Thursday, March 31, 2005

MSF's Foreign Reporting: Media's Challenges and Responsibilities

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tommi Laulajainen
Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2005 12:22:24 -0500
Subject: Foreign reporting conference

Dear all,

On April 12, Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF)
Canada is organising a stimulating media event in Toronto - Foreign
Reporting: Media's Challenges and Responsibilities - a
limited-invitation event designed to provoke and inspire
international news coverage. To see the agenda and register online,
go to
http://www.msf.ca/mediaevent

The event runs from 12 p.m. until 7 p.m. at the InterContinental
Toronto at 220 Bloor St. W, and includes six stimulating
presentations, a three-course lunch, and is followed by complimentary
cocktails and hors d'oeuvres. Registration fee is $30. All registered
participants will also receive a free copy of the book "The Practical
Guide to Humanitarian Law".

During the afternoon Dr. James Orbinski, former MSF international
president, will speak about MSF's struggle to give medical aid and at
the same time fight for its patients' stories to be heard.

Following Dr. Orbinski, Anna Maria Tremonti, host of The Current, CBC
Radio, and Douglas Struck, Canada bureau chief for the Washington
Post, will talk about how the contemporary media is struggling to get
the story and get the story out in an often physically and
intellectually challenging international climate. Video journalist
Tara Sutton will screen two short documentary films, including her
behind-the-lines story Falluja Forensics. Photographer Roger Lemoyne
will make a powerful multimedia presentation and discusses the
current role of photojournalism in a world drowning in sea of news
images. The afternoon will end with a talk from Dr. Gerald Caplan,
Senior Advisor
to the Office of the UN Special Envoy for HIV and AIDS in Africa on
"The Traps and Tribulations of Covering AIDS in Africa".

Limited space available. Sign up online now!
http://www.msf.ca/mediaevent

Tommi Laulajainen
MSF Canada
tlaulajainen@msf.ca

Tuesday, March 22, 2005

Global media coalition claims Canada wants to rule the web : Internet libel case threatens free speech, coalition says as Ontario appeal hearing opens

[Forwarder's Note: This message had the following files attached
Attachment : U.S. and Internation#4E4BD6.pdf (PDF)
Attachment :Bangoura Intervenors#4E4BD8.pdf (PDF)
Attachment :Canadian Affidavit.pdf (PDF)
If you want copies of them... let me know and I will send them to you.
George]

Date: Wed, 16 Mar 2005 14:00:14 -0600
From: Paul Nielson
List-Help:
List-Subscribe:

List-Owner:
List-Archive:
Subject: [CPI-UA] Global media coalition claims Canada wants to rule
the web : Internet
libel case threatens free speech, coalition says as Ontario appeal hearing
opens

Bangoura v. Washington Post, 2004 CanLII 26633 (ON S.C.)

http://www.canlii.org/on/cas/onsc/2004/2004onsc10181.html

----- Original Message -----
From: Wimmer, Kurt
To: Paul Nielson
Sent: Wednesday, March 16, 2005 7:56 AM
Subject: RE: Media campaign statement to the Ontario Court of Appeal

Paul -- here are our intervention papers and our factum
(attachments); the latter contains our legal arguments. A press
release actually would have been a great idea -- one would think we
would have thought of that, given that we’re representing 50 media
companies! But we didn’t think of it, and thus don’t have one. Good
idea for next time round, though. Thanks.

Kurt

Media giants join forces to fight Ontario ruling : Internet libel case
threatens free speech, coalition says as appeal hearing opens By PAUL WALDIE

Globe & Mail March 9, 2005 - Page A7

[Arrived with no URL]

TORONTO -- More than 50 of the world's largest media organizations have
banded together to overturn an Ontario court ruling that they say threatens
free speech and development of the Internet.

"This is a case of free expression," Brian McLeod Rogers, a Toronto lawyer
representing the media coalition, told the Ontario Court of Appeal
yesterday.

The 52-member coalition includes CNN, The New York Times, Time magazine, The
Times of London, Google and Yahoo, as well as Canadian media such as The
Globe and Mail, CanWest Publications Inc., CTV and CBC.

The case involves Cheickh Bangoura, a former senior official with the United
Nations in Africa who now lives in Oakville, Ont.

The UN fired Mr. Bangoura in 1997 after two articles in The Washington Post
accused him of sexual harassment and financial improprieties. A UN tribunal
later found the allegations baseless and said he should be compensated and
reinstated.

Mr. Bangoura, a Canadian citizen, sued the Post for libel and argued that
because the newspaper posted the story on its website, his reputation had
been damaged in Ontario.

The newspaper moved to have the case dismissed and argued that if it were
allowed to proceed in Ontario, any news organization could be sued anywhere
over material posted on its website.

In a decision issued last year, Mr. Justice Romain Pitt of the Ontario
Superior Court said the case could go ahead in Ontario. "Those who publish
via the Internet are aware of the global reach of their publications, and
must consider the legal consequences in the jurisdiction of the subjects of
their articles," he wrote.

The Post appealed the decision, and in a hearing before the Court of Appeal
yesterday, it was joined by the media coalition in arguing that Judge Pitt's
ruling went too far. The ruling "will discourage and inhibit a free flow of
information," Paul Schabas, a Toronto lawyer representing the Post, told the
court. "It will have a chilling effect on speech."

He added that the Post had seven subscribers in Ontario when the article
appeared and only one person paid to access the story through the
newspaper's on-line archive service. He also said Mr. Bangoura didn't move
to Ontario until 2000, long after the story appeared.

In a filing to the court, the media coalition said its intervention in the
case "speaks of the deep concern with the judgment under appeal and its
implications for all those who value freedom of expression. The
extraordinary nature of the ruling presents real dangers to the continued
development of the Internet and global communications."

Kikélola Roach, a Toronto lawyer representing Mr. Bangoura, said the ruling
should stand because the case presents some unique circumstances. Ms. Roach
said the Post continues to offer a short summary of the stories on its
website that contain defamatory information about Mr. Bangoura. "The damage
is ongoing," she told the court.

She added that Mr. Bangoura sued in Ontario because he is trying to
re-establish a career here and the availability of the article on-line hurts
those efforts. "The place where he is trying to vindicate his reputation is
important," she told the court.

In an interview outside the court, Mr. Bangoura said he is confident the
ruling will be upheld. "I have total confidence in our system of justice,"
he said, surrounded by a small group of friends and family.

Mr. Bangoura, 46, grew up in Guinea and studied in Germany, where he earned
a law degree and a PhD in international law. He spent a decade working at
the UN, first in Austria and later in West Africa where he directed a
regional drug-control program.

Yesterday, he said he is not intimidated by the collection of giant media
organizations lined up against him. "Those articles affect my future," he
said sternly, adding that he has had trouble finding work in his field since
being dismissed by the UN.

He said he is frustrated at suggestions he should not be allowed to sue the
Post in Ontario. "I live here. I am working here. My family is here, I have
two children born here. This is my home."
*******************

Global media giants fear chill from Toronto web libel suit

Last Updated Wed, 09 Mar 2005 14:37:00 EST
CBC News

[Arrived with no URL]

TORONTO - A libel lawsuit unfolding in Toronto could restrict how news
stories are published around the world, 52 large media companies argued this
week.

The lawsuit involves the Washington Post's 1997 coverage of a former United
Nations official who was accused of financial and sexual improprieties on
the job in West Africa.

Cheickh Bangoura, a native of Ghana who later moved from Kenya to Ontario,
filed legal action against the Post in 2000 seeking $9 million Cdn. in
damages.

The 46-year-old man's suit said the newspaper was hurting his reputation in
his new home because Ontario residents could read the stories in the Post's
web-based archives.

The Post has seven paid online subscribers in the province and only one
person has ever paid to see the story on the archives, the newspaper says.

Despite that, Bangoura's suit argues that material posted on a website that
is viewable in Canada should be seen as having been published in Canada.

Judge rules Ontario can hear case

An Ontario judge ruled last year that the province's court system had
jurisdiction to hear the case, sending shock waves through media companies
around the world.

CNN, the New York Times, Google, Yahoo, the London Times, the CBC and dozens
of other publishers and broadcasters are challenging the judge's decision.

They warn that freedom of expression and the public interest might suffer if
people could shop for a country with favourable libel laws anywhere in the
world and file suit there to avenge themselves over stories they don't like.

It is harder to win a libel case in the United States, where the Washington
Post is published, because it has stronger freedom of expression protections
for media companies.

If Bangoura's lawsuit is allowed to proceed, websites would be reluctant to
post any controversial story for fear of being forced out of business by a
large libel settlement, media lawyers said.

Arguments in the case were heard in the Ontario Court of Appeal Tuesday.

