Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Canadian PM Harper's minions shut down 'Yes Men' satirical website + 4,500 others

PM Harper shuts down satirical 'Yes Men' #cop15 website
http://ow.ly/QXL8
4,500
other Web sites also blocked #rights #censorship

[excerpt]

Stung by a satire at the Copenhagen climate conference, Canada's
government has shut down two parody Web sites criticizing the Great White
North's glacial policy on global warming.

In the process, however, it has taken down 4,500 other Web sites that had
nothing to do with the prank played two weeks ago at the global climate
summit.

The two "offending" sites, developed by "Yes Men" pranksters, announced
that Canada would reduce greenhouse gas emissions in 2020 40 percent from
1990 levels, and 80 percent by the year 2050.

The "announcement" came as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government was
privately circulating a plan to permit a 165 percent INCREASE in emissions
from Alberta's huge, dirty oil sands project.

The two Web sites, "enviro-canada.ca" and "ec-gc.ca" are "directly
connected to a hoax which misleads people into believing that the
Government of Canada will take certain actions in relation to
environmental matters," Mike Landreville from Environment Canada wrote in
an e-mail to the German Internet Service Provider (ISP) Serveloft.


The Great White North carries weight with ISP.

Serverloft immediately turned off a wide block of provider addresses,
knocking out 4,500 websites that had nothing to do with "Yes Men" or the
parody that raises such hackles among Harper's minions.

"We are sorry to see that the Canadian government will not 'take certain
actions' that could help stave off catastrophic climate change," said Mike
Bonanno of "Yes Men," "and we are sorry to see that they don't care so
much for free speech."

Google is sued by Chinese author Mian Mian over online library

Google is sued by Chinese author Mian Mian over online library
http://ow.ly/QU1f

[excerpt]

After a two-hour hearing, the court ordered both sides to talk but did not
set a deadline for reporting back, according to the author's lawyer.

She is seeking damages of 61,000 yuan ($8,950; £5,576) and a public apology.

The lawsuit was filed in October after Google scanned one of Mian Mian's
books, Acid House, into its library.

Google said it had removed the book as soon as it learned of the lawsuit,
but had no further comment on the case.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Canada’s free speech ruling brightens dark year, edito r says

RT @utknightcenter: Canada's free speech ruling brightens dark year,
editor says: http://bit.ly/6qoruA #journalism

[more links via URL http://bit.ly/6qoruA ]

New rulings by the Supreme Court allow news organizations to defend
themselves against defamation charges if they can prove they acted in the
public interest. "This means stories that have stayed under wraps because
of 'libel chill' will emerge into the light," writes columnist Dan Leger,
director of news content for The Chronicle Herald of Halifax, Nova Scotia.
"It means powerful and well-financed individuals won't so easily avoid
public scrutiny just because they have pit-bull lawyers."

RT @michaelgeist: The year in Canuk technology law & policy

RT @michaelgeist: The year in Canuk technology law & policy: Annual A
(ACTA) to Z (Zoocasa) review. http://bit.ly/4GtiLr

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Free speech activist Liu Xiaobo's eleven-year jail sentence court sneakily issued verdict Dec 24th

RT @RSF_RWB: China - Free speech activist Liu Xiaobo's eleven-year jail
sentence court sneakily issued verdict Dec 25th
http://bit.ly/8U1nxG

[excerpt]

Eleven-year jail sentence for free speech activist Liu Xiaobo, court
sneakily issues verdict on Christmas Day

"It is a disgrace that Liu Xiaobo is going to spend the next eleven years
in prison when all he did was defend free expression and participate in a
debate about his country's future with many other Chinese intellectuals,"
Reporters Without Borders said. "It is also disgraceful that such a
sentence was announced on Christmas Day."

The press freedom organisation added: "Where are the universal values of
freedom of expression that China is supposed to represent in Shanghai in
2010? The national and international pressure for this famous dissident's
release must be redoubled. The international community must not be
manipulated by the Chinese authorities, who are trying to minimise
reaction by concluding this case during the end-of-year holidays."

[...]

A former University of Beijing philosophy professor and winner of the
Reporters Without Borders press freedom prize in 2004, Liu is committed to
the idea that the Chinese media will one day be able to operate as a real
fourth estate and stand up to the omnipotent Communist Party. [...]

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

RSF expresses concern over Australian Internet censorship

#RSF expresses concern over Australian #Internet #censorship - IFEX
http://ow.ly/OKT0

http://www.ifex.org/australia/2009/12/22/internet_censorship/

(RSF/IFEX) - In an open letter to the prime minister, RSF expresses
serious concern over the government's plan to introduce a mandatory
Internet filtering system to combat child sex abuse:

Open letter to Australian Prime Minister
The Hon Kevin Michael Rudd MP
Prime Minister
Canberra, Australia
Paris, 18 December 2009

Dear Prime Minister,

Reporters Without Borders, an organisation that defends free expression
worldwide, would like to share with you its concern about your
government's plan to introduce a mandatory Internet filtering system.
While it is essential to combat child sex abuse, pursuing this draconian
filtering project is not the solution. If Australia were to introduce
systematic online content filtering, with a relatively broad definition of
the content targeted, it would be joining an Internet censors club that
includes such countries as China, Iran and Saudi Arabia.

Communications minister Stephen Conroy announced on 15 December that,
after a year of testing in partnership with Australian Internet service
providers (ISPs), your government intended to introduce legislation
imposing mandatory filtering of websites with pornographic, paedophile or
particularly violent content.

Reporters Without Borders would like to draw your attention to the risks
that this plan entails for freedom of expression.

Firstly, the decision to block access to an "inappropriate" website would
be taken not by a judge but by a government agency, the Australian
Communications and Media Authority (ACMA). Such a procedure, without a
court decision, does not satisfy the requirements of the rule of law. The
ACMA classifies content secretly, compiling a website blacklist by means
of unilateral and arbitrary administrative decision-making. Other
procedures are being considered but none of them would involve a judge.

Secondly, the criteria that the proposed law would use are too vague.
Filtering would be applied to all content considered "inappropriate," a
very slippery term that could be interpreted very differently by different
people. In all probability, filtering would target "refused
classification" (RC) sites, a category that is extremely controversial as
it is being applied to content that is completely unrelated to efforts to
combat child sex abuse and sexual violence, representing a dangerous
censorship option. Subjects such as abortion, anorexia, aborigines and
legislation on the sale of marijuana would all risk being filtered, as
would media reports on these subjects.

The choice of filtering techniques has not been clearly defined. Would it
be filtering by key-words, URL text or something else? And what about the
ISPs that are supposed to carry out the filtering at the government's
request? Will they be blamed, will they be accused of complicity in child
sex abuse if the filtering proves to be ineffective, as it almost
certainly will?

Your government claims that the filtering will be 100 per cent effective
but this is clearly impossible. Experts all over the world agree that no
filtering system is effective at combating this kind of content. On the
one hand, such a system filters sites that should not be affected (such as
sites about the psychology of child sexuality or paedophile crime news).
And on the other, it fails to filter targeted sites because their URLs
contain key-words that are completely unrelated to their content, or
because their content (photo and text) is registered under completely
neutral terms. Furthermore, people who are determined to visit such sites
will know how to avoid the filtering by, for example, using proxy servers
or censorship circumvention software or both.

The Wikileaks website highlighted the limitations of such as system when
it revealed that the ACMA blacklist of already banned websites contained
many with nothing reprehensible in their content. According to Wikileaks,
the blacklist included the Abortion TV website, some of the pages of
Wikileaks itself, online poker sites, gay networks, sites dealing with
euthanasia, Christian sites, a tour operator's site and even a Queensland
dentist's site.

The US company Google has also voiced strong reservations. Google
Australia's head of policy, Iarla Flynn, said yesterday: "Moving to a
mandatory ISP filtering regime with a scope that goes well beyond such
material is heavy handed and can raise genuine questions about
restrictions on access to information."

As regards paedophilia, the most dangerous places on the Internet are
websites offering chat and email services. So if this project were taken
to its logical conclusion, access to sites such as Gmail, Yahoo and Skype
would also have to be blocked, which would of course be impossible.

There are more effective ways to combat child pornography, including
tracking cyber-criminals online (by means of cookies, IP address
comparison, and so on), combined with police investigation into suspects
and their online habits. Why did your government end the programme
launched by the previous government, which made free filtering systems
available to Australian families? This procedure had the merit of being
adapted to individual needs and gave each home the possibility of
shielding its children from porn.

A real national debate is needed on this subject but your communications
minister, Stephen Conroy, made such a debate very difficult by branding
his critics as supporters of child pornography. An opportunity was lost
for stimulating a constructive exchange of ideas.

We also regret the lack of transparency displayed by your government as
regards the tests carried out in recent months using procedures that have
been kept secret. Your government paid some 300,000 Australian dollars to
ISPs to finance the tests. Australian taxpayers have a right to be given
detailed information about the results.

