YouTube offers reporting tips from top journalists
http://www.ejc.net/media_news/youtube_offers_reporting_tips_from_top_journalists/
http://www.ejc.net/media_news/youtube_offers_reporting_tips_from_top_journalists/
This leaves the remaining 27% of the 60.2 million sets in the UK still continuing to receive analogue terrestrial broadcast, despite the looming digital switchover.
The take up of digital television on main TV sets has increased 2.4% year on year to 89.6%, while more than 61% of consumers have also converted their second television set to digital - an increase of 8% year on year, according to figures for Q1 2009.
In addition, sales of freeview enabled equipment reached almost 3.4 million units in Q1, up 7% year on year.
Freeview is still the most widely-used digital service on main sets, accounting for around 9.8 million homes, 38.5%, in Q1, up by 200,000 over the year.
The number of homes using freeview on any set in the home reached nearly 18 million - 70% - in Q1 2009, up by about 313,000 on Q4 2008.
The survey also revealed pay satellite customers accounted for almost 8.9 million homes, with free-to-view customers, which includes all homes with satellite TV on the main set, which do not pay a subscription, adding a further 0.5m.
Meanwhile, cable television was received in 13.2% of all homes, up 0.4% from the last quarter.
http://www.mediaweek.co.uk/news/rss/916555/Digital-TV-take-up-reaches-73-UK-households/
http://www.ejc.net/media_news/nielsen_study_teens_still_rely_primarily_on_traditional_media/
As the head of any teen-filled household knows, young adults have hardly abandoned TV for new media. Yet, according to a new report from Nielsen Company, U.S. adolescents are actually watching more TV than ever -- up 6% over the past five years.
Another perhaps counterintuitive finding is that while teens clearly love the Internet, they actually spend less time online than matured adults.
Teens, Nielsen's study on the state of teen media usage finds, spend 11 hours and 32 minutes per month online -- far below the average of 29 hours and 15 minutes for which adults are presently responsible. However, while teens watch less online video than most adults, they report that the ads are highly engaging. Indeed, while teens spend 35% less time watching online video than adults 25-34, they recall ads better when watching TV shows online than they do on the tube.
"The media experience is broadening for all consumers, not just teens," said Nic Covey, director of insights for The Nielsen Company. "Looking at our research across markets and media, we see that, contrary to popular assumption, teens are actually pretty normal in their usage, and more attentive than most give them credit for."
Overall, teens read newspapers, listen to the radio and do, in fact, seem to like ads more than most. Those who recall TV ads are 44% more likely to say they liked the ad.
Teens obviously play video games, but their tastes are not all for the blood-and-guts style games, as just two of their top five most-anticipated games since 2005 have been rated "Mature."
Perhaps even more shocking, teens' favorite TV shows, Web sites and genre preferences across media are mostly the same as their parents. For U.S. teens, American Idol was the top show in 2008, and Google the top Web site, while general dramas are a preferred TV genre for teens around the world.
http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=108710
The bill would subject blogs, chat rooms and social networking sites to possible criminal prosecution, enabling the courts to block all websites considered in breach of Kazakh law.
Media rights activists say the law is designed to allow arbitary crackdowns on anyone opposing Nursultan Nazarbayev, Kazakhstan's president.
But authorities say the legislation aims to curb the distribution of child pornography, extremist literature and other unsuitable material.
"This law is not a regulation of the internet. The amendments introduced to the law are aimed at stopping the dissemination of illegal information on the internet," the government's state information agency said.
http://english.aljazeera.net//news/europe/2009/06/2009625115714327645.html
http://www.ejc.net/media_news/time_spent_on_many_top_newspaper_sites_is_dropping/
http://www.ejc.net/media_news/new_service_tracks_online_interest_in_tv_shows/
http://www.ejc.net/media_news/iran_puts_curbs_on_media_after_disputed_election/
The study shows that 22 per cent of Europeans use the web and watch TV at the same time and more than half of these consumers make use of social networking and instant messaging services on the internet.
