign correspondent, this week’s #jpod is for you.

Journalism.co.uk technology correspondent Sarah Marshall speaks to Tim Butcher, a former Telegraph foreign correspondent who is now a renowned author of books detailing journeys in Africa, and Ruud Elmendorp, a video journalist who has been roaming Africa with his camera for almost a decade.

You can find out more about books by Tim Butcher and watch Ruud Elmendorp’s video reports here.

You can hear future podcasts by signing up to the Journalism.co.uk iTunes podcast feed.

 

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Martin Moore: seven models for reform of self-regulation

Revelations about the extent of the phone-hacking scandal have fuelled discussion about the state of self-regulation and possible reform. Martin Moore, director of the Media Standards Trust, has created a thought-provoking list of seven possible ways in which the system might be reformed, from scrapping regulation altogether to full statutory regulation. Moore has weighed up some of the pros and cons of each idea and intends for them to serve as a framework for discussion of the issue.

The list:

1. Abolish the PCC, without setting up a replacement
2. Reform the existing PCC
3. Create an independent regulator
4. Extend a watered down Ofcom to cover all major media organisations
5. Create a professional body for journalists
6. Withdraw all media regulation, but reform, extend, reduce and clarify existing media law
7. Create a new statutory regulator for all media

See Moore’s post on the MST website for his introduction and the full reasoning behind each idea.

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Future PLC ‘considering options’ for US division

September 29th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Business, Editors' pick, Magazines

Magazine publisher Future has said it is “considering a wider range of strategic options” for its US division in light of “challenging” conditions for the business.

In pre-close trading update the publisher said its position in the US “is significantly more challenging” than the UK. In July Future announced plans to “accelerate the transition of Future US into a primarily digital business”.

But this week, in a report preceding full-year earnings in November, the group said trading conditions in the US “reflecting ongoing weakness and decreasing visibility at newsstand” means the board is now considering a wider range of strategic options. PaidContent reports that the language used suggests the company “now may look to sell its business there”.

The publisher also confirmed that 10 per cent of its workforce has been cut in the UK and worldwide, which equals around 100 jobs, as part of its restructure to focus on digital and print efficiencies.

The company also claims in the latest report that the trends identified in its Interim Management Statement, published in July, have continued.

Revenues for the twelve months ending 30 September 2011 are expected to be down 6 per cent on last year, in constant currency.  The Board remains comfortable with market expectations of results for 2011, subject only to any period-end adjustment required in relation to US newsstand returns, beyond those already announced and incorporated into fourth quarter estimates.

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#Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – HTML5 for journalists

Most online journalists will have the basics of HTML and be able to hand code a link, know how to display a headline as bold and have the skills to add emphasis.

And while you have probably heard for HTML5 you may not have looked into what this means for you as a journalist.

If that is the case here is a helpful background article headlined HTML5: briefing notes for journalists and analysts.

To read up on the new mark-ups then here’s Martin Belam’s incredibly useful HTML 5 for journalists, which was published just over a year ago.

Tipster: Sarah Marshall.

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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Bloomberg: News Corp’s The Daily averaging 120,000 readers a week

September 29th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Newspapers, Online Journalism

Bloomberg reported late on Wednesday (28 September) that News Corporation’s iPad-only newspaper the Daily has been averaging around 120,000 readers a week, said to be “less than a quarter of the number the company said it needs to make money”.

The figures came from advertising executive working with the publication.

News Corp., whose Chief Executive Officer Rupert Murdoch personally introduced the publication about eight months ago, may have even fewer paying subscribers since people can read the Daily free for two weeks. The 120,000 figure is for so-called unique weekly visitors, which includes people who pay and those who don’t, said John Nitti, executive vice president of Publicis Groupe SA (PUB)’s media-buying division Zenith Optimedia.

Bloomberg adds that Murdoch had said in February the publication, which was launched in February, would need 500,000 subscribers “to break even”.

Read the Bloomberg report here.

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Hearsay, a non-Facebook way of social news sharing

If you like the sound of Facebook’s new Open Graph news sharing concept, which allows readers to tell their friends what they are reading, but want to share away from the social network, meet Hearsay, which has today (September 29) launched in public beta.

You can sign up by connecting with Facebook, Twitter or by registering and then start to follow people and news sources, such as the Guardian, Mail Online and Telegraph. Once you click-through to a news item from Hearsay others will learn that you have read that article. You also have the option of sharing news on Twitter and Facebook (though bear in mind the tweet will just be the URL of the article with a “via @HearsayNews” message).

John Duncan, Hearsay’s co-founder and CEO who is a former managing editor and general manager of the Observer, describes the social news reader concept as providing others with a more accurate description of your news reading habits than provided by a Twitter stream, for example.

On Twitter and Facebook you tend to share what you think other people will be interested in. On Hearsay you share what you are interested in, what you were interested enough to actually read.

Duncan, who last year was a Knight Fellow at Stanford in the US, met a group of post-grads and together they formed the San Fransisco-based start-up, first working on the concept of social news game which then developed into a social news reader.

So how did they react to last week’s news from Facebook’s #f8 conference that the social media giant was launching its Open Graph single opt-in news reader?

Co-founder and CTO Kevin Montag said they see it as a “flattering endorsement of our vision of the future of social news”.

The more people get used to it on Facebook, the better. Facebook’s problem is that people’s news graph is not the same as their social graph. Can I really rebuild my news graph on Facebook? Do I even want to?  We think there’s plenty of room for us to build something that’s huge and news specific.

Duncan put it another way.

We think that Facebook is a bad place for [social news sharing]. Why do I care what my Aunt Mabel read on Yahoo News? But we think that it helps us get across the idea that passively sharing everything you read isn’t so scary – when you know you’re doing it.

The former journalist told Journalism.co.uk that Hearsay last week held talks with the Guardian, one of two UK news sites to launch a new-style Facebook Open Graph app last week.

And as with the Guardian and the Independent Facebook apps, Hearsay users can opt-out of sharing any article.

If Hearsay is successful in attracting enough users then as with the Facebook apps this news reader could be an important social traffic driver and other news sites will no doubt be keen to sign up as recognised sources.

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