Finally, you must be aware that this initiative is a source of a concern
for your compatriots. In a recent Fairfax Media poll of 20,000 people, 96
per cent were strongly opposed to such a mandatory Internet filtering
system, while around 120,000 Australians have signed a petition against
Internet censorship launched by the online activist group GetUp. The
withdrawal of this proposal would therefore satisfy public opinion as well
as prevent a democratic country from introducing a system that threatens
freedom of expression.

I thank you in advance for the consideration you give to our recommendations.

Sincerely,

Jean-François Julliard
Reporters Without Borders
Secretary-General

Source
http://www.ifex.org/australia/2009/12/22/internet_censorship/
Reporters Without Borders
47, rue Vivienne
75002 Paris
France
rsf (@) rsf.org
Phone: +33 1 44 83 84 84
Fax: +33 1 45 23 11 51

Supreme Court of Canada allows journalists & bloggers to use defence of "responsible communication" against libel suits

Supreme Court of Canada allows #journalists & #bloggers to use defence of
"responsible communication" against #libel suits

http://ow.ly/OGVh

[excerpt]

CBC.ca

New libel defence allowed: Supreme Court
2 publications fighting $1.5M, $100K libel awards

Canada's highest court ruled Tuesday in two decisions that publishers can
escape liability if they can show that they tried to verify the facts and
the published material is a matter of public interest.

The decision was prompted by appeals from two Ontario newspapers — the
Ottawa Citizen and the Toronto Star. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court ordered
new trials for both of them in light of the new defence available to them.

Journalists across Canada, as well as bloggers, can now use the defence of
"responsible communication on matters of public interest" as a defence
against libel.

However, in order for them to do so, a judge must confirm to the jury that
the published material relates to a matter of public interest.

The judge may also rule out the use of the "responsible communication"
defence if the case does not meet the criteria outlined in a checklist
issued as part of the rulings.

China has issued new Internet regulations... appears to be an effort to create a "whitelist"

China To Require Internet Domain Name Registration

China has issued new Internet regulations, including what appears to be an
effort to create a "whitelist" of approved Web sites that could
potentially place much of the Internet off-limits to Chinese readers. The
Ministry of Industry and Information Technology ordered domain management
institutions and Internet service providers to tighten control over domain
name registration, in a three-phase plan laid out on its Web site
(http://www.miit.gov.cn). [Billboard]

http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/content_display/industry/e3i1002148bbd34e1b54bbcbd0f257a5f0c

Thursday, December 17, 2009

UPIU - A social media platform project of United Press International

A program by United Press International, Inc. (UPI), UPIU is a social
media platform that aims to bring together the voices of journalists,
academics, human rights reporters, public education professionals, and
bloggers.

http://www.upiu.com/
http://espanol.upiu.com/

Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/pages/UPIUcom/85736340946

Aspiring and Professional Journalists

http://www.upiu.com/contents/about_upiu
[excerpt]

A program by United Press International, Inc. (UPI), UPIU is a social
media platform that aims to bring together the voices of journalists,
academics, human rights reporters, public education professionals, and
bloggers. We want to see and hear your stories, and we want to share them
with the world. Your work can live beyond a professor's desk. Your expert
opinion can reach a mass audience beyond your peers. Coupled with citizen
journalism submissions, your story will include those parts of the story
that mainstream media misses.

More than just another social network, UPIU wants to harness the powers of
both traditional and emerging new media to bring the stories that matter
to the world's attention, beyond just the internet. Our editors constantly
review your submissions, seeking the stories that deserve global
attention. UPI will publish these stories, channeling your images, text,
and videos through print, radio, TV and other multimedia outlets
throughout the world.

Catapult your journalistic career. When you post your content, you can get
ratings and feedback to help you improve your writing. With the ability to
respond to content with your own content, you can both contribute and gain
insight. With an audience from all over the world, each member is an
opportunity to build your international professional network. And when UPI
publishes your work, you'll get the byline; you'll keep the copyright.

An Opportunity for Faculty

UPIU strives to help journalism, communications, and otherwise specialized
programs advance their students' and staffs' careers. We are constantly
seeking to feature quality university content, and if you seek increased
exposure and wish to promote your institution's profile, we look forward
to the opportunity to collaborate with you. Please contact the following
representatives to inquire about collaborating with UPIU:

* International, North America: Sonja Eberly, seberly@upi.com
* Asia/Oceania: Harumi Gondo, hgondo@upi.com
* Europe/Africa: Ted Iliff, tiliff@upi.com
* Latin America: Pablo Aguirre, paguirre@upi.com
* North America, Spanish Language: Juan Mata, jmata@upi.com

- - - -

UPI Stylebook

http://www.upiu.com/stylebook

- - - - -

Saturday, December 05, 2009

Survey regarding the Preservation of Photo Metadata by Social Media Websites

"...The real and present danger is that by having your attribution
information removed (such as the creator/author field which indicates who
took the photograph, or the copyright notice field, or provider), the
service is creating potential "orphan works" of your property...."

The Controlled Vocabulary Survey regarding the Preservation of Photo
Metadata by Social Media Websites

Visit
http://www.controlledvocabulary.com/socialmedia/
for survey and other links not embeded in this e-mail

Overview
Do the social media websites or other image sharing services you use
preserve your embedded photo metadata after upload? The answer to that
question isn't clear, so we are conducting a survey of various services to
find out.

Digital images, saved in the JPEG format support the embedding of photo
metadata, and most social media sites support the uploading of JPEG
images. However, many of these social media services do not preserve this
information that you have taken the time to embed in your image files. In
some instances this information is removed on upload; in other cases, it
may preserved in the original uploaded file, but any images derived from
the original may no longer retain that same information.

As a result, anyone downloading an image of yours for reference may not
know where that image came from or who to contact, without at least some
basic information stored within the image file. Based on preliminary
survey data, the amount and type of embedded photo metadata preserved in
an image online varies. Much seems to depends on the type of server side
software they use and the type of image processing they are performing
when resizing, or creating thumbnails.

Some may claim they remove this information to decrease download time for
those viewing the images. Indeed, some social media services automatically
resize your uploaded images to a smaller size, as their primary concern is
to have your images take up less disk space. Since most do not charge any
membership fees, and the service is basically free, many users don't
complain, even if they are aware.This downsizing may make sense for the
service, but not for users of their service that are interested in
protecting their intellectual property. While your images may take up
fractionally less space on their servers by intentionally removing the
embedded photo metadata and/or ICC profile, the space savings is not
justifiable if the pixel dimensions remain the same.

The real and present danger is that by having your attribution information
removed (such as the creator/author field which indicates who took the
photograph, or the copyright notice field, or provider), the service is
creating potential "orphan works" of your property. In some instances the
service may only preserve the older "legacy" form of IPTC metadata, and
thus detailed contact information will be missing in any file that may be
downloaded for later reference.

Friday, December 04, 2009

New Tool for Online comment

Journalists and news outlets are accustomed to offering comments and criticisms about others, but they're not as used to being the subject of public comment themselves. In the online world, where technology can and does upend established relationships, journalists and online news outlets are joining the ranks of the commented-upon.

The shift has taken place due to the increased presence of commenting and feedback features on news websites, and partly thanks to the use of comment-friendly platforms such as WordPress. In these contexts, the news outlets have chosen to accept user comments, and they retain a certain amount of control over which ones appear on their site. Now, a new technology, Google's Sidewiki annotation tool, is poised to present a challenge to website owners, including news outlets, that attempt to control the interface between their site and end users. Suddenly, they won't have as much control over comments related to their content.

And that change in control might lead to some legal tussles down the road.

in reference to: MediaShift . Will Google Sidewiki Shift Control of Online Comments? | PBS (view on Google Sidewiki)

Monday, November 30, 2009

* BT boss has only broadband home *

* BT boss has only broadband home *

[excerpt]

British Telecom (BT) has admitted its chairman is the only person in a
village on the Oxfordshire-Buckinghamshire border with broadband.

Other people in Hambleden were told they could not have broadband because
of the distance to the exchange.

BT said Sir Michael Rake's connection was part of a trial of new
technology, and no company could afford to provide broadband to the area.

One local resident said it was not fair and that Sir Michael should resign.
Full story:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/-/2/hi/uk_news/england/8386224.stm

Sunday, November 29, 2009

IPI Fact-Finding Mission Reports on Ethiopian Press Freedom

-----------------------------------------
PRESS FREEDOM MISSIONS

5. ETHIOPIA: STATE INTERFERENCE IN MEDIA CONTENT; SHIFT IN MEDIA LAW

http://bit.ly/8nohL5

Despite some positive changes in media law, Ethiopian journalists operating
within state media have no editorial independence, says the International
Press Institute (IPI) after a recent fact-finding mission to Ethiopia.

After meetings with local media and the head of the Office of Government
Communication Affairs (OGCA), IPI learned that the OGCA involvement with
state media reinforces government influence. A document published in 2008
"invites the media to focus on developmental journalism and informs
journalists that they should focus on success stories." Some say the
document is an effort to curb media efforts to hold the government
accountable, reports IPI.

