Author Archives: Judith Townend

Cyberjournalist.net: The Nation’s new website with emphasis on community

CyberJournalist has an overview post of the New York based Nation magazine’s new site, built on Drupal with the aim of prioritising community:

The Nation magazine launched a much-improved new website that is built on an open-source platform and features a more flexible and community-oriented design. The redesign features innovations like search-engine friendly “topic” pages, story-level twitter feeds and instantly-customizable homepage and section front designs.

Full post at this link…

Times Online: Latest cases on the London libel trail

The Times has a good round-up of recent libel cases, including that involving a British freelance journalist, who “will appear in the High Court to defend a libel claim being brought by an Indian ‘holy man'”.

The case will be the latest test of libel tourism: Jeet Singh is an Indian national who lives in India and is thought never to have visited Britain.

The case is also the latest in a flurry of recent activity on the libel front: today there will be a ruling with wide implications for bloggers and online media.

Full story at this link…

Facebook and Google to be quizzed on whether the internet is safe for free speech

Index on Censorship is to host a debate on the internet and free speech at the Free Word Centre in London, tonight [12 May] at 6.30 pm.

It will feature:

  • Richard Allan, director of policy EU, Facebook
  • Anthony House, European policy and communications manager, Google
  • Gus Hosein, policy director, Privacy International

If like Journalism.co.uk, you’ve been increasingly alarmed by social network tactics that threaten journalists’ safety and confidentiality, you might like to submit a question to be asked at the event, at this link: ‘Put your questions to Facebook and Google – We ask is the internet safe for free speech?’

Background:

Jon Snow: ‘Joy is it to be allowed the role of reporter in these amazing times’

Yesterday we linked to an article by the Guardian’s Andrew Sparrow on the possibilities of political blogging, and today we spotted that Channel 4 News’ Jon Snow is also waxing lyrical about the beauty of election blogging:

Joy is it to be alive and to be allowed the role of reporter in these amazing times. May Snowblog long continue to be somewhere where, whatever our prejudices, we can share this remarkable moment in the affairs of man and woman.

Full post at this link…

(via @samshepherd / http://mayweed.tumblr.com/)

Fast Company: AFP’s legal row with photographer – and Twitter

Fast Company takes a look at the legal row between news agency AFP and photographer Daniel Morel – and where Twitter fits in. In summary, AFP is currently embroiled in a rights row with Morel after using photographs of Haiti that had been uploaded on Twitpic. Morel reportedly sent cease-and-desist letters to which AFP responded with threat of a law suit.

Fast Company writes:

AFP, like a lot of more established organizations, seems unable to change their perspectives on Twitter to address what the service actually is. That Morel posted some of the most important photos of the decade on Twitter before any other publication shows the power and flexibility of Twitter as a legitimate news service. AFP’s argument, that Twitter is in some way nothing more than a digital bulletin board with no accompanying rights, is worrisome – it’s a different kind of news outlet than AFP, but that doesn’t mean its value in news can simply be ignored.

Full Fast Company story at this link…

More from Russian Photos Blog at this link…

Currybet.net: Journalists need to think like programmers

Following on from the recent ‘do journalists need to code’ debate on this blog and elsewhere, Martin Belam argues the answer is both yes and no.

[J]ournalists don’t all need to be able to write program, but the ability to think like a programmer is an invaluable skill.

For example, being able to spot the difference between a small technical change that has a big impact on story-telling, and what appears to be a small change but which has a hugely expensive technical impact, is an essential skill for someone setting the requirements for changes to a website or a CMS.

Full post at this link…

Sky News’ version of the Campbell-Boulton row

If you read Metro, or the Mirror or even the Murdoch-owned Sun, you might be forgiven for thinking it was Sky News political editor Adam Boulton who lost it with Alastair Campbell during a live interview yesterday (video below).

But according to Sky News, which issued this statement yesterday evening, Boulton was “strongly” defending his – and Sky News’- journalistic integrity:

In the course of an interview outside Westminster this afternoon [10 May], Sky News political editor Adam Boulton defended his integrity and, by implication, Sky News’, against an attack by Alastair Campbell.

Mr Campbell had said, “You’ve been spending the last four years saying Gordon Brown is dead meat and he should be going anyway.” Adam Boulton strongly defended his impartiality, saying “I’m not saying that, show me where I said that once.”

Mr. Campbell went on to say, “You’re obviously upset that David Cameron is not Prime Minister”  to which Adam replied, “I’m not upset, you are, you keep casting aspersions.”

When challenged by Adam Boulton to substantiate his assertions, Mr Campbell failed to provide any evidence.

Meanwhile, former Downing Street director of communications Alastair Campbell has blogged his own thoughts here:

I was somewhat taken aback to be the only Labour figure trending on twitter an hour or so after the announcement and the reason – Adam Boulton – was trending all night. Justin Bieber eat your heart out.

Adam gets very touchy at any suggestion that he is anything other than an independent, hugely respected, totally impartial and very important journalist whose personal views never see the light of day, and who works for an organisation that is a superior form of public service than anything the BBC can deliver.

