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More Southside hyperlocal websites planned for Glasgow

Posted by Martin Stabe on 9 January 2008 at 10:02
Tags: Drupal, Scotland, Southside Media, hyperlocal

Southside Media, a not-for-profit citizen media project in Glasgow, is planning to launch five hyperlocal websites covering the G41 and G42, G5, G44 and G45 postcodes of the city, AllmediaScotland reports.

Since 2005, the company has published newspapers for the G41 and G42 postcodes. Drupal-powered web sites are live for those two postcodes.

Last July, the company launched free glossy magazines in the Bearsden and Milngavie districts of the city. The paid-for G41 newspaper has also branched out into podcasting.

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The big questions for the Scottish media in 2008

Posted by Martin Stabe on 5 January 2008 at 21:12
Tags: Herald, Scotland, Scotsman, Sun, The Herald

The Sunday Herald yesterday took a look at the issues that will be facing the Scottish media in 2008:

  • What will News International’s pricing strategy be under James Murdoch? Will the price war that saw the Scottish Sun sold at 20p continue?
  • How will the Scottish Executive’s plans to launch a jobs portal affect newspapers’ recruitment revenue?
  • What are the Scottish papers doing online? The Herald papers are preparing to announce a new joint portal for their titles as they become more integrated. The Scotsman and Daily Record have both also recently relaunched their web sites.
  • Will SMG follow ITV’s lead and acquire independent production companies?
  • How will redundancies affect output at STV and BBC Scotland?

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MSPs defeat hacks in Scotland quiz

Posted by Martin Stabe on 6 March 2006 at 17:21
Tags: Journalism, Scotland

A trio of politicans have beaten a team of journalists in “a quiz on all things Scottish“, the Edinburgh Evening News reports.

Journalists Lesley Riddoch, Magnus Linklater and Bill Jamieson lost to MSPs Robin Harper, Linda Fabiani and Jamie Stone in the pilot recording of Scottish Quest.
One of the questions, according to the News, was “What kind of fish is smoked to create kippers?”

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Scottish journalists fear FOI charges

Posted by Martin Stabe on 22 February 2006 at 13:00
Tags: Freedom of Information, Newspapers, Scotland

The Scottish Parliament deliberately drafted Scotland’s devolved Freedom of Information Act to be more liberal than the equivalent UK law. And it seems to have worked out that way. In an interview with the BBC’s “Good Morning Scotland” programme, the Scottish Information Commissioner, Kevin Dunion said open government has been well-received in Scotland:

“Tens of thousands of people have made requests, authorities by and large have responded extremely well and I’ve received over 570 appeals to my office - far more than I had anticipated but it reflects how the act has been enthusiastically used by the Scottish public.”

The interview cames Dunion published the annual report (PDF) for his office’s first year of enforcing the Scottish FOIA. In the Herald, Iain Macwhirter praises Dunion’s work and notes that the general public has been making the most use of the Act — just seven per cent of appeals to the Scottish Information Commissioner came from members of the media.

But there are some storm clouds gathering as well: There is some indication that the Scottish Executive may be planning to impose a fee for each FOI request. Scotsman political editor Hamish MacDonell reports:

… insiders at the Information Commission said Mr Dunion was preparing for a battle with ministers over proposals to levy higher charges, a move which the commissioner feels would undermine the basic principles of the legislation.

A source said: “There is a very real danger of this happening. They [people in the Executive] have been complaining about the cost of answering questions and the drain on staff time. Ministers are reviewing it and a charging system may be the next step.”

One member of the Executive who seems to favour fees — which led to a collapse in FOI requests by journalists when they were imposed in the Republic of Ireland — is Margaret Curran, the minister for parliamentary business in the Scottish Parliament. Curran, reports the Scotsman, feels fees should be charged to stop individuals submitting multiple requests, which are expensive to process.

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Defamation - what are the risks for news sites’ blogs?

Posted by Julie Tomlin on 13 February 2006 at 13:12
Tags: Blogs, Libel, Scotland, Scotsman

Steven Vass, the Sunday Herald’s media correspondent says media lawyers will be swallowing hard at The Guardian’s plans to massively increase reader interaction on its website this year. Having already been the only newspaper to allow readers to post messages straight on its site, it is about to take the risks to a whole new level, he argues.

In Scotland, the Herald, Scotsman and the Daily Express have all decided not to let readers add comments. Only the Press and Journal in Aberdeen and the Daily Record are allowing any reader contributions on their web sites.

But the Guardian’s Simon Waldman responds in his blog that these risks are nothing new as the newspaper has run open talkboards and other comment systems for almost ten years. As well as defamation, the challenge is also about cntempt, he argues.

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Journalist’s FOI victory forces publication of surgeon data

Posted by Martin Stabe on 7 February 2006 at 10:28
Tags: Freedom of Expression, Newspapers, Scotland, Scotsman

A Scottish journalist’s successful Freedom of Information appeal yesterday bore fruit, as NHS Scotland began publishing Scottish surgeons’ mortality rates.

In December The Scottish Information Commissioner, Kevin Dunion, had ruled in favour of the Scotsman’s Peter MacMahon, who had been refused the data by the Scottish Health Service.

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