IPI expressed concern about an ongoing legal case in which several media
owners are trying to secure publishing licenses for political newspapers
shut down in 2005. According to IPI, the head of the OGCA said he was not
willing to award the licenses on the basis of supporting a pluralistic
media environment.

However, there have been positive developments. There has been support for
freedom of information laws as well as the removal of the authorities'
power to hold journalists in jail while pursuing an investigation.

IPI has made several recommendations. The government should: ensure the
proper development of public service media; recognise dissenting, plural
voices; resist the temptation to adopt practices of other countries without
first considering if they are in accordance with the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights. IPI also urges the media to establish best practices for
its own credibility.

More on the web:
- IPI fact-finding mission reports on Ethiopian press freedom:
http://www.freemedia.at/startpage/singleview/ipi-fact-finding-mission-reports-on-ethiopian-press-freedom/164e15fb41/
--------------------------------------------------------

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Amy Goodman grilled at Canada border crossing

U.S. journalist grilled at Canada border crossing
Officials demanded to know what she would say publicly about 2010 Olympics..
U.S. journalist Amy Goodman said she was stopped at a Canadian border crossing south of Vancouver on Wednesday and questioned for 90 minutes by authorities concerned she was coming to Canada to speak against the Olympics.

Goodman says Canadian Border Services Agency officials ultimately allowed her to enter Canada but returned her passport with a document demanding she leave the country within 48 hours.

Goodman, 52, known for her views opposing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, told CBC News on Thursday that Canadian border agents asked her repeatedly what subjects she would cover at scheduled speaking engagements in Vancouver and Victoria.

in reference to:

"grilled at Canada border crossing"
- CBC News - British Columbia - U.S. journalist grilled at Canada border crossing (view on Google Sidewiki)

IFEX members call for protection for women journalists and activists to mark day against violence

IFEX members call for protection for women journalists and activists to
mark day against violence

http://www.ifex.org/international/2009/11/25/women_journalists/

[excerpt]

The massacre and rape of at least four women journalists in the
Philippines this week is emblematic of the additional risks women
journalists face. That is why 40 IFEX members are marking the
International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women today, 25
November, with a joint call for action.

Spearheaded by the IFEX Gender Working Group, which is chaired by the
International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), the joint action calls
attention to the many women journalists who are targeted because of their
gender. They face a range of violations, including death threats,
abduction, physical attacks, including assaults, flogging and killings, as
well as sexual, verbal and judicial harassment.

This year, several women have been murdered or threatened with death for
speaking out against corruption and violations of human rights.

[...]

BBC braced for return to 'pre-digital' age as technology fails, MACs available for backup

Major phone and computer problems could cause havoc to BBC's breakfast
programmes

John Plunkett

guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 25 November 2009 18.58 GMT

The BBC has been hit by a major technological breakdown affecting its
phone and computer networks that could cause chaos for the corporation's
news output and leave it marooned in a "pre-digital age".

Serious technical issues have caused problems across the corporation
today. One BBC insider described the situation as "absolutely chaotic" and
said there had been "major phone and computing problems over the past 72
hours or so".

[...]

In an email seen by MediaGuardian.co.uk, one BBC News editor told staff:
"Don't assume you'll have a normal start to the day. Either the network is
in a happy state, or you're walking into a pre-digital world.

"In a best-case scenario we will lose all outside connectivity - ie agency
feeds, lines, internet access etc.

[...]

The email said there would be "two Macs" in the BBC's Television Centre
newsroom in west London that had webmail and internet access via wi-fi in
case the computer system went down overnight.

[...]

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Your Brain on Books

Your Brain on Books

Neuroscientist Stanislas Dehaene explains his quest to understand how the
mind makes sense of written language By Stanislas Dehaene
Scientific American
November 17, 2009

[excerpt]

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=your-brain-on-books

Stanislas Dehaene holds the chair of Experimental Cognitive Psychology at
the Collège de France, and he is also the director of the INSERM-CEA
Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit at NeuroSpin, France's most advanced
neuroimaging research center. He is best known for his research into the
brain basis of numbers, popularized in his book, "The Number Sense." In
his new book, "Reading in the Brain," he describes his quest to understand
an astounding feat that most of us take for granted: translating marks on
a page (or a screen) into language.
He answered questions recently from Mind Matters editor Gareth Cook.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Ubuntu Studio. A multimedia creation flavor of Ubuntu.

Ubuntu Studio. A multimedia creation flavor of Ubuntu.

Ubuntu Studio is aimed at the GNU/Linux audio, video and graphic
enthusiast as well as professional.

We provide a suite of the best open-source applications available for
multimedia creation. Completely free to use, modify and redistribute. Your
only limitation is your imagination.

http://ubuntustudio.org/

Video editing with open source tools

Video editing with open source tools

http://www.digitalartistshandbook.org/node/35

"Mapping CCTV around Whitehall", 2008

"Mapping CCTV around Whitehall", 2008, is, as its name implies, a
performance of mapping Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) security cameras
around the UK's parliament in London and a video record of that
performance by Ambient.tv's Manu Luksch.

Starting with a HAL 9000-like image of a CCTV lens, the video of "Mapping
CCTV In Whitehall" has a glitchy techno aesthetic of sound and images with
a post-MTV-Style Guide reportage feel. The first half consists of a
recording of the police stop-and-search interviewing Luksch under
anti-terrorism legislation, with a map of the area superimposed. The
second half consists of CCTV views of the range of Camera number 40 being
taped out, and of the people caught within those bounds. Words flash on
the screen to identify the subjects of CCTV (....Artists! Sexy Arses!).
This redeployment of the language of mass media visual persuasion opens up
what we see rather than closing it down, making it a very effective
encapsulation of the project's ideas and aesthetics.

http://www.furtherfield.org/displayreview.php?review_id=366

UNESCO Guidelines for broadcasting regulation

These Guidelines seek to set out the main principles that underlie the
regulation of broadcasting and the aspects of broadcasting that can be
regulated. The book is aimed at governments and regulators and sets out
'best practice' as informed by an international analysis of what currently
is done.

(Source:UNESCO,2009)

PDF

http://zunia.org/index.php?id=11728&tx_dgcontent_pi1[tt_news]=292586&cHash=622040631d

or

http://bit.ly/NkKvi

Direct download URL
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0018/001832/183285e.pdf

Friday, November 20, 2009

The Role of New Media in the 2009 Iranian Elections

The Role of New Media in the 2009 Iranian Elections

This report discusses presentations and panel discussion in Washington,
DC, United States, on July 7 2009, in which new media practitioners, Iran
specialists, and interested observers attempted to clarify the role of new
media in the Iranian elections and the implications of these technologies
for future democratic movements. The report is the result of a Center for
International Media Assistance (CIMA) workshop in which approximately 150
people came together to discuss the impact of new communications
technologies in Iran...


http://www.comminit.com/en/node/304006/2754

Human Rights Reporting Handbooks for Journalists

Human Rights Reporting Handbooks for Journalists
This handbook collection was written to move forward the goal of the
organisation Journalists for Human Rights (jhr), which is to make everyone
in the world fully aware of their rights. "Creating rights awareness is
the first and most necessary step to ending rights abuses. By mobilizing
the media to spread human rights awareness, jhr informs people about human
rights, empowering marginalized communities to stand up, speak out and
protect themselves." jhr programmes promote Rights Media - the process of
writing, collecting, editing, producing, and distributing media that
create societal dialogue on human rights issues...
http://www.comminit.com/en/node/297008/2754

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Twitter urges Murdoch to be open

Twitter urges Murdoch to be open
By Jonathan Fildes
Technology reporter, BBC News

[excerpt]

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8368750.stm

Newspapers should become "radically open" if they want to make money in
the online world, the co-founder of social networking site Twitter has
said.

Biz Stone said that he would "love to see what happens" if newspaper mogul
Rupert Murdoch went ahead with plans to block Google from his websites.

"The future is in openness not [being] closed," he told the BBC.

Mr Murdoch recently said that search engines could not legally use
material such as headlines in search results.

Earlier this year, he said his News Corp business would start charging
customers for access to its websites.

News Corp owns the Times and Sun newspapers in the UK and the New York
Post and Wall Street Journal in the US.

Mr Stone said he should be allowed to "fail fast" with the proposal.

"They should be looking at this as an opportunity to try something
radically different and find out a way to make a ton of money from being
radically open rather than some money from being ridiculously closed," he
told an event organised by the National Endowment for Science, Technology
and the Arts (Nesta) in London.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Free Syllabics fonts Downloads (MAC & PC) plus keyboards

Free Syllabics fonts Downloads (MAC & PC)

Canadian Syllabics & Latin Scripts

Euphemia covers most languages which use the Canadian Syllabic script
including various Cree orthographies, Inuktitut and the historical
Carrier/Dakelh script (dulkw'ahke). Three fonts are available with free
end-user licences in TrueType-OpenType format (.ttf).