Chief Justice Roy McMurtry and two other judges hearing the challenge have
reserved judgment.
**********************

Global media giants claim Canada wants to rule the web

Wed Mar 9, 3:08 AM ET

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&ncid=1212&e=10&u=/afp/20050309/tc_afp/canadausmediainternet&sid=96001018

TORONTO (AFP) - The Washington Post, backed by 50 global media giants,
challenged a landmark Internet libel claim lodged in Canadian courts, which
critics fear could squelch freedom of expression in cyberspace.

The appeal seeks to overturn a previous ruling that Canada has jurisdiction
to hear a nine million-dollar (6.5 million US dollar) damages claim lodged
against the US-based paper by a former United Nations (news - web sites)
official now living in Ontario.

Media firms, including Cable News Network, The New York Times, the London
Times newspaper and Japan's Yomiuri Shimbun, argue that if the case
proceeds, it could force them to block access to their websites in some
nations.

Such a move would undermine the very rationale of the World Wide Web, and
be a detriment to global freedom of expression, the firms said.

It also raises the spectre of limitless liability for newspapers with
websites, read by millions of readers around the world.

Ghanian-born former UN official Cheickh Bangoura is suing the Post over
articles in 1997 mentioning allegations of sexual and financial wrongdoing
against him while he was working in Africa.

[SNIPPED]

*******************

New York Times March 14, 2005
[Arrived with no URL]

A Libel Case Raises a Tricky Question of Jurisdiction
IAN AUSTEN

Along with global audiences, online publication has brought some newspapers
libel lawsuits in countries far from their place of publication. A current
complaint against The Washington Post raises some particularly tricky
questions about jurisdiction.

Early in January 1997, The Post printed two articles indicating that Cheickh
Bangoura, a native of Guinea who is now a Canadian citizen, engaged in
sexual harassment, financial improprieties and nepotism while working as a
senior official of the United Nations' International Drug Control Program in
Austria and Africa. By the end of the month, Mr. Bangoura lost his job with
the United Nations and left Kenya to join family members who had gone to
Montreal late in 1996.

Kikélola Roach, Mr. Bangoura's lawyer in Toronto, said that, despite
repeated requests, the newspaper never reported that an investigation by the
United Nations cleared Mr. Bangoura of the accusations. She also wants The
Post to remove the two original stories and summaries of them from its
electronic archive and Web site. A spokesman for The Post declined to
comment about the newspaper's editorial decisions.

Ms. Roach argued that Mr. Bangoura's case is most appropriately heard in
Canada, where libel laws and courts are more generally more favorable to
plaintiffs.

"Your reputation, and any damage to your reputation, is most closely felt
where you reside," she said.

Paul Schabas, who is representing The Post, said that the case should be
heard either in Washington or in New York, the home of the United Nations.
Last year, however, a judge in Ontario Superior Court in Toronto sided with
Mr. Bangoura. Last week, both sides were in appeals court arguing about that
decision.

Joining The Post is an informal consortium of 51 news organizations,
including The New York Times Company, Google, CNN, Canada's leading
newspaper publishers and the government-owned Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation. Kurt Wimmer, a Washington lawyer representing the coalition,
said that allowing libel actions outside of a publication's home country
could lead to an impossible situation.

"There is such a disparity among countries in how libel is regulated that it
becomes impossible to determine in prepublication review what law applies,"
he said. Mr. Wimmer also noted that some United States courts recently
failed to enforce libel judgments by foreign countries.

Monday, March 21, 2005

In the year 2014, the New York times has gone off-line....


The Fourth Estate's fortunes have waned...
What happened to the news?
http://www.broom.org/epic/

An interesting Flash presentation....

Newspapers in the digital age

------------------

Newspapers in the digital age

ANTONIA ZERBISIAS

At the rate newspapers are losing circulation, the last reader is
expected to croak in 2040.

In April to be exact.

Philip Meyer, author of The Vanishing Newspaper: Saving Journalism in
the Information Age made that grim prognostication on Wednesday,
during a live webcast about our impending extinction.

Since I myself will be dead or defunct by 2040, it's not really my
problem - unless I am still trying to collect my Star denture
benefits.

Don't misunderstand: People will still be talking, online or on
whatever new forms of communication will arise.

The question is, what will be the quality of the information they receive?

All Whacko Jacko coverage and partisan rants, as we see on TV newscasts?

Or will newspapers turn around the Titanic to continue producing
original and credible reportage on events and issues critical to an
informed citizenry in a democracy?

FULL STORY:
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1110495015333&call_pageid=970599109774&col=Columnist969907624636&DPL=IvsNDS%2f7ChAX&tacodalogin=yes

Or

http://tinyurl.com/55c3z
--
--

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
Via / By / Excerpted / From / Tip from / Thanks to:

From Bill Doskoch to caj-list
Bill Doskoch Toronto, ON
http://billdoskoch.blogware.com

© info
http://members.tripod.com/~media002/disclaimer.htm
Due to the nature of email & the WWW, check ALL sources.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

INTERNEWS to hold news editing workshop in Sanaa


INTERNEWS to hold news editing workshop in Sanaa
International Journalist's Network - USA
Internews is conducting the three-day "Basics of News Editing" workshop
in cooperation with the Yemen Journalists Syndicate and the local Media
Institute ...

MEDIA GIANTS FIGHT CANADA RULING (GLOBE AND MAIL)

MEDIA GIANTS FIGHT CANADA RULING (GLOBE AND MAIL)
More than 50 of the world's largest media organizations have banded
together to overturn an Ontario court ruling that they say threatens
free speech and development of the Internet.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20050309/MEDIA09/TPNational/Canada

or via
http://digbig.com/4cwtg

Sunday, March 20, 2005

Canadian blogger detained, interrogated by U.S. customs


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Alan Bass abassATcaribooDOTbcDOTca
Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2005 12:37:35 -0800
Subject: Canadian blogger detained, interrogated by U.S. customs
To: "caj-list@eagle.ca"

Canadian blogger Jeremy Wright was reportedly detained by U.S.
customs at Pearson Airport, strip-searched, interrogated and
effectively denied entry to the United States.

The tale would be comical if it wasn't so scary: Apparently, the U.S.
officers found it impossible to believe a person with legitimate
business could make a living from blogging or plan to meet people
he'd never met face-to-face or talked to on the phone.

Check out:
http://www.technorati.com/cosmos/search.html?rank=&url=jeremy+wright

and, from Wright's blog:

http://www.ensight.org/archives/2005/03/17/the-end-of-the-story/

Cheers,
Alan Bass
-----------------

Friday, March 18, 2005

Fuming over language on APTN

"worse than a bad kung fu film" - Jose Kusugak

Fuming over language

Darrell Greer
Northern News Services

Rankin Inlet (Mar 02/05) - The Aboriginal Peoples Television
Network's (APTN) new policy of requiring all future submissions for
licensing to be dubbed (versioned) in multiple languages is meeting
fierce resistance in Nunavut.

Zacharias Kunuk says he's embarrassed by an APTN policy that demands
aboriginal language films to be dubbed into other languages.

The policy would require a production shot in Inuktitut to have
versions dubbed in English and/or French, as well as one or more
other aboriginal languages.

With the new direction, sub-titling would no longer be acceptable.

Under the format, a production such as multi-award-winning Atanarjuat
would not be acceptable in its present form.

Acclaimed Nunavut filmmaker Zacharias Kunuk is both angered and
embarrassed by APTN's policy.

Kunuk said the work of Igloolik Isuma Productions has always been
done in Inuktitut with other languages sub-titled and that's the way
it will continue to be produced.

"Our work has been featured in more than 20 countries and this is
the first time we've ever had to address this," said Kunuk.

"It's embarrassing because it's here in Canada."

Kunuk said Inuit filmmakers shouldn't be the ones responsible to wake
up other cultures.

He said his focus is to see things, and present them, from an Inuit
point of view.

"We're careful about what we do and don't like the idea of our
programs being worked over to have Inuit characters sounding like
someone different."

"It's an Inuk speaking Inuktitut. You don't have to be a rocket
scientist to understand what we're saying.

"Our work has been accepted around the world, but now we have to make
an aboriginal network understand where we're coming from?"

Isuma is not alone in its stance.

Arnait Video Productions (AVP) is an Iglulik-based collective of video
producers whose productions will also continue to be shot in Inuktitut.

Its work has been shown around the world in Inuktitut, using English
and French sub-titles.

In documents obtained by Kivalliq News, AVP's Marie-Helene Cousineau of
Montreal states the APTN's new policy is disturbing.

"How ironic that APTN would refuse to license aboriginal languages
films not dubbed in English or French," said Cousineau.

"There will always be more than enough English programming on APTN
and not enough aboriginal languages.

