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Do MSM blogs stack up?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 9 March 2006 at 08:00
Tags: BBC, Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Guardian, Journalism, Times

Press Gazette, 10 March 2006, p24In this week’s Press Gazette, the blogging efforts of David Aaronovitch and Nick Robinson fall under the Expert Eye of blogger Justin “Chicken Yoghurt” McKeating (PDF).

McKeating’s not impressed by the big media bloggers’ failure to exploit blogs’ greatest strength — the ability for readers to leave comments and enter into a truly two-way discussion with the blogger.

“I have yet to see a newspaper blog where the writer has got down and dirty with the readers. This defeats the object of blogging to a large extent and is seen as poor etiquette by many non-newspaper bloggers,” he writes.

Update: Due to popular demand, the full text is below the fold:

(more…)

8 comments

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News sites’ .eu domain names

Posted by Martin Stabe on 8 March 2006 at 14:04
Tags: Daily Mail, Daily Telegraph, Economist, Financial Times, Guardian, Independent, Independent on Sunday, International, News of the World, Observer, Online, Sun, Sunday Mirror, Sunday Times, Times

Kieren McCarthy — one of the blogging freelances recently mentioned in a Press Gazette feature — had a story in yesterday’s Times about the new .eu top-level domain for European web sites. The story behind the story is on his blog today.

At present, only registered trademark owners and others who can document a legal claim to a particular name can register with the European names registry EUrid. Owners of big online brands like Amazon and Skype, McCarthy reports, are fretting over whether they will be able to secure their .eu domain names before 7 April, when registration is expanded to a free-for-all “landgrab” for the general public:

… they have good reason to worry, according to EURid, the company behind the domains. “We will give the domain to the first company that applies with a valid trademark,” explained spokesman Patrik Linden.

That means even big names are not necessarily safe. Linden confirmed that Amazon had now been approved as owner of its .eu namesake, but pointed out that there was a Volvo Amazon car in the 1960s, so the car manufacturer could well have a legitimate claim.

Another car manufacturer, Volkswagen, has won a battle of the brands over Polo.eu. It beat both Ralph Lauren and Nestle to the name by a matter of minutes, according to domain name management company NetNames.

Clearly this also affects news organisations’ web sites? Are their European domain names safe?

The Telegraph has won a race for telegraph.eu. Associated Newspapers controls dailymail.eu. The Beeb has registed bbc.eu and skynews.eu is controlled by BSkyB. Also secure are itv.eu and itn.eu.

Surprisingly, perhaps, News International has grabbed thesun.eu, newsoftheworld.eu, sundaytimes.eu and thetimes.eu. But one RM Peddemors, a resident of the Netherlands, has staked claims to timeonline.eu. The same individual is also claiming economist.eu and observer.eu. Only Guardian Newspapers is appears to be challenging the claim to their trademark.

The German postal service has registered express.eu, and four companies (not including Trinity Mirror) are claiming mirror.eu.

The domain ft.eu is set to host a salmon-coloured financial news web site, but some of the other more Euro-friendly papers seem to have missed out.

Neither the Irish or British incarnations of the Indy will have independent.eu: That went to Swedish bank Independent Finans AB. Even normally web-savvy Guardian seems to have missed out: although they have secured guardianunlimited.eu, Guardian Flachglas GmbH, a glass manufacturer in Thalheim, Germany, has snapped up guardian.eu. One other domain name that a Guardian employee has recently been diligently buying up in various TLDs is still available on .eu.

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Times web site targets global audience

Posted by Martin Stabe on 1 March 2006 at 10:40
Tags: International, Journalism, Online, Sunday Times, Times

In a move to target its growing overseas audience, TimesOnline, the web site of the Times and Sunday Times, has launched a global edition home page.

The site’s new global edition front page places greater emphasis on world news and comment than the existing UK edition home page.
Times editor Robert Thomson said: “We and The Sunday Times already have a large audience online, and we intend to be one of the world’s leading providers of high quality journalism to growing audiences in the US, India and around the globe. Whether it be business journalism, comment or international coverage, it is clear that readers want and need Times-quality reporting and insight in a world overflowing with unreliable information.”