Pigiarniq, Uqammaq and the Inuktitut Keyboard Driver

Macintosh keyboards for Inuktitut are available with Mac OSX 10.3 or
later. They are compatible with both the version of Euphemia available
here as well as the version of Euphemia that comes with OSX, as well as
any other Unicode-encoded Inuktitut fonts or UCAS fonts. If you wish to
have the latest version, and/or a version of Euphemia that has the extra
features (smallcaps, old-style figures etc.) you can download the version
from this site.

http://www.tiro.com/syllabics/resources/index.html

--
GEORGE LESSARD

Information & Media Specialist
6402135 Canada Inc.

451 Norseman Drive
Yellowknife, Northwest Territories
X1A 2J1, Canada

Yellowknife Land Line # (867) 873-2662
Yellowknife Cell # (867) 445-9193

Online Business Card:
http://lessardcard.notlong.com

Home e-mail media@web.net
Alternate e-mail: mediamentor@gmail.com

Home Pages http://mediamentor.ca
Online Activities: http://www.web.ca/~media/index.html
Photos: http://photosbygeorge.notlong.com
My Public Bookmarks: http://del.icio.us/themediamentor

Member:
Canadian Association of Journalists http://www.caj.ca
Canadian Artists Representation / le Front des artistes canadiennes
http://www.carfac.ca/
Canadian Artists Representation Copyright Collective http://www.carcc.ca/

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Flarf, the poetry of Googled search terms - thestar.com

Flarf, the poetry of Googled search terms - thestar.com

http://www.thestar.com/living/article/726499--flarf-the-poetry-of-googled-search-terms

Riddles; is curry an acid or a base; are dreads sexy; the difference
between a sea and an ocean; fish that clean other fish; the life and times
of Scrooge McDuck; what's my zip code; where does the money go? -By Kate
Dawson and Ori Barbut, from 'Searchbar History Vol. 1'

Worldwide Earthquake Notification Service

Worldwide Earthquake Notification Service

https://sslearthquake.usgs.gov/ens/

This system provides automated free email and email-based SMS text message
notification for worldwide earthquakes.

The U.S. Geological Survey Earthquake Hazards Program Earthquake
Notification Service (ENS) is a customizable system provided free to
everyone. You can receive earthquake notifications for any earthquakes
located by the ANSS/NEIC (Advanced National Seismic System/National
Earthquake Information Center) in the U.S. and around the World.
Information for earthquakes in the U.S. is generally available within 5
minutes; information for earthquakes elsewhere in the World is generally
available within 30 minutes.

Customizable Options:

* Functional in English and Spanish
* Specify your local time zone
* Specify affiliation
* Aftershock exclusion option
* Update Notifications option
* Defer Notifications option
* Add, remove, or change multiple email addresses (up to 15)
* Define multiple notification profiles
* Activate/Deactivate each profile individually
* Set notification magnitude thresholds for night and day hours
* Receive emails in 3 formats: long, short (for pagers and cell
phones), and raw CUBE format messages.
* Create a notification profile region from a list of predefined regions
* Create a rectangular profile region from four specified lat/lon points
* Specify a circular profile region from a center point and radius, or
pick it on a map
* Make a custom polygon profile region by picking points on a map, or
uploading XML
* Select seismic networks to receive events from (scientists only;
default is to receive from all networks)
* Remove profiles
* Manage/Delete account

NASA and Microsoft Allow Earthlings to Become Martians

NASA and Microsoft Allow Earthlings to Become Martians - To enroll as a
virtual Martian citizen and start exploring, visit

http://beamartian.jpl.nasa.gov/welcome

This site was created under a Memorandum of Understanding between
NASA/JPL-Caltech and Microsoft.

‘Daily Show’ Producers, Writers Say They’re Seriou s about Media Criticism

'Daily Show' Producers, Writers Say They're Serious about Media Criticism

http://mediachannel.org/blog/2009/11/daily-show-producers-writers-say-theyre-serious-about-media-criticism/

[excerpt]

"Daily Show" producer Ramin Hedayati spends his morning flipping back and
forth between the "Today Show" and "The Early Show," glancing at major
news sites and political blogs and reading The New York Times. When he
gets into the office, he scans through news shows recorded on the office's
13 TiVos and looks for glaring inconsistencies, misleading reports and
humorous soundbites.

While watching Sean Hannity's coverage of an anti-health-care-reform rally
at the Capitol last week, he knew something wasn't quite right. "I
remember saying to myself …'There couldn't be a more beautiful day for
this rally.' Then all of a sudden it went to cloudy footage," said
Hedayati. "Hannity used footage from Glenn Beck's 9/12 rally to make his
rally look bigger … We were surprised that no one else caught it."

Hannity responded last week to the show's uncovering of the inconsistency,
saying the video switch-up was an "inadvertent mistake."

While its touts itself as a comedy show first and foremost, "The Daily
Show" is also an unabashed media critic and ombudsman of sorts that
exposes journalists' wrongdoings and shortcomings.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Switzerland takes Google to court

Switzerland takes Google to court

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8358908.stm

[excerpt]

Web search giant Google faces a court case in Switzerland because of
privacy concerns over its Street View service.

The application allows a 360-degree view of any street-level location.

"Numerous faces and vehicle number plates are not made sufficiently
unrecognisable," said data protection commissioner Hanspeter Thuer.

Google said it was disappointed by the move. The firm says it is sure that
Street View is legal in Switzerland and will "vigorously contest" the
case.

Line of sight

Mr Thuer is especially concerned about people shown in sensitive locations
such as hospitals, prisons or schools.

He also said that the height of the camera was problematic because it
allowed a view over fences, hedges and walls, meaning that more could be
seen from Street View than by a normal passer-by.

Copyright Watch

Copyright Watch

Copyright Watch collects and monitors copyright laws from all over the world.

http://www.copyright-watch.org/

The details of copyright law used to be important for only a few in the
creative industries. Now, with the growth of the Internet, we are all
authors, publishers, and sharers of copyrighted works.

Our dream was to build a user-friendly resource of national copyright laws
to help citizens of the world undertake comparative research. We wanted to
raise awareness of the importance of balanced copyright law in the
information society, and draw attention to points of commonality and of
difference in countries' laws and legal traditions. We also wanted to
create an information sharing resource, where copyright watchers could
post information about proposed amendments to their own copyright laws,
and understand the changes in others.

We hope that Copyright Watch will be a resource maintained and driven by
the Access to Knowledge community and that copyright monitors in each
country will help to keep this information up to date and relevant.

Finally, we hope that Copyright Watch will help document the importance of
copyright to all aspects of cultural life and human freedom. Balanced and
well-calibrated copyright laws are extremely important in our global
information society. The smallest shift in the legal balance between the
rights of copyright owners and users of copyrighted knowledge can destroy
or enable business models, criminalize or liberate everyday behaviour, and
transform or eradicate new technology. A law that is passed in one nation
can quickly be taken up by others, through bilateral trade agreements,
regional policy initiatives or international treaties. We all need to keep
watch.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

An open source project, to pioneer “community funded reporting.”

What is Spot.Us About?

Spot.Us is a nonprofit project of the Center for Media Change and funded by various groups like the Knight Foundation.

We are an open source project, to pioneer "community funded reporting." Through Spot.Us the public can commission journalists to do reporting on important and perhaps overlooked topics. Contributions are tax deductible and if a news organization buys exclusive rights to the content, your donation will be reimbursed. Otherwise, all content is made available through a Creative Commons license. It's a marketplace where independent reporters, community members and news organizations can come together and collaborate.

You can learn more about us at our Press Page, the FAQ's page.
http://spot.us/

NY Times story on the pacific garbage patch. It's twice the size of texas! http://bit.ly/KcJBB

Story: Dissecting the Great Pacific Garbage Patch
In the science section of the New York Times November 10th, 2009 you'll find a story from Lindsey Hoshaw on the Pacific Garbage Patch. This story was partly funded by the Spot.Us community and is credited as such.
http://spot.us/stories/252-dissecting-the-great-pacific-garbage-patch

- - - - -

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iSC_k8BSFHlGN6nbX0mpFbUaF1Tw


New York Times publishes 'crowd-funded' article
(AFP) – 1 day ago

WASHINGTON — The science section of The New York Times contained an unusual article on Tuesday. The story about a huge floating garbage patch in the Pacific Ocean was not written by a Times reporter but by a freelance journalist whose expenses were paid by hundreds of donors in an experiment in "crowd-funded" journalism.

The travel expenses for journalist Lindsey Hoshaw's trip were raised through Spot.Us, which describes itself as a "nonprofit project to pioneer 'community funded' reporting."

Spot.Us, according to its website, allows the public to "commission investigations with tax deductible donations for important and perhaps overlooked stories.

"It?s a marketplace where independent reporters, community members and news organizations can come together and collaborate," it says.

The website lists 6,000 dollars in donations for the Pacific garbage patch story from more than 100 people.