"Nunavut is about to get serious in developing a film-and-television industry.

"The politics of APTN regarding the issue of language is a barrier to
the development of this industry and has to be discussed seriously
between all involved in the production of aboriginal media in Canada."

Watching closely

Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami president Jose Kusugak has experience in
trying to dub Inuktitut features into English.

He said the national Inuit organization will be following the policy closely.

"If you use Atanarjuat for example, to hear Oki and Atanarjuat
speaking in English would be totally embarrassing," said Kusugak.

"I've tried to dub Inuktitut speakers into English during my work
with the Inuit Broadcasting Corp. and it's worse than a bad kung fu
film.

"I can assure you this policy could possibly halt production from the Arctic."

Reach all aboriginals

CEO Jean LaRose said the APTN's mandate is to reach all aboriginal
peoples, not one particular segment.

He said the network was set up to be reflective of First Nations, Inuit
and Metis peoples and to share the stories amongst all of them.

"The purpose of this policy is not to embarrass Zacharias Kunuk or
anybody else," says LaRose.

"We've been told by different aboriginal people that their languages
are nowhere to be seen on the network, and they would like to hear
these stories in their languages, too.

Larger audience

"If it's critical to Zacharias for the artistic value of his
presentations that there is no language version, but sub-titling in
other aboriginal languages, that's something we would consider.

"He sub-titled Atanarjuat so he could reach out to audiences around the
world who understand English.

"APTN isn't asking him to do anything more dramatic than that."

LaRose said versioning would allow the APTN to reach a far-greater
audience, including people with low reading skills.

"If you look at our schooling rates, a lot of people on reserves or
in other parts of the country have basic primary school level and
many don't have reading skills.

"They still can't understand a movie with sub-titles, but a language
version would break that barrier."

Thursday, March 17, 2005

Unexpected Program on China's TV: Withdrawing from CCP - CLANDESTINE RADIO WATCH 177 Extra


From: "Nick Grace"

Date: Thu, 17 Mar 2005 00:34:05 -0500
Subject: [crwatch] CRW 177 Extra
crwatch Main Page

CLANDESTINE RADIO WATCH 177 Extra
March 17, 2005

CRW is the biweekly online magazine for ClandestineRadio.com, the
Web's only portal on clandestine broadcasting and subversive media.

http://www.ClandestineRadio.com

The full online issue can be read at:

http://www.ClandestineRadio.com/crw/crw.php?id=238

------------xxxxxxxxxx Breaking News xxxxxxxxxx----------------

China (PRC): Interception of Nine Commentaries Message on TV Was a "Good Thing"
China (PRC): CCP Withdrawals Pass 300,000, News Broadcast in China
China (PRC): Unexpected Program on China's TV: Withdrawing from CCP

............................................

Interception of Nine Commentaries Message on TV Was a "Good Thing"
March 31, 2005
Article originally posted at:

http://www.theepochtimes.com/news/5-3-16/27116.html

By Zhao Zifa
The Epoch Times

During Beijing’s 2005 annual government conferences on the night of
March 14 around 9:35- 9:45 p.m., more than eight provincial TV
stations and more than six satellite TV stations were interrupted
with broadcasts about The Nine Commentaries on the CCP.

Initially, many people thought it was a message introducing the
beginning session of the CCP Congress. However, as they continued
watching and saw that it was exposing the CCP, it dawned on them that
the TV program signals had been intercepted. The interception lasted
for one to two minutes.

According to responses from viewers and Beijing investigators, the
scope of this interception covered eight TV stations including
Heilongjiang province, Liaoning province, Jiangsu province, Guangxi
province, Henan province and Hunan province. Since it happened during
prime time viewing at night, many people saw the contents of The Nine
Commentaries.

Viewers in Shenzhen said programs in the four satellite TV stations
in Shanghai, Guangxi, Sichuan and Shenzhen stopped suddenly following
the interruption and their TV screens went blank.

Yesterday, Beijing citizen Mr. Zhao and his neighbors were watching
television together. They saw the intercepted program, Nine
Commentaries as well.

Our reporter interviewed Mr. Zhao on March 15. Here is an excerpt of
the interview:

Mr. Zhao: A few of us saw the intercepted Nine Commentaries. It was a
coincidence yesterday. We were just switching channels and then The
Nine Commentaries on the CCP appeared. We saw it first on the
Heilongjiang TV station.

Reporter: Were you very surprised at seeing this?

Mr. Zhao: Not at all, I was glad because we depend on outside media
to understand the situation in China. Everything they (the CCP)
propagate are lies, nothing they say is true. We need to hear a
different voice; we can’t let them continue to deceive people
everyday.

People in Beijing call them (the CCP) “the embezzlement party”- they
come from all walks of life and come together for a common goal,
embezzlement.

Reporter (laughing): It seems you are trying to be funny?

Mr. Zhao: Yes, people in Beijing can only try to find a balance
through our own efforts.

[snipped]

(The Epoch Times Mar 16 via Grace-USA)

............................................

CCP Withdrawals Pass 300,000, News Broadcast in China
March 16, 2005
Article originally posted at:
http://www.theepochtimes.com/news/5-3-16/27101.html

By Zeng Ni
The Epoch Times

Around 11:30 am on March 16 (Beijing time), The Epoch Times reported
that the number of people who withdrew from the CCP exceeded 300,000.
At the same time, the Chinese official news agency, Xinhua News,
confirmed that the signals of many TV stations were intercepted and
the news of the withdrawals were broadcast in China on the
intercepted signals.

First Time TV Broadcast On The Withdrawals And The "Nine
Commentaries" Seen in China
According to an Epoch Times reader, on the night of March 14, the
signals of more than eight provincial TV stations and more than six
satellite TV stations were intercepted and replaced with broadcasts
about "The Nine Commentaries On The CCP" and the withdrawals from the
CCP. The longest broadcast lasted five minutes. TV stations
intercepted include Xindongfang, CCTV1, a satellite TV station in
Jiangsu, and cable TV stations in Sichuan, Heilongjiang, Anhui,
Xinjiang, and Guangxi Provinces.

Official Confirmation On the Interception
The China official news agency, Xinhua News, confirmed that the
signals of many TV stations were intercepted. On March 15, the Hong
Kong office of Xinhua released the news report titled, "Satellite
intercepted by Falun Gong again, Asia Satellite Telecommunication Co.
(AsiaSat) strongly condemns interception." In the report, it said
that "at 9:34 pm on March 14, 2005, six C-band transponders of
AsiaSat's 3S satellite were interfered with by the signals with Falun
Gong content which stopped normal TV programs of several provinces
renting those transponders."

A visitor to the Xinhua website posted a message following the news
report, "Why claim it was Falun Gong? There was no such propaganda,
only the withdrawal from the CCP. What did this have to do with Falun
Gong? You should report after you find the real criminal."

[snipped]

(The Epoch Times Mar 16 via Grace-USA)

............................................

Unexpected Program on China's TV: Withdrawing from CCP
March 15, 2005
Article originally posted at:

http://www.theepochtimes.com/news/5-3-15/27055.html

By Pu Huien
The Epoch Times

HONG KONG - At 9 p.m. on March 13, "a statement to withdraw from the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP)" popped up on the TV screen when Hong
Kong residents were watching a Chinese satellite TV program. It
lasted for about a minute. Then, the TV play was resumed. One hour
later, the TV station stopped all its programs.

Mrs. Zhang, a resident of the North District of Hong Kong, called The
Epoch Times and said that when she and her family were watching Jiang
Su Satellite TV programs at home, the screen was paused suddenly, and
then there appeared a stationary image of white characters on a red
background, which was "A Statement to Withdraw from the Communist
Party." A male voice read the statement.

[snipped]

(The Epoch Times Mar 15 via Grace-USA)

------------xxxxxxxxxx Miscellaneous xxxxxxxxxx----------------

China (PRC)
AsiaSat Probes Falun Gong-related Hijack of Satellite Transmissions
March 16, 2005
Article originally posted at:

http://www.japantoday.com/e/?content=news&cat=7&id=330922

Kyodo News

HONG KONG — Asia Satellite Telecommunications Co said Tuesday it has
launched an investigation into Monday's interruption of its satellite
transmissions with signals carrying content related to the Falun Gong
spiritual movement, banned in China.

The company said in a statement that six transponders on its AsiaSat
3S satellite were deliberately interrupted by illegal signals,
repeatedly carrying Falun Gong-related content.

(Kyodo News Mar 16 via Grace-USA)

............................................