Boulton’s Wikipedia page has already been edited to include the incident, with a certain amount of creativity. ‘Falling of Love: The End of My marriage to Alistair Campbell (2010) Simon & Garfunkel’ seems an unlikely source for the entry.

The transcript (issued by Sky News):

JEREMY THOMPSON:
I’m joined here in Westminster by Alastair Campbell, good evening to you.  A lot of people trying to make head or tail of what the Prime Minister said, your colleagues say it’s a dignified and statesman like offering from him, those on the other side of the House saying it is a blatant piece of party gamesmanship and has nothing to do with dignity.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Well it is. I think it brings sense to this very, very complicated and difficult situation which the election result threw up.  No party won, no party leader got a very clear mandate. The Tories got most seats, they got the biggest share of the vote and the options remain a minority Tory government, some sort of deal between the Tories and the Liberals and they can carry on their discussions with that but what’s happened today is that Nick Clegg has indicated to Gordon Brown that there may be sense in actually a discussion developing, there has actually been behind the scenes discussions going on but a proper policy based discussion developing between Labour and the Liberal Democrats to see whether the basis for a coalition government can be formed and I think actually a lot of people will feel that’s not a bad …if that materialises is not a bad outcome for this election.  Let’s just go back a bit where we were …

JEREMY THOMPSON:
Do you think that’s what the British people really voted for?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Well they certainly voted for change of some sort, no doubt about that … let me finish, they voted for change of some sort …

ADAM BOULTON:
I thought you wanted to have a discussion.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
No, I wanted to answer Jeremy’s question if I may.

ADAM BOULTON:
Oh right.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
They want a change of some sort, they did not go for David Cameron despite the utterly slavish media support that he got, despite all the money from Lord Ashcroft and his friends, despite the fact that we’d had the recession and so forth, they didn’t really want Cameron.  There obviously has been, Gordon accepts that there was also …

JEREMY THOMPSON:
Well this was their least worst option.  They certainly didn’t give Gordon Brown an endorsement did they?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
What I said was no party leader and no party won.

ADAM BOULTON:
Let’s just look at the facts of the election. In the election you take three main parties …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Yes.

ADAM BOULTON:
… there is one party that lost both in terms of share of the vote and seats, that is Labour.  There is one party that is behind the Conservatives and on top of that we have now got a Prime Minister who wants to stay on for four months but is saying  he is going to resign in four months time. Now none of that, with all due respect Alastair Campbell, can be seen as a vote of confidence by the voters in the Labour party.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
But nobody is saying that it is, in fact that’s the whole point …

ADAM BOULTON:
But you’re saying nobody won, what I’m saying is if you just look at the results there is a party that is clearly not …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
What you are saying though, look David Cameron didn’t do that much better than some of his predecessors but I accept he got more seats and a bigger share of the vote but my point is …

ADAM BOULTON:
A much bigger share of the vote.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Right, okay, but my point is that constitutionally …

ADAM BOULTON:
And the second point if I can just …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Can I answer the first point?

ADAM BOULTON:
The second point is if you put together the percentages of the vote or the parliamentary seats a Lib-Lab combination doesn’t do it.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
No, you’d then have to look at other parties …

ADAM BOULTON:
It doesn’t have a majority so …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
But nor has a minority Tory government.

ADAM BOULTON:
Yes, but a Lib-Conservative coalition clearly has got a majority and a majority of seats.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
And that may happen, and that may happen, all that’s happened today …

ADAM BOULTON:
Well why not do what Malcolm Wickes says and just go quietly, accept that you lost this election?  Why not do what David Blunkett says and accept that you lost this election?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Because I don’t think that would be the right thing to do because I don’t think that is the verdict that the public delivered.

ADAM BOULTON:
What, national interest is what you are seriously thinking about in this?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Yes, it is actually, yes.

ADAM BOULTON:
The nation needs four more months of Gordon Brown limping on until he retires?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Adam, I know that you’ve been spending the last few years saying Gordon Brown is dead meat and he should be going anyway …

ADAM BOULTON:
I’m  not saying that, show me where I said that once.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Adam, I don’t want to …

ADAM BOULTON:
But are you saying in the national interest what the nation needs is four more months of Gordon Brown and then resign having lost an election?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
I am saying, I am saying there are three options. One is a Tory minority …  none of the are perfect, one is a Tory minority government.  That would be perfectly legitimate, okay.  It wouldn’t be terribly stable, it might not last very long but it is legitimate.  The second is a Lib-Tory deal either …

ADAM BOULTON:
It could be stable.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
… which could be stable but what’s absolutely clear Adam, you can’t tell the Liberal Democrats to do things they don’t want to do.

ADAM BOULTON:
I’m not telling anybody to do anything.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
But you’re sort of saying it is an easy option for them and it’s not and what’s coming through loud and clear from a lot of the Liberal Democrats is that their activists and their supporters are saying, hold on a minute, we did not vote to get you to put David Cameron in power, we voted to stop that happening.