Among the listed donors are Web luminaries such as Craig Newmark, the founder of classified site Craigslist, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, eBay founder Pierre Omidyar and others.

Spot.Us is a project of the Center for Media Change, a San
Francisco-based non-profit.

- - - -

- - - - -

Spot.Us has been covered and talked about by traditional news organizations like the New York Times, NPR and PBS as well as new media giants like TechCrunch and Wired. Below is a sampling which should give you sense of just how much attention Spot.Us is making for our innovative approach to funding journalism.
http://www.spot.us/pages/press/


Twitter, Internet Undermine Canada Election Rules

Twitter, Internet Undermine Canada Election Rules
As Canadians in four electoral districts spread right across the giant
country cast ballots on Monday to fill vacant seats in the House of
Commons, Elections Canada asked a newspaper to remove from its website a
story revealing initial results from one constituency where voting had
ended early. The agency did not notice reporters had been discussing the
same by-election results on the microblogging network Twitter, which is
accessible across Canada. [Reuters]

[excerpt]

By David Ljunggren

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Twitter 1, Elections Canada 0.

In this era of smartphones and the Internet, the federal elections agency
is struggling to enforce a rule that bans the general broadcasting of
voting results until all the polls have closed.

As Canadians in four electoral districts spread right across the giant
country cast ballots on Monday to fill vacant seats in the House of
Commons, Elections Canada asked a newspaper to remove from its website a
story revealing initial results from one constituency where voting had
ended early.

The agency did not notice reporters had been discussing the same
by-election results on the microblogging network Twitter, which is
accessible across Canada.

One journalist even sent a Twitter message saying "Oh dear. Have just
realized I may have been violating law because of my poor understanding of
Twitter". Elections Canada did nothing.

It is little wonder that critics use terms like absurd and archaic to
describe a provision that, in large part, comes from an era before the
Internet was born.

The rule -- part of the Canada Elections Act -- aims to prevent abuses in
the world's second largest country. Canada has six time zones, which means
results from the East start to come in while polls are still open in the
rest of the country.

To head off the chance that the majority could somehow be influenced by
early voting, media organizations are banned from nationally broadcasting
any results until the last polling station has closed.

http://ca.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idCATRE5A94XM20091110

Monday, November 09, 2009

Afiche forum pour envoyer aux membres

ARTS, LA CULTURE et l’ÉDUCATION

FRANCO-CANADIEN

À YELLOWKNIFE

Samedi 14 novembre  9H00-16H00

9H00-12H00 

  • Mot de bienvenue;
  • Déroulement de la journée;
  • Présentation de l’infrastructure des arts et de la culture au
  • Canada français (dont la FCCF);
  • Dossier Arts et Éducation :
  • portrait général des enjeux, b) Sommet en éducation, c) Table nationale en arts et éducation (TAACI), d) Trousse du passeur culturel, e) Tables en art et éducation dans les provinces et territoires;
  • Partage d’informations sur les liens entre arts et éducation aux
  • TNO et les défis.

 

 12H00-13H00 

Buffet froid sur place

      • Musique d’ambiance sur place par des musiciens locaux
      • Lancement du livre Traces de vie par un Collectif Des Ainés TNO

 

13H00-16H00

  • Positionnement des arts et la culture francophone dans l’enseignement et l’éducation
  • Formation d’un comité arts et éducation aux TNO
  •  Vision, mission, rôle des associations et répertoire des ressources culturelles et artistiques aux TNO                
      • Comment les communautés pourraient mieux utiliser les ressources disponibles;        
      • Formation d’un comité de suivis

AFCY Jpeg.JPG

Samedi le14 novembre

Northern United Place


Friday, November 06, 2009

Web.ca 's E-mail Service

A very good and low cost text based e-mail syste supplied by a Toronto, Ontatio Canada not-for-profit http://www.web.ca for details

in reference to: Web Networks - Login (view on Google Sidewiki)

Thursday, November 05, 2009

China to ban beating web addicts

China's ministry of health has moved to ban the use of physical punishment
to treat teenagers addicted to the web, according to draft guidelines.

There are dozens of treatment centres offering to wean youths, mostly
boys, from spending hours on the web.

Many of them are military-style boot camps that rely on tough programmes
of physical exercise and counselling.

Two boys were beaten at separate camps earlier this year, one died and the
other was severely injured.

"When intervening to prevent improper use of the internet we should...
strictly prohibit restriction of personal freedom and physical
punishments," the ministry said in a draft guideline quoted by Reuters
news agency.

[excerpt]

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8344002.stm

Monday, November 02, 2009

Training resources from Media Helping Media

These training modules have been put together to offer ongoing help to
journalists in transition states, post-conflict countries, and areas where
freedom of expression is under threat.

The only condition for using these modules is that you let us know if you
spot any typos. Many have been written on planes, in departure lounges and
in hotels and they may contain spelling errors.

Also, please credit Media Helping Media (or the author if it is a module
written by a guest) with a mention and a link if you refer to them online.
If you have a training module you would like to make available, please use
the contact us form and let us know.

http://www.mediahelpingmedia.org/content/section/6/234/

# Basic journalism training ( 16 items )
This section contains modules covering basic journalism training. There
will be some overlap with other sections, particularly as many media
organisations now have converged news operations, but we have tried to
store these modules in the most appropriate categories for the bulk of the
content they contain. Please, click through to the other setions, too. If
you want to add to this section, please use the contact us form and your
contribution will be considered for inclusion.

# Advanced journalism training ( 4 items )
This section contains modules covering advanced journalism training. There
will be some overlap with other sections, particularly as many media
organisations now have converged news operations, but we have tried to
store these modules in the most appropriate categories for the bulk of the
content they contain. Please, click through to the other setions, too. If
you want to add to this section, please use the contact us form and your
contribution will be considered for inclusion.
# Editorial ethics ( 9 items )

This section contains modules covering the ethical issues that journalists
face day-to-day, such as balance, impartiality, integrity, fairness, taste
and decency, offence, privacy, etc. They are continually updated to
reflect social and cultural changes. It is important that these modules
are continually revisited and kept fresh. If you want to add to this
section, please use the contact us form and your contribution will be
considered for inclusion.
# Media management ( 3 items )

This section contains modules covering media management. These training
courses cover all management aspects from how to run a newsroom to how to
manage a news business. If you would like to contribute a module to the
series, please use the contact us form and your contribution will be
considered for inclusion.

# Online and multimedia ( 7 items )
This section contains modules covering online and multimedia journalism.
There may be some overlap with other sections, particularly as many media
organisations now have converged news operations, but we have tried to
store these modules in the most appropriate categories for the bulk of the
content they contain. If you want to add to this section, please use the
contact us form and your contribution will be considered for inclusion.

# Social networking ( 10 items )
This is a new section of Media Helping Media. We should have loads of
material available here already, but the fact is that we have been slow
off the mark. Now we are aiming to make up time rapidly. If you would like
to contribute a resource (no payment, it's done for the love of it),
please let us know by using the contact us form. You can follow us on
Twitter @helpingmedia.

# Media strategy ( 4 items )
This section contains modules covering media strategy. These training
courses cover how to set a content strategy and run a converged news
operation in order to deliver content to multiple outlets. If you would
like to contribute a module to the series, please use the contact us form
and your contribution will be considered for inclusion.

# Refugee media ( 1 items )
This section deals with how refugee communities can set up and operate
successful news organisations in areas which are often poorly covered by
the mainstream media. The author, T.P. Mishra (left) set up a media
operation in the Bhutanese refugee camps in Nepal over an eight year
period. Now living in New York under a refugee resettlement project,
Mishra, the author of 'Becoming a Journalist in Exile' has put together a
number of guides for those who want to follow his lead.

Bhutan media group seeks international support

Bhutan media group seeks international support

http://www.mediahelpingmedia.org/content/view/519/1/
PDF Print E-mail
 
Monday, 02 November 2009
MNB - participant of journalism training from jan 27-16feb.2007.JPG	participant of journalism training from jan 27-16 feb.2007 - Photo Mona Rath Pokhrel
Trainee journalists on one of the courses - Photo Mona Rath Pokhrel
A media support group, run by Bhutanese journalists living in exile, is looking for international support in order to continue to develop its media training programmes and to campaign for media freedom in the region.

The Media Network Bhutan (MNB), run entirely by volunteers, is approaching its third anniversary. It claims its training courses have helped hundreds of Bhutanese journalists living in the refugee camps in Nepal.