China (PRC)
AsiaSat Says Transmissions Interrupted by Falun Gong Content
March 15, 2005

[no known url]

Text of report in English by official Chinese news agency Xinhua (New
China News Agency)

Hong Kong, 15 March: Asia Satellite Telecommunications Co. Ltd.
(AsiaSat) announced here Tuesday [15 March] that the transmissions of
its satellite were deliberately interrupted by illegal signals,
reportedly carrying content related to Falun Gong.

The company expressed its strong condemnation of the incident at a
press conference here. Falun Gong, an evil cult, was banned in China.

Six C-band transponders on an AsiaSat 3S satellite were interrupted
by illegal transmissions carrying Falun Gong-related content at 9.34
p.m. [1334 gmt] Monday, which caused a break in service of TV
programming on several provincial TV channels in Chinese mainland,
the company said in a statement.

This is the second incident to the company after a similar one on 20
November last year, the statement said, accusing the deliberate
attack of seriously violating international telecommunications
treaties, contravening international regulations and being in breach
of the normal conduct of satellite operations.

The company said it strongly condemns such behaviour and reserves the
right to take the appropriate action under the law, adding that the
AsiaSat has initiated an inquiry and the findings will be released in
due course.

AsiaSat is a wholly owned subsidiary of Asia Satellite
Telecommunications Holdings Ltd., whose major shareholders include
China's state-owned conglomerate CITIC Group.

Source: Xinhua news agency, Beijing, in English 1333 gmt 15 Mar 05

(BBC Monitoring Mar 15)

............................................

China (PRC)
Falun Gong Denies Sending China Pirate Signals
March 16, 2005

[no known url]

Reuters

HONG KONG, March 16 (Reuters) - The Falun Gong spiritual movement
dismissed on Wednesday accusations by a Hong Kong-based satellite
operator that it had hacked into a satellite to beam transmissions
into mainland China.

"The accusation is completely groundless, we do not know what this
whole thing is and we do not know who may be doing it," said Kan
Hung-cheung, a Hong Kong-based spokesman for the group.

China's official Xinhua news agency reported on Tuesday that Asia
Satellite Telecommunications Co Ltd (AsiaSat) said Falun Gong
interrupted transmissions on Monday on several provincial channels to
broadcast information about the group into China, where Falun Gong is
banned as an "evil cult."

AsiaSat accused Falun Gong of a similar operation on November 22. At
that time, a Falun Gong spokeswoman in Hong Kong said she knew
nothing about any hacking.

Xinhua said AsiaSat condemned the illegal transmissions at a news
conference in Hong Kong and reserved the right to take legal action.

Beijing banned the Falun Gong in 1999 after 10,000 members besieged
the compound of the Chinese leadership in the capital to demand
official recognition for their faith.

But the movement, which combines Taoism, Buddhism and traditional
Chinese breathing exercises, remains legal in Hong Kong, a former
British colony that returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

A Falun Gong Web site,
www.clearwisdom.net, says that in the
past five years China has tortured more than 1,121 practitioners to
death, jailed at least 6,000 and sent more than 100,000 to labour
camps. The figures could not be independently confirmed.

Two years ago, China accused the Falun Gong of hijacking satellite
signals to disrupt state media broadcasts, saying it had pinpointed
the origin of the disruption to Taiwan.

(Additional reporting by Tan Ee Lyn in Hong Kong)

(Reuters Mar 16 via Grace-USA)

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Nick Grace, CRW Washington
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Monday, March 14, 2005

A Concise Guide to the Major Internet Bodies


From: sz < soenke@kein.org

Subject [ incom ] Simonelis, A Concise Guide to the Major Internet Bodies

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Simonelis, Alex. "A Concise Guide to the Major Internet Bodies."
Ubiquity 6.5 (15-22 Feb 2005).
http://www.acm.org/ubiquity/views/v6i5_simoneli.html

The bodies responsible for the Internet's protocols and parameters can
be said to steer the Internet in a significant sense. This document, by
Alex Simonelis of Dawson College in Montreal, is a summary of those
bodies and their most important characteristics.

1. Introduction

Who steers the Internet? "The Internet, a loosely-organized
international collaboration of autonomous, interconnected networks,
supports host-to-host communication through voluntary adherence to open
protocols and procedures defined by Internet Standards." [1]. While this
definition is essentially correct, its emphasis might give the reader
the impression that no one is at the helm of the Internet. That
conclusion would be wrong. Certain protocols, and the parameters
required for their usage, are essential in order to operate on the
Internet. A number of bodies have become responsible for those protocol
standards and parameters. It can be fairly said that those bodies steer
the Internet in a significant sense. This document is a summary of those
bodies and their most important characteristics.

The bodies belong to three major nexuses. Links, both formal and
informal, exist between the nexuses.

Almost all Internet technological standards are developed and set by the
group consisting of the Internet Society (ISOC) and the units operating
under the auspices of ISOC: the Internet Architecture Board (IAB), the
Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG), the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF), the Internet Research Steering Group (IRSG), the
Internet Research Task Force (IRTF), and the RFC Editor. It is important
to note that, while these units are responsible to ISOC, ISOC allows
them a large degree of independence in their technical work.

Internet domain names and IP addresses are the province of the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and its Internet
Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA).

World Wide Web standards are developed by the World Wide Web Consortium
(W3C).

It should be noted that the direction of the Internet's physical network
structure is not addressed in this document. That structure is
essentially determined by a large number of mainly commercial network
operators, ranging from small to intercontinental, that build and join
their infrastructures in response to market forces, in order to provide
them to subscribers on a paid basis. These networks that form the
Internet are linked in a topology similar to that of a large,
well-developed highway system.

2. ISOC

ORGANIZATION: In 1991, the large growth of the Internet, including its
commercial sector, and the Internet community's need for a formal
organization to provide a legal home for the standards bodies of that
time (IETF, etc.) led to the formation, under the auspices of the
Corporation for National Research Initiatives (CNRI), of the Internet
Society. In January 1992, the Internet Society was chartered as a U.S.
District of Columbia non-profit corporation.

GOVERNANCE: ISOC is governed by its Board of Trustees.

MEMBERSHIP/COMPOSITION: ISOC welcomes individuals and organizations as
members. Individuals in the Internet community have ample opportunity to
participate in ISOC and its component bodies.

MISSION/GOALS: ISOC's mission is "To assure the open development,
evolution and use of the Internet for the benefit of all people
throughout the world." [2]. As one of its most important tasks, it
"facilitates open development of standards, protocols, administration
and the technical infrastructure of the Internet" [2], and so it is the
organizational and legal home for most of the groups that are
responsible for developing Internet technical standards.

FUNDING: ISOC is funded mainly from organization member fees.

ASSOCIATED BODIES: IAB, IESG, IETF, IRSG, IRTF, RFC Editor.

3. IETF

ORGANIZATION: The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) held its first
meeting in 1986. It is a loosely self-organized, large, grass roots
technical group consisting of network administrators, designers,
researchers, vendors, users, etc. In its broader sense, IETF is used to
refer to IETF, IAB, IESG, IRSG, IRTF and RFC Editor as a collective.

GOVERNANCE: The IETF is not a formal body, and has no board of
directors. It operates as an activity of ISOC and is responsible to it.
For its technical work, it is divided into broad units called areas,
each led by the Area Director(s) (ADs). ADs are proposed by the
nominating committee (the Nomcom) of the IETF, and appointed by the IAB.
The areas are divided into more specialized working groups (WGs), each
with chair(s). WG chairs serve at the pleasure of the appropriate AD.
IETF has a chair who is proposed by the nominating committee of the
IETF, and then appointed by the voting members of the IAB, not including
the incumbent IETF chair. The IETF chair is also the chair of IESG. WG
and AD decisions are subject to appeal to the IESG.

MEMBERSHIP/COMPOSITION: There is no formal membership. Generally,
attendance at IETF meetings and subscription to IETF mailing lists is
open to all volunteers. Participants are expected to contribute as
individuals, rather than as representatives of companies or organizations.

MISSION/GOALS: The IETF concerns itself with the engineering and
architecture of the Internet. It is the principal body that develops,
tests and implements new Internet technological standards, including
protocols. The IETF proposes standards to the IESG.

FUNDING: The IETF, including its small Secretariat, is largely
self-funded via IETF meeting attendance fees. A relatively small
percentage of IETF's budget is contributed by ISOC.

ASSOCIATED BODIES: ISOC, IAB, IESG, RFC Editor, ICANN, IANA, W3C.

4. IESG

ORGANIZATION: Formed in 1989, the Internet Engineering Steering Group
(IESG) is the management group of the IETF.

GOVERNANCE: The IESG operates as an activity of ISOC and is responsible
to it. The IESG is led by the IETF/IESG chair. IESG decisions are
subject to appeal to the IAB.

MEMBERSHIP/COMPOSITION: The members are the Area Directors of IETF, the
chair of IETF/IESG and a small number of ex-officio and liaison members.