Furthermore, those using several media platforms at the same time are also more likely to buy a product from an ecommerce site than those who use one channel at any one time, the EIAA states.
Consumers multi-tasking in this way tend to be under the age of 35 and users of the mobile web, the study additionally indicates.
"It has never been easier for consumers to access the internet on the move and, so, mesh their media," comments Alison Fennah, executive director of the EIAA.
She adds: "Brands need to better understand how media can work most effectively together and reflect this in their marketing strategies."
Research conducted by the EIAA earlier this year found that seven in ten European advertisers are spending more on online marketing in 2009 compared with last year, taking money away from traditional media budgets in the process.
Survey respondents also indicated that they intend to continue to increase web spending throughout 2010 and 2011.
http://www.iabuk.net/en/1/europeanmediauseconverging120609.mxs
EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - In an effort to counter increasing worries about infringement of press freedom by governments in Europe, both within the EU and beyond, the editor-in-chief of Germany's weekly Stern magazine, together with EU media commissioner Viviane Reding on Tuesday (9 June) celebrated the launch of the European Charter on Freedom of the Press.
Speaking to journalists in Brussels, Ms Reding expressed her concern about threats to media freedom in "the east" but was reluctant to acknowledge similar worries emanating from Italy.
The charter, while having no legal teeth and being largely a symbolic document, should begin to have some effect at the point of accession to the EU, as it is intended to be made a condition of entry for EU candidate countries in future accession negotiations.
"[The commission does] not have a direct competence to make the charter legally binding," said Ms Reding, "but the journalists will give the charter to the politicians, who will have to see that the charter is applied in real terms."
The ten-article charter requires, amongst other assurances, that journalism in all media be "free of persecution, repression and of political interference by government."
The charter is an initiative of the Stern editor, Hans-Ulrich Joerges, Ms Reding and other editors-in-chief of European newspapers and originated during a discussion between the commission and the newspapers in 2007.
The publishers and the commission meet on an annual basis to discuss sectoral concerns.
"The charter's main concern is at last to unify Europe journalistically and to enable all our colleagues to invoke its principles if press freedom is violated," said Mr Joerges at the launch in Brussels alongside Ms Reding.
Some 150 prominent journalists from 28 European states have signed the document, but all journalists are encouraged to do so at the document's online home.
In March, the Open Society Institute's media programme - a pressure group focussing on media freedom in emerging democracies - criticised the European Commission in a report that argued that broadcasting across Europe, particularly in the east but also in Italy, is undergoing a "counter-reformation" - a backsliding towards overt political control after the post-Cold War period, when leaders relaxed their grip on TV and radio.
The report also found that many public broadcasters are heading into the economic crisis deeply underfunded and unable to meet public service requirements, while political elites are returning to appointing partisan allies to key positions, secure in the knowledge that no penalties from the EU await them for doing so.
The European Commission came in for criticism for not holding new EU member states to account after promises concerning media freedom were made ahead of accession.
"The commission has notably failed to keep the new states to their compacts for the media that they made as a condition of entry," the report said.
Ms Reding, herself a former reporter, said the charter was inspired by complaints from eastern journalists about the undermining of press freedoms.
"About the eastern press in general," continued Ms Reding, adding "and Italy" visibly reluctantly after a reporter's prompt, "the eastern press was the basis for this. Journalists from the eastern press really told us horror stories about how they cannot exercise their job as a journalist any more."
The OSI report at the time described the situation in Italy as "a dark farce."
Already the owner of 90 percent of Italy's commercial broadcasters, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi influences the public broadcaster RAI as well.
Under his third premiership, according to the report, "the appointment of its board followed the usual political logic, with the result that strategic decisions reflected political affiliation."
"Italian deputies have ... grown accustomed to see their control over RAI as a natural prerogative," the document continues.
Speaking to EUobserver, Mr Joergens said that he shares OSI's concerns about Italy.
"It's noticeable that only one journalist from Italy, from Corriere della Sera, signed the charter. The situation in Italy should be as much a concern as in the east."