The aim now is to bring together the overseas Bhutanese refugee communities that have been resettled in the West in order to strengthen their media skills and to mobilise them in a campaign for media freedom within Bhutan.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

* Google opens OneBox music service *

* Google opens OneBox music service *
Search giant Google enters the online music market with a new service for
finding and buying music online.
Full story:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/-/2/hi/technology/8331290.stm

* Canada jails Rwandan war criminal *

* Canada jails Rwandan war criminal *
A Rwandan man convicted of war crimes is jailed for life by a Canadian court,
without the prospect of parole for 25 years.
Full story:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/-/2/hi/americas/8333046.stm

Survey of blocked Uyghur websites shows Xinjiang still cut off from the world

Reporters Without Borders/Reporters sans frontières

29 October 2009

CHINA
Survey of blocked Uyghur websites shows Xinjiang still cut off from the world
http://www.rsf.org/spip.php?page=article&id_article=34859

Reporters Without Borders has surveyed access to websites dedicated to the
Uyghur community, including sites in the Uyghur language, in Mandarin and
sometimes in English. These sites, operated for Uyghurs, are for the most
part inaccessible both to Internet users based in Xinjiang and those
abroad. More than 85 per cent of the surveyed sites were blocked, censored
or otherwise unreachable.

"The discrimination to which Uyghurs have been subjected for decades as
regards their freedom of expression and their religious and economic
freedom now applies to their Internet access as well," Reporters Without
Borders said. "Four months after the violence in Urumqi, the Chinese
authorities continue to keep the province cut off from the rest of the
world. We must not be duped by the illusion of normality. Most Uyghurs
still cannot go online, send SMS messages or even make phone calls."

The press freedom organisation added: "The official reason given for this
blackout, that 'terrorists used the Internet and SMS messaging,' is
unacceptable. Do the Pakistani or Afghan authorities suspend the Internet
because terrorists sent email messages? No. The Chinese government seems
more interested in preventing Xinjiang's inhabitants from circulating
information about the real situation in the province, especially about the
crackdown after the July riots."

Reporters Without Borders urges the authorities to restore Internet and
phone connections in Xinjiang without delay. "The dozens of websites in
the Uyghur language and websites about Xinjiang that have been closed must
be allowed to reopen and those who edit them must have freedom of
movement," the organisation added.

Carried out in October, the survey examined around 100 Uyghur websites,
portals, forums, blogs and other kinds of online platform. Various factors
were considered, such as the country in which the site is based, the type
of site (such as forum or blog), the type of content (such as news,
politics, culture or sport), the language, and the problems encountered
when the attempt was made to visit the site (such as change of address,
overly long delay in opening or error message).

The results highlight the degree of paralysis of the Uyghur Internet
during the pasts four months. The more than 85 per cent of the sites that
are inaccessible include very popular ones such as Diyarim
(www.diyarim.com), Xabnam (www.xabnam.com) and Ulinix (www.ulinix.com), a
site registered in the name of the University of Xinjiang that served as a
portal.

More than half of the websites – including Uzmakan (www.uzmakan.com) and
Uzonline (www.uzonline.net), whose addresses refer explicitly to the
Uyghur community – are inaccessible because of interminable connection
delays. Others have for months been displaying temporary error messages,
which disguise the fact that they have been closed down for good.

The few accessible sites such as Uighurbiz (www.uighurbiz.net) are based
in other countries, often the United States, where there is a sizable
Uyghur diaspora, or are based in China but have a content that is in no
way political and have no sensitive information, such as Blogbus
(www.qutyar.blogbus.com).

Some sites are the victims of targeted censorship. The news section of the
Gazina website (www.gazina.com) was inaccessible during the survey but its
music and cinema sections were working. The Akburkut (www.akburkut.com),
Tahdir (bbs.tahdir.com), Uyghurum (www.uyghurum.net) and Karamet
(http://karamet.5d6d.com) websites did not let visitors register in order
to post messages.

Many reports have confirmed Xinjiang's isolation since July 2009 and the
severe problems being encountered by Internet café owners, online stores,
and students while they wait for the Internet to resume working. Ordinary
residents are also hard put to send or receive emails or text messages.

The Chinese authorities meanwhile continue to regularly censor websites in
general. An average of one site is shut down every two days. This is what
happened on 24 October, for example, to the blogs on the Free China Forum
(http://zyzg.us.), one of the most influential political debate platforms.

Similarly, Window of Southern Breeze, a website linked to the Guangzhou
Daily News Corporation's online magazine, was blocked on 26 October after
it posted an article from the 21 October print issue about incidents
involving the police. Other sites that had reproduced the article had to
remove it.

---------

CHINE
Etude sur le blocage des sites Internet ouïghours : le Xinjiang toujours
coupé du monde
http://www.rsf.org/spip.php?page=article&id_article=34858

Reporters sans frontières a mené une enquête sur la situation de l'accès
aux sites Internet dédiés à la communauté ouïghoure. La plupart de ces
sites, en langue ouïghoure, chinoise et parfois anglaise, fait par ou pour
des Ouïghours, sont, pour la grande majorité, inaccessibles aux
internautes, que ceux-ci soient basés au Xinjiang ou bien à l'étranger.
Sur 91 sites répertoriés, plus de 85% étaient bloqués, censurés ou hors
d'atteinte.

"La discrimination qui frappe depuis des décennies les Ouïghours dans leur
liberté d'expression, leur liberté religieuse et économique, s'étend
maintenant à leur accès à Internet. Presque quatre mois après les
violences à Urumqi, les autorités chinoises maintiennent la province
coupée du monde. L'illusion de la normalité ne doit pas tromper, la
majorité des Ouïghours ne peuvent toujours pas consulter Internet, envoyer
des SMS ou tout simplement téléphoner. Et les motifs officiels de ce black
out – "les terroristes utilisent Internet et les SMS" – sont
inacceptables. Est-ce que les autorités pakistanaises ou afghanes
suspendent Internet car les terroristes envoient des emails ? Non. Le
gouvernement chinois semble plutôt intéressé d'empêcher les habitants du
Xinjiang de faire sortir les informations sur la situation réelle dans la
province, notamment la répression qui a suivi les émeutes de juillet", a
affirmé l'organisation.

Reporters sans frontières demande que les connexions Internet et
téléphoniques soient rétablies dans les meilleurs délais au Xinjiang. "Les
sites en ouïghour ou dédiés au Xinjiang qui ont été fermés par dizaines
doivent être rouverts et leurs responsables libres de leurs mouvements", a
précisé l'organisation.

Réalisée en octobre 2009, l'enquête repose sur l'examen d'une centaine de
sites Web, portails, forums, blogs et autres plateformes ouïghoures.
Plusieurs facteurs ont été pris en compte au cours de cette enquête, comme
le pays dans lequel le site Internet est basé, le type de site (forum,
blog, etc.), le type de contenu offert par le site (informations,
politique, culture, sport, etc.), la langue et les problèmes rencontrés
lors de la visite du site (changement d'adresse, délai d'ouverture du site
trop long, message d'erreur, etc.).

Les résultats sont éloquents sur la situation de quasi-paralysie de
l'Internet ouïghour depuis près de quatre mois. Plus de 85% des sites sont
inaccessibles et on compte parmi eux des sites très populaires tels que
www.diyarim.com, www.xabnam.com ou www.ulinix.com, site enregistré au nom
de l'université du Xinjiang et faisant office de portail Web.

Plus de la moitié des sites visités, comme www.uzmakan.com ou
www.uzonline.net dont l'adresse fait explicitement référence à la
communauté ouïghoure, sont inaccessibles en raison de délais de connexions
dépassés. D'autres sites affichent des messages d'erreur temporaires
depuis plusieurs mois, qui masquent une fermeture définitive.

Les rares sites accessibles, à l'instar de www.uighurbiz.net, sont basés à
l'étranger, souvent aux Etats-Unis où la diaspora ouïghoure est
importante, ou bien en Chine, mais dans ce cas leur contenu n'est jamais
politique, et ne traite pas d'informations sensibles (par exemple:
http://www.qutyar.blogbus.com).

Certains sites sont victimes de censures ciblées. Durant l'enquête, la
rubrique d'informations du site www.gazina.com était inaccessible alors
que les rubriques de musique et de cinéma fonctionnaient. Les sites
www.akburkut.com, bbs.tahdir.com, www.uyghurum.net ou
http://karamet.5d6d.com/ ne permettaient pas de s'enregistrer pour poster
des messages.

Depuis juillet 2009, de nombreux témoignages ont confirmé l'état
d'isolement dont est victime le Xinjiang, et du désarroi des propriétaires
de cybercafés et de magasins en ligne ou des étudiants qui attendent
qu'Internet fonctionne à nouveau. Les habitants rencontrent également des
difficultés pour envoyer et recevoir des mails et des messages par
téléphone.

D'autre part, les autorités chinoises continuent à censurer régulièrement
des sites Internet. Un site, en moyenne, se retrouve fermé tous les deux
jours. Ainsi, le 24 octobre, les blogs établis sur la plateforme du site
Free China Forum (http://zyzg.us.), l'un des plus influents dans le débat
politique, ont subi ce traitement. De même, le site officiel Window of
Southern Breeze, lié au magazine en ligne du Guangzhou Daily News
Corporation, a été bloqué le 26 octobre. Selon l'organisation CHRD, le
site avait mis en ligne un article du magazine papier du 21 octobre
relatant des incidents impliquant la police. L'article a dû être retiré
d'autres sites qui l'avaient également republié.