MISSION/GOALS: The IESG vets and approves IETF standards, and generally
manages the standards process according to the policies and procedures
ratified by the ISOC Trustees. The IESG creates IETF working groups, etc.
FUNDING: The IESG is largely self-funded. ISOC contributes.

ASSOCIATED BODIES: ISOC, IAB, IETF, RFC Editor, IANA.

5. IRTF

ORGANIZATION: Formed in 1989, the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF) is
a self-organized research group.

GOVERNANCE: The IRTF is divided into research groups (RGs), each with
chair(s). RG chairs may be removed by the IRTF chair, subject to appeal
to the IAB. The IAB appoints the chair of the IRTF. The IRTF chair
reports to the IAB.

MEMBERSHIP/COMPOSITION: Since RGs are expected to be long-term groups,
and to encourage the kind of working relationships such groups may need,
membership in RGs may be open or closed, in contrast with IETF WGs,
which are always open. Participants are expected to contribute as
individuals, rather than as representatives of companies or organizations.

MISSION/GOALS: While the IETF focuses on engineering and standards, the
IRTF focuses on research. The IRTF investigates Internet topics that are
too uncertain or too advanced to be standardized at the moment. When
IRTF produces a specification that is suitable for standardization, it
is processed via IETF.

FUNDING: The IRTF is largely self-funded. ISOC contributes.

ASSOCIATED BODIES: ISOC, IAB, IRSG.

6. IRSG

ORGANIZATION: Formed in 1989, the Internet Research Steering Group
(IRSG) is the management group of the IRTF.

GOVERNANCE: The IRTF chair leads the IRSG. The IRTF chair reports to the
IAB.

MEMBERSHIP/COMPOSITION: The IRSG consists of the chairs of the IRTF
research groups, the chair of IRTF, and possibly at-large members from
the research community.

MISSION/GOALS: The IRTF chair manages the IRTF in consultation with the
IRSG.

FUNDING: The IRSG is largely self-funded. ISOC contributes.

ASSOCIATED BODIES: ISOC, IAB, IRTF.

7. IAB

ORGANIZATION: In June of 1992, the Internet Society chartered the
Internet Architecture Board (IAB) as one of its components. The ancestor
of the IAB was the Internet Configuration Control Board (ICCB), a
technical advisory group formed by Vint Cerf of DARPA in 1979. The ICCB
was replaced by the Internet Advisory Board (IAB) in 1984, which became
the Internet Activities Board in 1986, which was chartered as the
Internet Architecture Board in June, 1992.

GOVERNANCE: ISOC has jurisdiction over the IAB but allows it a large
degree of independence in its operations. With respect to technology,
the IAB is considered to be a committee of the IETF.

MEMBERSHIP/COMPOSITION: IAB voting members are proposed by the
nominating committee of the IETF, and are then appointed by the ISOC
Board of Trustees. The IETF chair, who is chair of IESG as well, is also
a voting member. The voting members select one of themselves to serve as
chair of IAB. Non-voting members, mainly from associated bodies, also
exist. Members serve as individuals, and not as representatives of
companies or organizations.

MISSION/GOALS: ISOC mandates the IAB to oversee the architecture of the
Internet, including its protocols and other standards. IESG decisions
may be appealed to the IAB. IAB rulings are final, with the exception
that claims that the IAB proceeded unreasonably may be appealed to the
ISOC Board of Trustees. The appointment of an organization as RFC Editor
is subject to IAB approval. The IAB claims, on behalf of the IETF, to
appoint the organization which is to act as IANA (see sections 9 and 10
below). The IAB appoints the IETF Area Directors and the IETF chair on
recommendation of the IETF, as well as the IRTF chair. The IAB advises
ISOC's Board, and carries out technical external liaison on behalf of ISOC.

FUNDING: The IAB is largely self-funded. ISOC contributes.

ASSOCIATED BODIES: ISOC, IESG, IETF, IRSG, IRTF, RFC Editor, ICANN, IANA.

8. RFC Editor

ORGANIZATION: The RFC document series was initiated by UCLA's Steve
Crocker in 1969, and maintained originally at the SRI Network
Information Center, then at USC ISI. Jon Postel of USC ISI headed the
RFC Editor for decades until his passing in 1998. The RFC Editor is
currently a small department operated by USC ISI for ISOC.

GOVERNANCE: ISOC appoints an organization as RFC Editor on the
recommendation of IAB. The IAB vets the general policy followed by the
RFC Editor.

MEMBERSHIP/COMPOSITION: ISOC appointees.

MISSION/GOALS: The RFC Editor is the organization that edits, manages,
publishes and maintains the authoritative archive of the Request For
Comments (RFC) documents, which are the Internet's documents of record.

FUNDING: ISOC funds the RFC Editor.

ASSOCIATED BODIES: ISOC, IAB, IESG, IETF, IANA.

9. ICANN

ORGANIZATION: In the late '90s, the U.S. government was completing
implementation of its decision to privatize the Internet. The
implementation called for the continued operational stability of the
Internet, including its Domain Name System. In 1998, the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) was chartered as a
California non-profit corporation for this purpose. It can be regarded
as a technical coordinating and regulatory body.

GOVERNANCE: ICANN is governed by its Board of Directors. The majority of
Directors are selected by ICANN's nominating committee. A number of
others are appointed by ICANN's supporting organizations. Directors are
expected to serve as individuals, not as representatives. The U.S.
Department of Commerce gives ICANN authorization to perform the IANA
function via a renewable contract which contains a number of reporting
requirements. For the more technical aspects of its operations, ICANN
and its Board rely on the IETF and the IAB for information and guidance.

MEMBERSHIP/COMPOSITION: ICANN has neither individual nor organizational
members in the ordinary sense. Its supporting organizations and advisory
committees generally provide a great deal of feedback to the Board on
the issues of the day, and ICANN regards them as its constituents. They
span the globe and cover a broad range of interests: technical,
commercial, governmental, academic and user-oriented. Individuals in the
Internet community have some opportunity for participation in ICANN,
mainly through its advisory committee structure.

MISSION/GOALS: ICANN's revised articles of incorporation state that "...
the Corporation shall, except as limited by Article 5 hereof, pursue the
charitable and public purposes of lessening the burdens of government
and promoting the global public interest in the operational stability of
the Internet by (i) coordinating the assignment of Internet technical
parameters as needed to maintain universal connectivity on the Internet;
(ii) performing and overseeing functions related to the coordination of
the Internet Protocol ("IP") address space; (iii) performing and
overseeing functions related to the coordination of the Internet domain
name system ("DNS"), including the development of policies for
determining the circumstances under which new top-level domains are
added to the DNS root system; (iv) overseeing operation of the
authoritative Internet DNS root server system; and (v) engaging in any
other related lawful activity in furtherance of items (i) through (iv)."
[3]. The articles further state that ICANN "shall operate for the
benefit of the Internet community as a whole, carrying out its
activities in conformity with relevant principles of international law
and applicable international conventions and local law and, to the
extent appropriate and consistent with these Articles and its Bylaws,
through open and transparent processes that enable competition and open
entry in Internet-related markets. To this effect, the Corporation shall
cooperate as appropriate with relevant international organizations."
Among ICANN's most demanding responsibilities are the creation of
top-level domains and the (re-)delegation of domain registries.

FUNDING: ICANN is funded mainly from domain name and IP address
registries and registrars. Its budget includes funds for a number of
staff, headed by a President/CEO and including an Ombudsman.

ASSOCIATED BODIES: IANA, U.S. Department of Commerce, IAB, IETF, W3C.

10. IANA

ORGANIZATION: The tasks that the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority
(IANA) performs began in the early '70s. Those and ensuing tasks were
performed, and the organization was led, by Jon Postel for decades.
Formally, IANA is said to be a service or set of functions. In practical
terms, it is a subsidiary organization of ICANN.

GOVERNANCE: In March, 2003, the U.S. Department of Commerce awarded its
most recent contract to ICANN to perform the IANA functions. ICANN
operates IANA under the authority of the U.S. government. IANA works
collegially with the IAB, IESG and IETF in carrying out its mission.

MEMBERSHIP/COMPOSITION: ICANN appointees.

MISSION/GOALS: IANA oversees IP address allocation, manages the DNS
(this includes root server system oversight and top-level domain
delegation), and coordinates protocol parameter assignment. All Internet
domain names and IP addresses are allocated from IANA, either directly
or, much more likely, indirectly through IANA's delegation of authority
via a worldwide system of Internet registries and registrars.

FUNDING: ICANN funds IANA.

ASSOCIATED BODIES: ICANN, IAB, IESG, IETF, RFC Editor.