ADAM BOULTON:
Did they vote to keep Gordon Brown in power?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
They voted …

ADAM BOULTON:
Did they vote to keep Gordon Brown in power?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
No, they didn’t and Gordon has accepted that today which is why…

ADAM BOULTON:
Exactly, so on that basis you …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
What does he do, what does he do?  Just sort of says here you go, David Cameron come on in, you didn’t actually get the vote you should have done, you didn’t get the majority you said you were going to do …

ADAM BOULTON:
He got a lot more votes and seats than he did.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Yes, I know, you’re obviously upset that David Cameron is not Prime Minister.

ADAM BOULTON:
I’m not upset, you are, you keep casting aspersions and …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Calm down.

ADAM BOULTON:
I am commenting, don’t keep saying what I think.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
This is live on television.

JEREMY THOMPSON:
Alastair, Alastair …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Dignity, dignity.

ADAM BOULTON:
Don’t keep telling me what I think, this is what you do, you come on and you say you haven’t won the election …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Jeremy …

ADAM BOULTON:
… you talk to me, I’m fed up with you telling me what I think, I don’t think that.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
I don’t care what you’re fed up with, you can say what you like.  I can tell you my opinion …

ADAM BOULTON:
Don’t tell me what I think.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
I will tell you why I think you are reacting so badly.

JEREMY THOMPSON:
Alastair, you are being a bit provocative here and unnecessarily so.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Well sometimes politics is about passionate things.

JEREMY THOMPSON:
I understand that.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
He is saying Gordon Brown is no longer legitimately in Downing Street, I’m saying he is.   He is.

ADAM BOULTON:
No, I’m saying look at the performances in the elections, Labour did worse than the Conservatives, will you accept that?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
I know.  They got more seats, of course they did, the Tories go more seats…

ADAM BOULTON:
So you do accept it?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Yes.  Equally Gordon Brown is constitutionally perfectly entitled to be Prime Minister and …

JEREMY THOMPSON:
Alastair, just tell me how …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Let me finish this point.  He has managed this situation I think perfectly properly.  He has today announced he will not be the Prime Minister …

ADAM BOULTON:
Can I ask you a simple question?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Yes.

ADAM BOULTON:
Why hasn’t he had a Cabinet meeting before making this offer?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
He is about to have a Cabinet meeting now.

ADAM BOULTON:
Yes, but now he has made the offer, what can the Cabinet do, why haven’t you had a meeting with the parliamentary Labour party like the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives have had?

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
He’s having one tomorrow, he’s having one tomorrow.

JEREMY THOMPSON:
Gentlemen, gentlemen.

ADAM BOULTON:
In other words it’s you, totally unelected have plotted this with …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Me?

ADAM BOULTON:
Yes.  You are happiest speaking about him …

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
That’s because the Ministers are going to a Cabinet meeting …

ADAM BOULTON:
He has got a parliamentary party, you’re the one that cooked it up, you’re the one that’s cooked it up with Peter Mandelson.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
Oh my God, unbelievable.  Adam, calm down.

JEREMY THOMPSON:
Gentlemen, gentlemen, let this debate carry on later.  Let’s just remind you that Gordon Brown said a few minutes ago…

ADAM BOULTON:
I actually care about this country.

ALASTAIR CAMPBELL:
You think I don’t care about it, you think I don’t care about it.

ADAM BOULTON:
I don’t think the evidence is there.

JEREMY THOMPSON:
… let’s listen to Gordon Brown’s statement.

Paul Foot Award opens for entries

The annual Private Eye/Guardian Paul Foot Award for campaigning and investigative journalism is open for entries in 2010:

The overall winner will be awarded £5,000, with the 5 runners-up each receiving £1,000 at a ceremony to be held in London on 2nd November 2010. Submissions will be accepted for material published in a newspaper, magazine or on a website between 1st September 2009 and 31st August 2010.

The form can be found at this link [PDF] and the closing date is 1 September 2010.

Read Journalism.co.uk’s coverage from last year at this link.

#ge2010 poll: Who were the best tweeters, journalists and bloggers?

Forget about the politicians and their wives, which journalist has done it for you during the general election? In this completely unofficial set of polls, let us know whose coverage you’ve enjoyed the most. If you’ve got notable mentions to add, drop us a line [judith at journalism.co.uk], tweet [@journalismnews] or comment below. Nominations were compiled using our readers’ suggestions – but add your own to the poll too!

#gv2010: Follow the Global Voices Citizen Media Summit 2010

The two day Global Voices Citizen Media Summit 2010 is about to kick off in Santiago.

Organisers plan to webcast from the main auditorium 6-7 May.

Global Voices, the citizen media project translated into more than 15 languages, will be hosting discussion and activity around “next generation citizen media, public access and citizen participation” at the two day event.

Global Voices Online will gather with a diverse group of bloggers, activists, technologists, journalists from around the world for two days of public discussions and workshops. A two-day internal meeting for Global Voices editors, translators and contributors will follow the public gathering.

GV is also live blogging in English and in Spanish on its site, and via Twitter (@gvsummit2010 / #gv2010).

More information at this link…

Disclaimer: I am a contributor to Global Voices Online.