Vincent Brossel
Asia-Pacific Desk
Reporters Without Borders
33 1 44 83 84 70
asia@rsf.org

Tiny banner advertisements attached to flies.. should work great in the North!

"... A company at a German trade show has attached tiny banner advertisements to flies and set them loose on unsuspecting visitors, in a bizarre yet effective marketing stunt.The banners, measuring just a few centimetres across, seem to be causing the beleaguered flies a bit of piloting trouble. The weight keeps the flies at a lower altitude and forces them to rest more often, which is a stroke of genius on the part of the marketing creatives: the flies end up at about eye level, and whenever a fly is forced to land and recover, the banner is clearly visible. What's more, the zig-zagging of the fly naturally attracts the attention because of its rapid movement..." But what will PETA say?

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Prosecutors Turn Tables on Northwestern University's Student Journalists

---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: Prosecutors Turn Tables on Student Journalists
From: moderator@PORTSIDE.ORG
Date: Sun, October 25, 2009 22:00
To: PORTSIDE@LISTS.PORTSIDE.ORG
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Prosecutors Turn Tables on Student Journalists
By MONICA DAVEY
New York Times
October 25, 2009
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/25/us/25innocence.html?th&emc=th

[excerpt]


EVANSTON, Ill. - For more than a decade, classes of students at
Northwestern University's journalism school have been scrutinizing the
work of prosecutors and the police. The investigations into old crimes, as
part of the Medill Innocence Project, have helped lead to the release of
11 inmates, the project's director says, and an Illinois governor once
cited those wrongful convictions as he announced he was commuting the
sentences of everyone on death row.

But as the Medill Innocence Project is raising concerns about another
case, that of a man convicted in a murder 31 years ago, a hearing has been
scheduled next month in Cook County Circuit Court on an unusual request:
Local prosecutors have subpoenaed the grades, grading criteria, class
syllabus, expense reports and e-mail messages of the journalism students
themselves.

The prosecutors, it seems, wish to scrutinize the methods of the students
this time. The university is fighting the subpoenas.

Lawyers in the Cook County state's attorney's office say that in their
quest for justice in the old case, they need every pertinent piece of
information about the students' three-year investigation into Anthony
McKinney, who was convicted of fatally shooting a security guard in 1978.
Mr. McKinney's conviction is being reviewed by a judge.

Among the issues the prosecutors need to understand better, a spokeswoman
said, is whether students believed they would receive better grades if
witnesses they interviewed provided evidence to exonerate Mr. McKinney.

Northwestern University and David Protess, the professor who leads the
students and directs the Medill Innocence Project, say the demands are
ridiculously overreaching, irrelevant to Mr. McKinney's case, in violation
of the state's protections for journalists and a breach of federal privacy
statutes - not to mention insulting.

John Lavine, the dean of the Medill School of Journalism, said the
suggestion that students might have thought their grades were linked to
what witnesses said was "astonishing." He said he believed that federal
law
barred him from providing the students grades, but that he had no
intention of doing so in any case..

[...]

Friday, October 23, 2009

ManyCam Virtual Webcam 2.4.44 [MAC & WIN]

ManyCam Virtual Webcam 2.4.44
http://www.manycam.com/

If you're the kind of person you has a need for being in several different
places at once, the ManyCam application is worth a look. Essentially, the
application allows interested parties the ability to use their webcam with
multiple programs simultaneously. The application also allows users to
customize their backgrounds with falling snow, flickering flames, or a
pelagic view that gives the appearance of being 20,000 leagues under the
sea. This version is compatible with computers running Windows 95 and newer
and Mac OS X 10.5 and newer. [KMG]

Thanks to:
>From The Scout Report, Copyright Internet Scout 1994-2009.
http://scout.wisc.edu/

Five reasons corporations are failing at social media

Five reasons corporations are failing at social media

[excerpts]

http://www.socialmediatoday.com/SMC/132126

"It's not rocket surgery."

That malapropism became a bit of a mantra at last week's Inbound Marketing
Summit.

Social media isn't complicated. When you boil it down it's about listening
to your customers, being helpful by offering your knowledge and giving
them interesting content to share and thereby advocate for you. The IMS
speakers shared several case studies (yes, too many of them mentioned
Comcast and Zappos) on how organizations have embraced social media to
connect with and built trust and affection among customers. None of the
examples required hyper-specialized knowledge or technology for a company
to connect with people.

So why is it so difficult for so many companies to successfully integrate
social media? I dug through my (30 pages of) notes to try and find some
themes in what the speakers shared and came up with a this list of why
organizations might be getting hung up.

1. They can't talk about anything broader than their own products.

[...]

2. They listen to customers but don't take any action

[...]

3. They aren't calibrated internally with the technology

[...]

4. They're not framing risk accurately

[...]

5. Their internal culture isn't aligned for social media success

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

The Yes Men Fix the US Chamber of Commerce

Canadian Folk-Blues-Jazz Radio Shows

This site is a listing of folk, blues, and jazz related shows aired on
campus and community radio stations in Canada (and a few CBC shows, too).
It is maintained by Melissa Kaestner (as passed on from Ian Gifford). If
you find something that needs correcting (shows, spelling, stations,
whatever!) or if you have a new listing then please email me at
melissa.kaestner[at]gmail.com.

A note from some campus and community radio music directors (other music
directors and programmers may have different opinions and approaches):
Artists/bands are encouraged to send releases to the station (Music
Director) to ensure charting. If music only gets to the show hosts, then
the release may not be eligible for charting, nor will the station have
access to your recording once the show hosts move on. Artists are
encouraged to contact the stations to find out their policy. Tips on how
to get airplay: blogs at http://www.myspace.com/communityradio and
http://www.myspace.com/digyourroots

Charting: Campus and community stations report to a variety of charts and
publications. The main publication for the sector is !earshot Magazine.
http://www.earshot-online.com/
!earshot maintains a weekly Top 50 and a monthly Top 200 spanning all
airplay and genres, as well as a Top 10 for specific genres, including:
Folk/Roots/Blues, Jazz, Electronic, Hip Hop, International, and Loud.
!earshot also publishes music reviews and other music-related resources,
including top picks from music directors around the country. It is
published online as well as monthly in Exclaim! Magazine.
http://www.exclaim.ca/

http://sites.google.com/site/rootsradiolist/

Sunday, October 18, 2009

HERB & DOROTHY

"Most of us go through the world, never seeing anything. Then you meet somebody like Herb and Dorothy, who have eyes that see." —Richard Tuttle, artist

He was a postal worker. She was a librarian. Together they amassed one of the most important contemporary art collections in the world.

HERB & DOROTHY tells the extraordinary tale of Herb and Dorothy Vogel, a seemingly ordinary couple who filled their humble one-bedroom New York apartment with more than 4,000 works of art over a 45-year period. Filmmaker Megumi Sasaki turns her lens on the Vogels during a critical period of transition for the couple and their cherished collection.

Herb and Dorothy Vogel, wearing heavy winter coats and scarves, smile at the camera with ChristoÕs flowing orange installation ÒThe GatesÓ above and behind them on a path in Central Park, New York.
Herb and Dorothy at The Gates, Central Park, 2005

From the earliest days of their marriage, the Vogels delighted in art. While working the midnight shift at the post office, Herb studied by day at the Institute of Fine Arts. Dorothy soon followed suit and began taking classes in painting and drawing. But ultimately, Dorothy confesses, they were "wannabe artists" and quickly gave up their own ambitions when they realized the joys of collecting.

Despite their modest income, the two began acquiring work that was undiscovered or unappreciated in the early 1960s, primarily Minimalist and Conceptual art by such visionaries as Robert and Sylvia Mangold, Donald Judd, Richard Tuttle, Sol LeWitt, Christo, Lynda Benglis and many other artists who are featured in the film.

More at

http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/herb-and-dorothy/film.html

Ancient aboriginals in Australia may have been faster than a speeding Bolt!

http://www.australiannews.net/story/554479

[excerpt]

Edinburgh, October 15 : A leading anthropologist has suggested that
ancient aboriginals in Australia would have outrun Usain Bolt, the fastest
man alive, while a Neanderthal woman would have crushed Arnold
Schwarzenegger in arm-wrestling.

According to a report in The Scotsman, Peter McAllister, the author of
"Manthropology: the Science of Inadequate Modern Man", claims men today
are the weakest in history and would have been trumped in feats of
strength or speed by our ancient ancestors.

McAllister finds evidence he believes proves modern man is inferior to his
predecessors in, among other fields, the basic Olympic athletics
disciplines of running and jumping.

His conclusions about the speed of Australian aboriginals 20,000 years ago
are based on a set of footprints, preserved in a fossilised claypan lake
bed, of six men chasing prey.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Do you need media insurance?

Do you need media insurance?

October 13, 2009 · Filed Under News

The Online News Association is surveying digital journalists to gauge the
need for low-cost Media Liability Insurance coverage, which includes
libel, defamation, copyright and other publishing torts.