11. W3C

ORGANIZATION: The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) was founded by Tim
Berners-Lee in October, 1994 at MIT in collaboration with the European
Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN).

GOVERNANCE: The W3C is a group hosted by MIT in the U.S., the European
Research Consortium in Informatics and Mathematics (ERCIM) in Europe,
and Keio University in Japan (the Hosts). The W3C is responsible to the
Hosts, who maintain a Steering Committee that sets general policy and
strategy for W3C from time to time; the majority of the Steering
Committee are either from, or appointed by, MIT. W3C calls its technical
tasks "Activities", and groups them into broad units called domains.
Activities are carried out by Working Group(s) (for technical work),
Interest Group(s) (for general work) and Coordination Group(s) (for
group coordination). Groups have a chair and consist of member
representatives, Team representatives and invited experts. The Team is
the Hosts' technical and staff corps that leads Activities and manages
the W3C. The Team includes the Director, the Chief Operating Officer,
the W3C Chair, W3C Fellows, and others. The Director: has responsibility
and authority for overall direction of W3C, is the chief technical
architect, chairs the Technical Architecture Group (TAG), appoints group
chairs, hears appeals of working group decisions, is appointed by MIT
and reports to the Director of MIT's Lab for Computer Sciences. The
Chief Operating Officer is responsible for worldwide operations and
general management of W3C. The W3C Chair, appointed by MIT, is
responsible for member relations and external liaison. The Advisory
Committee (AC) is the general assembly of the membership, with one
representative from each member; it reviews proposed Activities and
recommendations, and suggests future directions for the W3C. The
Advisory Board, elected by the Advisory Committee, is the representative
council of the membership; its chair is appointed by the Team; it is not
a board of directors; it gives guidance to the Team on legal issues,
strategy, administration, structures, process, etc., and can do so in
between Advisory Committee meetings, which are infrequent.

MEMBERSHIP/COMPOSITION: The W3C is structured, and membership is priced,
to have organizations as members. Individuals in the Internet community
have limited opportunity for participation in W3C, mainly via those W3C
mailing lists that are public.

MISSION/GOALS: "The mission of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is to
lead the World Wide Web to its full potential by developing common
protocols that promote its evolution and ensure its interoperability."
[4]. The W3C develops, tests and implements new Web technological
standards ("recommendations" in W3C parlance). The W3C is similar to the
IETF in that it develops technological standards, but its focus is more
tightly directed, at the Web and associated technologies.

FUNDING: W3C is funded mainly from organization member fees, and some
grants. Its budget includes funds for a number of staff and
collaborative resources.

ASSOCIATED BODIES: IETF, ICANN.

12. Acknowledgements

Thanks to Dawson College. Thanks to Tim Berners-Lee, Bob Braden, Vint
Cerf and Ian B. Jacobs for their constructive reviews of major portions
of this document.

13. References

[1] Internet Activities Board, "The Internet Standards Process" -
RFC1310, RFC Editor, March 1992.

[2] ISOC, URL http://www.isoc.org/isoc/mission/, February 2005.

[3] ICANN, URL http://www.icann.org/general/articles.htm, February 2005.

[4] W3C, URL http://www.w3c.org/Consortium/Process, February 2005.

14. Author Information

Alex Simonelis is a faculty member in the Computer Science Department of
Dawson College in Montreal, Canada, and is interested in the Internet,
operating systems, programming languages and data structures. Email:
asimonelis@dawsoncollege.qc.ca

Author's Note

The reader should be aware that this document was submitted to the RFC
Editor as a proposed RFC, and rejected, essentially because it contains
some points that were judged to be too controversial. For example, this
paper describes ICANN as a technical coordinating and regulatory body;
the senior leadership of ICANN, however, maintains that ICANN is
definitely not a regulatory body, which is clearly contrary to reality.
On another point, some groups described herein have contradictory views
on which body has jurisdiction over IANA. Furthermore, there are
differences of opinion regarding the degree of independence of the IETF
from ISOC, and therefore any statement that takes a position will be
considered controversial by some. And so it would be extremely
difficult, if not impossible, for a document to treat this subject
matter in a concise and accurate way, and at the same time avoid
controversy. In any case, it is the author's conviction that this
document does achieve objectivity by using historical and legal facts as
its basis.

__

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(date posted: 3/10/2005)
http://chronicle.com/jobs/id.php?id=0000407939-01&pg=e

L'association ACTED propose le poste suivant : Stagiaire
Communication http://www.coordinationsud.org/search/view.php?id=4104
Date de l'offre : 11 mar 2005
Validité de l'offre : 1 mois
Organisation : ACTED
Intitulé du poste : Stagiaire Communication
Secteur d'activité : Information Communication
Région : France
Pays / Ville : Paris
Durée du contrat: 4 à 6 mois
Location: Paris
Début: 01 avril 2005
QUI SOMMES NOUS ?
ACTED est une ONG créée en 1993 dont l'objet est l'intervention
d'urgence et la mise en ¦uvre de programmes de reconstruction et de
développement dans les pays en crise.
Ses principaux domaines d'action sont le soutien alimentaire
d'urgence, le soutien à la production agricole, les programmes
sanitaires (réhabilitation de réseaux d'eaux, lutte contre la
malaria,Š), le développement économique et les études pour la
prévention des crises.

ACTED intervient dans 17 pays sur 5 zones (Asie, Afrique, Amérique,
Europe et Moyen-Orient) et emploie 2500 personnes dans le monde.

DESCRIPTION DU POSTE :

Basé(e) au siège (Paris 9ème), en lien avec le Directeur de la
Communication, vous assurerez les missions suivantes:

* Constitution et suivi d'un fichier presse, contacts avec les
journalistes, proposition de sujets et de reportages, élaboration des
communiqués de presse, mise en contact journalistes/terrain.
* Constitution et suivi d'un fichier collectivités territoriales,
contacts avec les responsables solidarité internationale dans les
villes, conseils généraux et régionaux. Propositions d'actions,
montage d'opérations de partenariat, mise en place d'opérations de
communication conjointes, création d'évènements.
* Constitution et suivi d'un « fichier entreprises et fondations »,
contacts avec les responsables projets et communication,
identification et propositions d'actions, montage d'opérations de
partenariat, mise en place d'opérations de communication conjointes,
création d'évènements.
* Elaboration de supports de communication (plaquettes, dossier de
presse, présentation DVD, spot publicitaireŠ.).
* Préparation et suivi des événements ACTED : salons, forums, etcŠ
* Partenariat, Mécénat : montage d'opérations avec les medias
(presse, télé, site Internet) et les entreprises.
* Appel aux dons : montage d'opération de fidélisation avec les
donateurs, mise en place de campagnes d'appel aux dons privés.

COMPETENCES REQUISES :

Formation : études en Info com, à partir de la troisième année du cursus.

* Dynamique, autonome, goût des contacts et force de proposition
* Intérêt pour les programmes d'aide d'urgence et de développement
internationaux
* Excellentes qualités de rédaction et capacité de synthèse
* Excellent niveau en anglais, écrit et parlé
* Bonne connaissance world, Excel, gestion de listes emails.
Logiciels de montage et de mise en page serait un plus.

CONDITIONS :

Début du stage : Mars/Avril 2005
Durée du stage : 4 mois minimum, idéalement 6 mois
Indemnités : 300 euros/mois + 50 % transport + tickets restaurants
Convention de Stage obligatoire.

POUR POSTULER :

Merci d'adresser votre candidature à :

Patricia d'Erneville
33, rue Godot de Mauroy
75009 Paris
Tel. + 33 (0) 1 42 65 33 33
Fax. + 33 (0) 1 42 65 33 46
E-mail: jobs@acted.org

Profil du candidat
Conditions
Statut : Stagiaire
Durée du contrat : 4 à 6 mois
Salaire / Indemnité : 300 euros/mois + 50 % transport + tickets restaurants
Documents à envoyer : CV + LM
Contact : Patricia d'Erneville
Email : jobs@acted.org

International Scholar Fellow (including journalism/media studies)

International Scholar Fellow
Open Society Institute (USA)
(date posted: 3/10/2005)
http://chronicle.com/jobs/id.php?id=0000407933-01&pg=e

California court rejects claim Apple bloggers are journalists


Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2005 20:11:51 -0600
From: Paul Nielson
List-Help: mailto:sympa@vancouvercommunity.net?subject=help
List-Subscribe: mailto:sympa@vancouvercommunity.net?subject=subscribe%20cpi-ua
List-Owner: mailto:cpi-ua-request@vancouvercommunity.net
List-Archive: http://vancouvercommunity.net/lists/arc/cpi-ua
Subject: [CPI-UA] APPLE COMPUTER, INC. V. DOES (Breaking Legal
Documents - March 11,
2005)

Breaking Legal Documents
Legal Documents Straight from the Source http://news.findlaw.com

March 11, 2005

A California court rejects claims by people running rumor web sites
devoted to following Apple computer products that they are
journalists protected from complying with discovery subpoena by the
First Amendment and California's shield law. The court ordered the
defendants to reveal their confidential sources to Apple in this
trade secret litigation.

http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/apple/appledoe31105opn.pdf

Apple's Lawyers:

George Riley
http://pview.findlaw.com/view/2025206_1

David Eberhart
http://pview.findlaw.com/view/1172342_1

Defendants' Lawyers:

Thomas E. Moore, III
http://pview.findlaw.com/view/1896499_1

Richard Wiebe
http://pview.findlaw.com/view/2146775_1

Terry Gross
http://pview.findlaw.com/view/3310427_1

Kurt Opsahl
http://pview.findlaw.com/view/2337419_1

Safeguarding Trade Secrets in the Information Age
http://articles.corporate.findlaw.com/articles/file/00355/008787.html

FindLaw's Breaking Documents http://news.findlaw.com | Copyright © 2005
FindLaw,Inc.