TimesOnline says its audience has grown by 380 per cent since 2004 and the site now has more than 7.7 million unique monthly users, with more than 4 million of those readers coming from outside the UK.

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Thomson: Newspaper brands key to online trust

Posted by Martin Stabe on 23 February 2006 at 18:04
Tags: Blogs, Journalism, Newspapers, Online, Times

Traditional newspaper brands are the key to judging quality online, even among bloggers, Times editor Robert Thomson told the PR and the Media conference yesterday, according to PR Week.

“There is an element of doubt about what appears online — it can be difficult to know which bits are right or wrong,” Thomson said according spin trade’s journal of record.”Even bloggers are not sure of the other content on the internet. The desire to be rooted in reality is at its strongest with news bloggers, who continually monitor traditional media.”

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Freemasonry in the lobby

Posted by Martin Stabe on 23 February 2006 at 16:40
Tags: Express, Mirror, New Statesman, Press Association, Times

Writing in the New Statesman, associate editor Kevin Maguire of the Daily Mirror notes the Masonic goings-on in the Parliamentary press gallery:

I read in the minutes of the parliamentary press pinny boys the names of an old Times hand, a couple of ex-Express scribes and my former boss at the Press Association news wire, yet disappointingly none of the Gallery galacticos. Word was that the masons operated two lobby lodges, so perhaps chapter 1928 is the retirees. Anyone who’d like to peruse what this funny-handshake brigade got up to at their 366th convocation should get in touch.

Surely Maguire refers to the minutes of lobby hacks’ Masonic lodge, which, as our very own Axegrinder recently reported, were accidentally e-mailed to MPs by former Daily Express political editor Rob Gibson.

Maguire should get in touch with Paul Linford, who noted that the Westminster hacks’ Masonic lodge was a major topic of gossip during his time as a lobby correspondent.

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Times online to target upmarket Radio 4 audience

Posted by Julie Tomlin on 22 February 2006 at 11:56
Tags: New Media, Newspapers, Online, Sunday Times, Times

Times Online could use audio and visual material to become like Radio 4 television on the internet according to the MediaGuardian report on a meeting organised by News International to inform journalists about the company’s future online.

News International executive chairman Les Hinton and group managing director Clive Milner have been hosting a travelling roadshow to talk to staff about the challenges of the internet.

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Times apologizes for Al Jazeera slur

Posted by Martin Stabe on 16 February 2006 at 14:10
Tags: Al Jazeera, Times

Al Jazeera is has received the apology from the Times after one of the papers’ leaders yesterday accused the Arabic television station of biased reporting based on comments from an unrelated news web site, aljazeera.com.

The Times leader, about inflamatory coverage of the News of the Worlds’ British military abuse video in the Arab media, accused “the supposedly prestigious” Al Jazeera describing the video as “savagery”.

At least one blogger, Brand Republic editor Gordon MacMillan, spotted the error straight away. Al Jazeera demanded the apology yesterday in his magazine.

The Times has apparently removed the offending leader, headed “Being Framed” from its web site. On Thurday, existing links to the leader returned error messages, but there is a a version it in the Google cache.

Understanding the web seems to be causing the broadsheets some trouble lately. A fortnight ago, a Daily Telegraph report confused a blog that is frequently critical of the Mayor of London with one written Ken Livingstone.

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News International profits ’sluggish’

Posted by Martin Stabe on 9 February 2006 at 12:25
Tags: News of the World, Sun, Sunday Times, Times

Releasing earnings figures yesterday, News Corporation said that while its profits were up, it’s no thanks to its newspaper division, which saw profits decline by 63 per cent.
As the Independent reported, the 650 redundancies that will result from it Wapping printworks will cost £57m. The company is moving its printing operations to sites in Enfield, Glasgow and Liverpool.

The Indy also mentions that News Corp had announced advertising revenues from its UK newspapers are ’sluggish’ - a fact curiously omitted from the Times’ report.

In addition to the Times, News Corp is the parent company of the Sunday Times, Sun and News of the World.

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