If ONA determines enough need and interest, we will work to provide a
program tailored for digital journalists under the ONA name.

Please take a few moments to complete the following survey. If you aren't
in need of Media Liability Insurance, please forward this to someone who
might be.

http://www.cyberjournalist.net/do-you-need-media-insurance/

Report: Top Keyword Price Nears $100 Per Click

Report: Top Keyword Price Nears $100 Per Click
by Laurie Sullivan, Wednesday, October 14, 2009, 3:45 PM

[excerpt]

http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=115431

The highest-priced keyword in the United States last month sold on Google
for $99.44 per click, according to the AdGooroo Search Engine Advertising
Update: Q309.

The report released Wednesday pegs Mesothelioma as the highest-selling
keyword in September. The same word sold on Yahoo in the No. 1 spot for
$60.68 per click. The phrase "auto insurance comparison" took top honors
on Bing, bringing in $55.20 per click.

It's the first time that AdGooroo's quarterly report has analyzed the
price for keywords, according to Rich Stokes, founder and CEO of AdGooroo.
He couldn't tell Online Media Daily how many times the top keywords were
clicked on during the month.

As for the word "mesothelioma," it seems lawyers have ramped up
paid-search ads based on lawsuits related to the asbestos-causing lung
cancer. The paid search ads direct people to lawyers affected by the death
sentence. "If I was a law firm specializing in mesothelioma lawsuits I
would put the paid-search ads on Bing," he says. "The word hasn't caught
up demand on Bing as it has on the other two search engines."

Stokes believes average cost per click (CPCs) will remain flat through
2010. Advertisers can expect to see keywords shift in and out of the
top-priced list. It suggests the industry has begun to mature.

The report also lists the top 25 U.S. advertisers by search engine. Among
the top in alphabetical order are Amazon.com, Ask.com, Att.com, eBay.com,
Google.com, Priceline.com and more. Companies come and go from this list
each quarter, Stokes says. Travel companies seem to dominate in the first
quarter, replaced in the fourth quarter by retail.

Actual Newspaper Story or the Onion Headline?

Ever read a small-town newspaper and just scratch your head in disbelief
at the funny headlines? We do all the time, and we can't help but notice
how similar many are to headlines in The Onion. Think you can spot real
news from fake?

http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/36766

AP’s Tom Curley on the “oversupply” of news and whathe’s doing about it

By Zachary M. Seward / Oct. 13 / 8:40 a.m.

Tom Curley, president and chief executive of The Associated Press, was in
China last week for a government-sponsored media summit, where he compared
digital content to NCAA basketball and explained the AP's plans to build
revenue online. But Curley was far more revealing when he spoke without a
prepared text on October 6 at the Foreign Correspondents' Club in Hong
Kong. I wrote about the big news from that talk on Friday but can now
share the audio and transcript.

http://www.niemanlab.org/2009/10/aps-tom-curley-on-the-oversupply-of-news-and-what-hes-doing-about-it/

Linux laptop for every pupil in Uruguay

* Laptop for every pupil in Uruguay *
Uruguay has given 362,000 primary children laptops which run on a Linux
desktop.
Full story:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/-/2/hi/technology/8309583.stm

RELATED INTERNET LINKS
Portal Ceibal
http://www.ceibal.edu.uy/
One Laptop Per Child
http://laptop.org/en/

MEDIA: South-South Radio from Caracas to Africa

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Frederick Noronha <fredericknoronha@gmail.com>
Date: 2009/10/8
Subject: [cr-india] MEDIA: South-South Radio from Caracas to Africa
To: cr-india@sarai.net


http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=48749

MEDIA:
South-South Radio from Caracas to Africa
By Mildred Pineda

CARACAS, Oct 6 (IPS) - Poverty, attacks on human rights and corporate fraud will be among the main news coverage focuses of a new regional public radio network, Radio del Sur, which will link stations from South America and Africa.

Radio del Sur (Radio of the South) emerged as "an instrument of integration in a world of shifting power alignments and geopolitical changes," said Helena Salcedo, director of the Radio Nacional de Venezuela (the state-owned national radio station), who heads the new Caracas-based station.

Salcedo said the Venezuelan government, which launched the new network of public stations, is providing "a small amount" of funding, but did not provide figures.

The new station is motivated by the same objectives underlying Telesur, the Caracas-based regional TV network that for four years has been broadcasting news coverage, documentaries and series aimed at "giving a voice" to those who have none in the mainstream media.

Telesur is a 24-hour Latin America-wide network jointly owned by the governments of Venezuela, Argentina, Uruguay, Cuba, Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua. The bulk of the station's financing comes from the Venezuelan government, with other governments providing mainly logistical and in-country support.

For now, Radio del Sur is broadcasting mainly music and some news, using the internet for international coverage, over a network of stations that reach 40 percent of the country.

The first day it went on the air, on Sept. 27, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez said "People in Latin America, the Caribbean and Africa are going to learn about their history and their revolutionary political struggles."

That was a concrete objective, he said, laid out by the second Africa-South America summit held Sept. 26-27 on Venezuela's Margarita Island, where the governments of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile and Ecuador pledged support for the initiative.

Radio del Sur will closely follow news on the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA), the new regional lender Banco del Sur, Petrocaribe, the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR), the Universidad del Sur (University of the South), the Gasoducto del Sur (pipeline of the South) and the Southern Common Market (Mercosur) - blocs and projects aimed at political, financial, economic, energy and cultural integration, many of which were Chávez's initiatives.

The radio network will also provide coverage of social movements and cooperation agreements between the regions.

The programming will be planned with partner stations from Mexico to Argentina. Contacts have also been made with community and indigenous stations in Colombia. Venezuela will provide the system with news programmes and interviews, and editing and coordination will take place in Caracas.

On the Radio del Sur web site, www.laradiodelsur.com, 88 stations from Latin America, the Caribbean, the United States, Canada and Spain are listed as partners: 18 from Argentina, 10 from Colombia, five from Bolivia, four from Uruguay and Honduras, three from Brazil, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay and the United States, two from Cuba, Ecuador, Haiti and Peru, and one from Chile, El Salvador, Guatemala and the Dominican Republic.

The eventual goal is to translate the programming into French, English, Dutch and Arabic, so that it can expand throughout the African continent.

Programming content will also be shared with several radio stations in Africa: stations in Gambia, Benin and Algeria – which have Spanish language broadcasts – and in Equatorial Guinea, where Spanish is one of the official languages.

Writer and media expert Luis Britto García, a member of the Telesur advisory council, told IPS that "Radio del Sur's broadcasts must provide an accurate view of reality, because the conventional media tend to create an illusory world; they only air reruns while transmitting U.S. values as if they were our own."

In U.S. programming, "we are depicted as picturesque beings, but actually, we have our own cultures," he said.

The question of the impartiality of Radio del Sur could be a point of controversy, as it will be largely financed by the Venezuelan government.

But Britto said that will not be a problem, because the government "is governed by the constitution, which stipulates that news must be veracious."

Furthermore, the station "is not going to sit on news items until they are no longer important, nor is it going to lie or censor, as the transnational news networks do – something that can be seen simply by turning to certain channels," he said.

Salcedo said "nations that have been subjected to the transnational news networks will now have a station that will be open to participation."

Magda Gibelli, a 21-year-old journalism student at the Santa María University in Caracas, said "it is always good when new media outlets are opened, but that depends on the focus that it will have, because we often see that official channels only show one viewpoint on what is happening in Latin America – in this case, from the angle of the left."

Another journalism student, Yosvelin Saavedra, 23, said "on Radio del Sur, listeners can find other eyes and microphones to see reality as it is; I just hope they focus on social issues instead of waging media wars."

The new station itself complains about a smear campaign and "counteroffensive" against the Chávez administration's so-called "Bolivarian revolution" by local and international stations.

The directors of Radio del Sur recall, for example, that in 2005, U.S. Congressman Connie Mack, a Republican from Florida, sponsored a bill that was to increase broadcasting to Venezuela "as a way to provide an accurate and comprehensive alternative source of news to the people of Venezuela" and counter Telesur's "anti-Americanism." The broadcasting would be financed by the U.S. government.

In late July, the Venezuelan government broadcasting watchdog Conatel ordered the closure of 32 radio stations and two TV stations because they failed to comply with regulations – a decision that drew wide criticism, on both the local and international levels.

Public Works Minister Diosdado Cabello, who oversees Conatel, said some of the stations were shut down because they did not renew their broadcasting licenses, and others because the stations had been illegally transferred to new owners.

Radio del Sur will broadcast on 98.5 FM, which it was assigned by Conatel prior to the July closures.

Salcedo said her team "has fulfilled all of the legal procedures," unlike the outlets that were taken off the air on Aug. 1. (END/2009)


--
Frederick Noronha :: +91-832-2409490
Writing, editing, alt.publishing, photography, journalism
Blog: http://fredericknoronha.wordpress.com
Photos: http://photosfromgoa.notlong.com
Goa,1556: http://goa1556.goa-india.org

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