Friday, March 11, 2005

A-Infos Radio Project Fundraising and Bandwidth Update


From: "Lyn Gerry"
Date: Thu, 10 Mar 2005 11:12:54 -0500
List-Help: mailto:sympa@lists.riseup.net?subject=help
List-Subscribe: mailto:sympa@lists.riseup.net?subject=subscribe%20radioproject
List-Owner: mailto:radioproject-request@lists.riseup.net
List-Archive: http://lists.riseup.net/www/arc/radioproject
Subject: [radio] A-Infos Radio Project Fundraising and Bandwidth Update

Dear Radio Project Uploaders and Downloaders,

At the beginning of the year we increased our bandwidth after making
do on a residential DSL line for the past six years. We had intended
to double our bandwidth but it turned out that what we really needed
was to quadruple our bandwidth to keep things moving at a nice clip.
This meant doubling the monthly cost. We decided to see if everyone
cared about this enough to chip in. We're happy to tell you that we
have raised enough to pay for bandwidth for the next 3 1/2 months at
our present speed. And we'll keep it going as long as contributions
keep coming.

One of the things we introduced was the option to make a monthly
subscription of 5 or 10 dollars via paypal and 10 people have signed
up for this.

Now that we have increased our bandwidth, what we suspected has been
confirmed - there were people wanting to use the site but they just
couldn't get through. There has been a 50% per cent
increase in unique visitors to the site - if we were a radio station
we'd have a monthly audience of more than 30,000 people.

And, you've probably noticed that there a quite a few new producers
contributing their work. Thanks to everyone, producers and donors who
have made this project mean something. Next month, we will have been
online for 7 years - maintained by volunteers and funded by our users.

And here's some inspiring news: a new network of 7 low-power FM
stations in New Zealand is using audio from our site for most of
their broadcast schedule.

If every one of our users gave only a dollar a year, we could have
some monster bandwidth. You can send us a buck anytime to:

A-Infos Radio Project
P. O. Box 302
Watkins Glen, NY 14891

Thanks!

The A-Infos Project maintainers,
Shawn, David, and Lyn
http://www.radio4all.net

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For all list information and functions, including changing
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Thursday, March 10, 2005

Global media giants claim Canada wants to rule the web


Global media giants claim Canada wants to rule the web

Wed Mar 9, 3:08 AM ET
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&ncid=1212&e=10&u=/afp/20050309/tc_afp/canadausmediainternet&sid=96001018

TORONTO (AFP) - The Washington Post, backed by 50 global media
giants, challenged a landmark Internet libel claim lodged in Canadian
courts, which critics fear could squelch freedom of expression in
cyberspace.

The appeal seeks to overturn a previous ruling that Canada has
jurisdiction to hear a nine million-dollar (6.5 million US dollar)
damages claim lodged against the US-based paper by a former United
Nations [snipped] official now living in Ontario.

Media firms, including Cable News Network, The New York Times, the
London Times newspaper and Japan's Yomiuri Shimbun, argue that if the
case proceeds, it could force them to block access to their websites
in some nations.

Such a move would undermine the very rationale of the World Wide Web,
and be a detriment to global freedom of expression, the firms said.

It also raises the spectre of limitless liability for newspapers with
websites, read by millions of readers around the world.

[snipped]

His case largely rides on the fact that the articles can still be
read online in Canada, and suggests a precedent that material posted
on a website should be considered as published in the nation where it
is read.

Tuesday's case in the Ontario Court of Appeals challenges a previous
ruling by a lower court that the paper should have considered the
allegations would impact the official's life, wherever he
subsequently chose to live.

The Post argues the case has no connection with Ontario, despite the
fact that the official now lives in the province. Bangoura was living
in Kenya when the alleged libels ocurred.

[snipped]

Lawyers for the Post argue that Canadian courts did not have
jurisdiction as Bangoura did not even move to Canada until after the
stories were published, and did not take up residence in Ontario
until 2000.

They proposed Washington as the proper venue for such a claim.
Incidentally US libel laws are more favourable to media organisations
owing to freedom of speech provisions enshrined in the US
Constitution.

But Bangoura's lawyers responded that since the damage to his
reputation was most pronounced, and ongoing, in Ontario, where he now
lives, he should be entitled to redress in the province's courts.

[snipped]

The Canadian case is one of a sheaf of new questions surrounding
libel issues on the Internet.

[snipped]

Critics of such rulings argue that they could lead to people who
believe they have been libeled by an Internet publication shopping
around the world for a country where they may receive a sympathetic
hearing.

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

APTN Plans to increase Aboriginal Language Programming.


Date: Wed, 09 Mar 2005 18:44:38 -0500
Subject: FW: APTN Media Release 08032005
From: Norman Cohn
To: Zacharias Kunuk ,
Madeline Adams ,
John Houston , Paul Quassa ,
, , ,
, ,
"Murphy, Reuben" ,
"Keenainak, Rosemary" ,
"Campbell, Alex" , Jim Bell ,
Nunavut Film , ,
, , ,
, ,
, ,
David Craig ,
Dave Forget ,
David Poole ,
Sandra Macdonald ,
Lucius Barre , Katarina Soukup ,
Steph Rituit , Jim Bell ,
Patricia Bell ,
Odile Nelson , Sean Rombough ,
, ,
, "George(s) Lessard" ,
oana spinu

The enclosed APTN press release speaks for itself. They don't seem to
understand their language policy any better than I do.

Like APTN, Isuma is dedicated to promoting wider access and
acceptance of Aboriginal languages in Canada and around the world.
Unlike APTN, Isuma has no guaranteed annual income; as a private
sector independent production company Isuma is obligated to make
films wider audiences really want to watch, and are willing to pay
for.

Our film, Atanarjuat, had the widest audience and acceptance of any
Aboriginal film ever made and was commercially successful for
distributors and broadcasters in 20 countries. This film is entirely
in Inuktitut, with sub-titles, and has not been dubbed into any other
language version anywhere on earth.

APTN's strategy of making FEWER films, but dubbing these into MORE
languages, gets it backwards: it will build neither a 'wider
audience' nor a stronger aboriginal production industry. Twenty
language versions of the same film doesn't help one more filmmaker
get one more film financed; quite the opposite. And if Jean LaRose
dubbed Atanarjuat into English, French, Cree, Mic Mac and Slavey to
get a wider audience, he'd have to sell it to the Comedy Channel. As
Jose Kusugak, President of Inuit Tapirisat Kanatami was quoted
recently, dubbing Atanarjuat into English would sound like 'a bad
kung fu movie.' Is that how to build a future for Aboriginal
languages in the film industry?

----------
From: Producer Inquiries
Date: Tue, 8 Mar 2005 09:34:38 -0600
To: Producer Inquiries
Subject: APTN Media Release 08032005

Hello Everyone,

Please find the attached APTN Media Release: APTN Plans to increase
Aboriginal Language Programming.

If you wish to have your email address removed from APTN's media
release distribution list, please reply
to this email with the word "Remove" in the Subject: line, and we
will remove your name from the list.

Thank you!

For immediate release

APTN PLANS TO INCREASE ABORIGINAL LANGUAGE PROGRAMMING
TO FURTHER PROMOTE, ENHANCE AND PROTECT
ABORIGINAL LANGUAGES IN CANADA

March 7, 2005 - APTN (Aboriginal Peoples Television Network) plays a
significant role in helping to promote, enhance and protect the
Aboriginal languages of Canada. To that end, APTN is moving forward
with plans to increase the amount of Aboriginal language programming
aired on the network through versioning.

