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2008.05.08

Now showing online

An article from the NY Times discusses how within the last few months, television distributors have opened up their libraries of classic content online, making thousands of episodes of programs like "The Twilight Zone" and "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" available free. In putting old episodes online, broadcasters are tapping into the "long tail" of niche content that the Internet has monetized.

http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_9167596?nclick_check=1

2008.04.30

European Commission seeks to improve its communication via audiovisual media

In a Communication entitled "Communicating Europe through audiovisual media", the Commission has announced actions aimed at bringing more coverage of EU affairs to TV and radio channels and multimedia platforms. It will encourage audiovisual media professionals to create and take part in European audiovisual networks. In particular, it will propose a network of TV stations to complement the network of radio stations already launched on 1st April 2008. The Commission will also increase the amount of raw audiovisual material which it already provides free of charge to audiovisual media professionals and will increase its own production of videos to illustrate or explain EU policies.

http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/08/640&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en

2008.04.29

Russians face internet Iron Curtain

Russian government officials are proposing tough censorship laws for the country's 29 million internet users. State newspaper Rossiiskaya Gazeta reported that prosecutors have proposed an amendment to bring the internet under the same rules as traditional media "within a month".

http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2215216/russians-face-iron-curtain

2008.04.27

New Media Consortium Sparking Innovative Learning & Creativity

The New Media Consortium (NMC) is an international 501(c)3 not-for-profit consortium of over 260 learning-focused organizations dedicated to the exploration and use of new media and new technologies. NMC member institutions are found in almost every state in the United States, across Canada, and in Europe, Asia and Australia. Among the membership are an elite list of the most highly regarded colleges and universities in the world, as well as a growing list of innovative museums, research centers, foundations, and forward-thinking companies.

http://www.nmc.org

2008.04.17

More than 10 Billion Videos Viewed Online in the U.S. in February

comScore released February 2008 data from the comScore Video Metrix service, indicating that U.S. Internet users viewed more than 10 billion online videos during the month, representing a 3-percent gain versus January (despite February being two days shorter) and a 66-percent gain versus February 2007.

http://www.comscore.com/press/release.asp?press=2190

2008.04.16

International Journalists' Network On Helium.com

Think it was reasonable for Pakistan to ban YouTube for its anti-Islamic videos and want to be heard? Tired of your country's media over-reporting the U.S. presidential race and want to complain about it?

The International Journalists' Network (IJNet) has recently partnered with Helium, a new online community of writers, to give journalists from around the world the opportunity to take part in provocative debates and write for a cause.

Browse IJNet's featured debates, pick your side, and write away. Once your article is posted, fellow members will rate it against competing articles. The best writers will even be rewarded financially. Share what you know and learn new perspectives here:

http://www.helium.com/partners/ijnet

2008.04.08

Media Development Indicators: A Framework for Assessing Media Development

UNESCO's Intergovernmental Council of the International Program for the Development of Communication (IPDC) unanimously endorsed this new set of media development indicators proposed by a specially appointed international expert group. The expert group included the author of the paper Andrew Puddephatt, former Executive Director of the freedom of expression NGO Article 19 and current Director of Global Partners and Associates; Alfred Opubor, Secretary-General of the West African News Media & Development Center (WANAD); Bill Orme, Advisor for Media Development at UNDP and former Executive Director of the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ); and Toby Mendel, Law Programme Director at ARTICLE 19. IPDC, UNESCO, March 2008.

http://portal.unesco.org/ci/en/files/26032/12058560693media_indicators_framework_en.pdf/media_indicators_framework_en.pdf

2008.04.01

Building the field of Digital Media and Learning

The MacArthur Foundation launched its five-year, $50 million digital media and learning initiative in 2006 to help determine how digital technologies are changing the way young people learn, play, socialize, and participate in civic life. Answers are critical to developing educational and other social institutions that can meet the needs of this and future generations. The initiative is both marshaling what is already known about the field and seeding innovation for continued growth.

http://digitallearning.macfound.org/site/c.enJLKQNlFiG/b.2029199/k.BFC9/Home.htm

2008.03.31

Newspapers in Slovakia protest media legislation

Slovakia's leading newspapers published identical protests on otherwise blank front pages Thursday to condemn legislation that they said would undermine press freedom. The six main dailies left their front pages empty except for a list of "seven sins" in the legislation, which would require them to print responses by people or institutions to any news article even if the published information were true.

http://iht.com/articles/2008/03/27/business/smedia.php

2008.03.24

State of the news media online 2008

The audience for online news is growing, but news sites are not growing in advertising revenue as quickly as other types of Websites, according to the annual State of the News Media report.

Lots of good analysis in the Online section and elsewhere, including:

* A news organization and a news Web site are no longer final destinations. Now they must move toward also being stops along the way, gateways to other places, and a means to drill deeper, all ideas that connect to service rather than product. “The walled garden is over,” the editor of one of the most popular news sites in the country told us. A site restricted to its own content takes on the character of a cul de sac street with yellow “No Outlet” sign, reducing its value to the user. “Search has become the predominant … paradigm,” an influential market research report circulating throughout the industry reads. That means every page of a Web site — even one containing a single story — is its own front page. And each piece of content competes on its own with all other information on that topic linked to by blogs, “digged” by user news sites, sent in e-mails, or appearing in searches. As much as half of every Web page, designers advise, should be devoted to helping people find what they want on the rest of the site or the Web. That change is already occurring. A year ago, our study of news Web sites found that only three of 24 major Web sites from traditional news organizations offered links to outside content. Eleven of those sites now offer them. Some of this may simply be automated, which may be a service of limited value.

* The prospects for user-created content, once thought possibly central to the next era of journalism, for now appear more limited, even among “citizen” sites and blogs. News people report the most promising parts of citizen input currently are new ideas, sources, comments and to some extent pictures and video. But citizens posting news content has proven less valuable, with too little that is new or verifiable. (It may thrive at smaller outlets with fewer resources.) And the skepticism is not restricted to the traditional mainstream media or “MSM.” The array of citizen-produced news and blog sites is reaching a meaningful level. But a study of citizen media contained in this report finds most of these sites do not let outsiders do more than comment on the site’s own material, the same as most traditional news sites. Few allow the posting of news, information, community events or even letters to the editors. And blog sites are even more restricted. In short, rather than rejecting the “gatekeeper” role of traditional journalism, for now citizen journalists and bloggers appear for now to be recreating it in other places.

* The Web is becoming a more integral part of people’s lives. Eight in 10 Americans 17 and older now say the Internet is a critical source of information — up from 66% in 2006. According to the same survey, more Americans identified the Internet as a more important source of information than television (68%), radio (63%) and newspapers (63%).

* In 2007, the evidence suggests online access through mobile phones was still a niche activity. … As of March 2007, the latest period for which data are available, more than 60% of U.S. broadband users owned an Internet-enabled mobile device, but just 5% reported using the Internet there, according to research conducted by Media-Screen, a research firm.

* More media sites are taking the reader away from the “walled garden” – their own content – linking to once-taboo outside sources or even inviting in third-party content, allowing hunting-and-gathering consumers to act more directly on their preferences rather than being led to them.

http://stateofthemedia.com/2008/narrative_online_intro.php?cat=0&media=5