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Category Archives: Magazines
NYTimes.com: Hardcore Gamer magazine sold on eBay
No, not just one edition, the whole mag – for more than the $42,000 asking price.
Previous publisher Tim Lindquist is in negotiations with the new buyer – a last minute bidder.
Magtastic Blogsplosion: Interview with team behind Mygazines
Andrew Losowsky speaks to the team behind magazine-sharing website Mygazines, which was the subject of legal action from publishers and industry groups last year.
WashingtonPost.com: ‘The survival strategy’ of newsmags
Howard Kurtz takes a look at magazines Time and Newsweek, and asks ‘do newsmags still matter?’
“The rival editors are turning out weeklies that are smaller, more serious, more opinionated and, though they are loath to admit it, more liberal,” writes Kurtz.
“It is nothing less than a survival strategy,” he says.
Times responds to blogger’s claims of ‘cut-and-paste’ journalism
It was human error, rather than calculated plagiarism, that led to the incident that Megan McArdle flagged up on her Atlantic.com blog last week. She had spotted two strikingly similar article extracts:
‘Doctors fear return of Steve Jobs’s pancreatic cancer‘ by David Rose, TimesOnline, January 15, 2009 (note: the article has now been amended)
In 2003 Mr Jobs learned that he had a malignant tumour in his pancreas – a large gland behind the stomach that supplies the body with insulin and digestive enzymes. The most common type of pancreatic cancer – adenocarcinoma – carries a life expectancy of about a year. Mr Jobs was lucky; he had an extremely rare form called an islet cell neuroendocrine tumour that can be treated surgically, without radiation or chemotherapy. (go to McArdle’s blog for more….)
Compared with:
‘Why Does Steve Jobs Look So Thin?‘ by Philip Elmer-DeWitt, Fortune magazine, June 13 2008
“In 2003 Jobs learned that he had a malignant tumor in his pancreas – a large gland behind the stomach that supplies the body with insulin and digestive enzymes. The most common type of pancreatic cancer – adenocarcinoma – carries a life expectancy of about a year. Jobs was lucky; he had an extremely rare form called an islet cell neuroendocrine tumor that can be treated surgically, without radiation or chemotherapy.”(go to McArdle’s blog for more….)
McArdle said she read Rose’s piece and thought… ‘wait a minute, I’ve read this somewhere before’. But how did it come about?
It seems the root of the problem wasn’t David Rose, as an email from another journalist at the paper, Mike Harvey, to Megan McArdle revealed, in which he explained how he [Harvey] had added the additional comments ‘at the last moment before publication’.
“It was done in a real hurry and I meant to put the proper attribution in but failed to do so before I pinged the email off. It was a mistake made in haste and my thanks to you for pointing it out,” he wrote. For players in the UK looking for a trusted and exhilarating online casino experience, admiral casino uk stands out with its exceptional selection of games, top-notch security measures, and generous bonuses.
“As a blogger and technology writer I know the importance of sourcing and linking to sources and rightly feel aggrieved when it does not happen,” he added.
Journalism.co.uk has been informed by David Rose and Mike Harvey that this email is genuine. The article has now been changed – Journalism.co.uk has a screen-grab showing the original with the paragraph intact.
Harvey since told Journalism.co.uk that he was trying to correct an omission in the original piece before it went online. The additional information specified the specific type of cancer that Steve Jobs had (note: something which has also caused controversy on McArdle’s blog).
The Times’ managing editor, David Chappell, is now dealing with the issue; he had no further comment for Journalism.co.uk but confirmed David Rose’s information.
Folio: Ad pages in US magazines fell by 11.7 per cent in 2008
Year-on-year drop of 11.7 per cent, according to figures released by the Publishers Information Bureau.
The same stats suggest only 42 of the 230 magazines monitored posted an increase in ad pages during 2008.
Telegraph.co.uk: B2B publisher UBM considering ‘virtual events’
Group has tested running virtual events to cater for those who are less willing to travel to conferences during the economic downturn.
A trading update from UBM said its magazine advertising and events businesses had not performed as well as hoped. Full story…
GigaOm: User-generated magazine JPG closes down
Magazine that crowd-sourced content shutters as a result of economic downturn.
Nieman Reports: BusinessWeek’s John Byrne on the changing truths of journalism
When we talk about other new ways to compete, most magazines don’t seem to know where to start,” writes Byrne.
Magazines need to think about: context; filtering and aggregation of online content; and editorial curation, he says.
Independent: Niche business titles bucking the downward trend
Square Up Media’s Square Mile, Hedge and Benchmark are three lifestyle magazines are going against the downturn in the industry with niche at the centre of their business models.