"In the last 2 years, the network has been slowly asking its
producers to propose programming concepts that also offer a version
in one of the Aboriginal languages in Canada. APTN's Strategic Plan,
adopted by its Board of Directors, clearly seeks to promote and
protect our languages," explains APTN CEO Jean LaRose. "In a
submission to the Aboriginal Languages Task Force, the network has
clearly shown that the retention of our languages is linked to
exposure and use of the language. Television, as a very powerful
media, is a key component in ensuring the long term strength of our
languages," says LaRose.

In the various Requests for Proposals (RFP'S) put out in the last
year, APTN has been asking for Aboriginal language versions of
various programs. In order to continue to live up to its mandate to
protect Aboriginal languages, APTN will now seek to obtain more
language versions as well as the English or French versions in which
the programs are produced. In the past, sub-titling of programs was
used to version shows into either English or French. This form or
versioning, while acceptable for the English and French languages,
does not promote or enhance Aboriginal languages.

"To date, APTN has not promoted the Aboriginal languages to the
extent that it should. The Aboriginal production sector is still in
its infancy in many regions and we had to give time to our producers
to build the capacity to provide us with programming of high quality.
Now that the capacity is improving, we will move to also obtain
versioning of the programs in Aboriginal languages," states LaRose.
"While we have some constraints in our conditions of licence in the
amount of language programming that we can air, Aboriginal language
versions of shows produced in English or French will allow us to show
repeats of our programming in the Aboriginal languages while
respecting the terms of our licence. Furthermore, in the next few
years, Secondary Audio Programming (SAP) will allow viewers to choose
the language in which they listen to a program. With versioning
already done and part of our programming inventory, APTN will be in a
position to allow the viewer to choose the language in which he or
she listens to the program. We are confident that this will respond
to comments and expectations from our viewers across the country,"
adds LaRose.

Over the course of the last 18 months, the Board and CEO of APTN have
been meeting with producers, viewers and other stakeholders across
the country to seek their comments about the network. While most
viewers strongly support the network, many asked for programming that
is reflective of their region and language. Currently, APTN has
produced programs in more than 15 Aboriginal languages; however, the
greatest part of the language programming on the network has been in
Inuktitut. The network wants to add other languages to respond to the
requests from its audience. The current undertakings by APTN under
the terms of its licence stipulate that 60% of the programming must
be in English, 25% in Aboriginal languages and 15% in French. The
network intends to live up to its conditions of licence. Furthermore,
as it moves to increase advertising revenues to pay the producers for
the versioning and new and innovative programming, the network must
continue to appeal to a wide audience by ensuring that a broad range
of its programming is also available in English and in French. It
will also seek to obtain some of the programming that is produced in
Aboriginal languages versioned in either English or French.

"We are confident that once the producers understand that the premise
behind this policy is to promote all Aboriginal languages and not
marginalize them, the approach will be well received. As a network,
our goal is to broadcast programs in as many Aboriginal languages as
possible while respecting the conditions of licence established by
the CRTC. At the same time, APTN must be financially viable and this
means that it must generate new revenues to meet the obligations that
face it as it moves to increase its programming requirements and
license fees to producers," concludes LaRose.

About APTN:
September 1, 2004 marked the five-year anniversary of the launch of
the first national Aboriginal television network in the world with
programming by, for and about Aboriginal Peoples to share with all
Canadians as well as viewers around the world. APTN is a mandatory
service available in over 10 million Canadian households and
commercial establishments with basic cable, direct-to-home (DTH) or
wireless service. APTN broadcasts programming with 60% offered in
English, 15% in French and 25% in Aboriginal languages

NDTV on Chennai's CR Station

Date: 8 Mar 2005 16:00:35 -0000
From: "sajan venniyoor" venniyoor@rediffmail.com
Subject: Re: [cr-india] NDTV on Chennai's CR
List-Archive: http://mail.sarai.net/pipermail/cr-india
List-Help: mailto:cr-india-request@sarai.net?subject=help
List-Subscribe: https://mail.sarai.net/mailman/listinfo/cr-india
mailto:cr-india-request@sarai.net?subject=subscribe

On Tue, 08 Mar 2005 Frederick Noronha(FN) wrote :
>NDTV is just reporting (March 8, 2045 hrs) about Chennai's "first
>community radio station from a private college". It is to have a
>50watt transmitter, and a reach of (just) 7.5 kms radius. English,
>Tamil and Hindi. But no film songs. Expected to go on the air
>shortly at 91.2 FM.

Thanks, Rico. I located the story on The Hindu's website. Here it is.

Sajan.
------

MOP FM to go on air on Saturday
www.hindu.com update, 8 March 2005

CHENNAI, MARCH 7. It's by the students and for the students in the
city. M.O.P. Vaishnav College, Nungambakkam, is launching a community
radio station on Saturday to reach out to students.

The `MOP FM' set at 91.2 MHz frequency will broadcast programmes for
an hour in the morning between 6.30 a.m. and 7.30 a.m. with a repeat
broadcast from 6 p.m. and 7 p.m.

Addressing mediapersons here on Monday, college secretary, P.
Haridas, said the programmes would focus on education, health and
environment among others. Produced in three languages, English, Tamil
and Hindi, the programmes will be in the form of interviews,
docu-dramas and skits.

The radio station has a full-fledged studio built at a cost of Rs.50
lakhs, he added.

The college was granted an operating license after a 2-year wait. The
community radio station will have a 50 watt FM transmitter and will
be launched by the University Grants commission Chairman, Arun
Nigavekar.
K. Nirmala Prasad, principal, said students would provide the
content. The programmes in April and May would concentrate on career
guidance. The `MOP FM' transmit signal would cover a radius of 7.5 to
15 km, reaching most parts of the city.

The college also plans to launch `Yuvashakthi', a fortnightly
newspaper on the same day.

To be released by S.P. Thyagarajan, Vice-Chancellor, Madras
University, about 10,000 copies of the newspaper would be circulated
among students in the age group of 15 and 25.

http://www.hindu.com/2005/03/08/stories/2005030812350600.htm

_______________________________________________
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Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Nominations sought for American Indian Journalism Institute


Date: Tue, 8 Mar 2005 08:47:08 -0700 (MST)
From: NAJA-Email Alerts
Organization: NAJA-Email Alerts
List: naja
List-Archive: http://www.naja.com/cgi-bin/mojo/mojo.cgi?f=archive&l=naja
List-Subscribe: http://www.naja.com/cgi-bin/mojo/mojo.cgi?f=s&l=naja
List-URL: http://www.naja.com/cgi-bin/mojo/mojo.cgi?l=naja
Subject: Nominations sought for American Indian Journalism Institute

Dear NAJA Supporter,
Please take a moment to consider this terrific opportunity for students.

Nominations sought for American Indian Journalism Institute, June 5-24, 2005

Nominations and applications are being accepted for the fifth annual
American Indian Journalism Institute, June 5-24, 2005, a concentrated
three-week academic program at The University of South Dakota. The
nomination deadline is March 31.

An informative 11-minute video and other information are available
online at
http://www.freedomforum.org/templates/document.asp?documentID=17963

To nominate a student, write an e-mail or letter explaining why the
person should be accepted into the institute and how the student can
be contacted. Please include the nominee's mailing address and e-mail
address. Self-nominations also are welcome.

Send nominations to Jack Marsh, executive director, Al Neuharth Media
Center, 555 Dakota St., Vermillion, SD 57069 or via e-mail to
jmarsh@freedomforum.org. Telephone 605/677-6315.

AIJI is a college course sanctioned by the university and funded by
the Freedom Forum's Al Neuharth Media Center. It trains about 25
Native students each year in the fundamentals of print journalism and
is the largest program of its kind in the country. AIJI students
attend classes and lectures and receive hands-on experience in
reporting, writing and photojournalism. The Al Neuharth Media Center,
a newly refurbished state-of-the-art facility where AIJI is held,
also is home to the Native American Journalists Association.

Tuition, fees, room, board, books and supplies are free. Those who
successfully complete the program earn four hours of college credit
that can be transferred to another college. They also receive a $500
stipend/scholarship when they re-enroll as full-time college students
in the fall.

About a dozen participants will go directly from AIJI to paid summer
internships at daily newspapers. AIJI graduates also are eligible to
apply to work for www.Reznetnews.org, the country's foremost online
newspaper produced by and for Native students.

AIJI is open exclusively to Native students interested in journalism
who have completed at least one year of college and who intend to
return to school in the fall.

Preference will be given to those applicants interested in journalism
careers and who show the greatest potential to become journalists.
Previous journalism coursework is not required. The program forbids
the use of alcohol, other intoxicants and illegal drugs at any time
from June 5 through June 24, 2005. Violators will be dismissed from
the institute.