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Posts Tagged ‘journalism subsidies

05 Jul, 2010

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[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Buy Altace Without Prescription, on June 4, 2010.]

The FTC's ideas for journalism: The U.S. Buy cheap Altace no rx, Federal Trade Commission has spent much of the last year listening to suggestions about how they might change antitrust, copyright and tax laws in order to create the best possible climate for good journalism, buy Altace online without prescription, Cod online Altace, and this weekend it posted its "discussion draft" of policy proposals to "support the reinvention of journalism." It's a 47-page document, so here's a quick summary of their ideas:

— Expand copyright law to protect news content against online aggregators, buy Altace no prescription, Purchase Altace online no prescription, including "hot news" legislation, further limits to fair use and mandatory content licenses, Altace from canadian pharmacy. Order Altace from United States pharmacy, — Allow antitrust exemptions for news organizations to put up paywalls together and develop a unified system to limit online aggregators.

— Enact direct or indirect government subsidies through a variety of possible means, Altace price, coupon, Rx free Altace, including a journalism AmeriCorps, more CPB funding, Altace trusted pharmacy reviews, Buy Altace online cod, a national local news fund, tax credits to news orgs for employing journalists, buy no prescription Altace online, Online buy Altace without a prescription, university investigative journalism grants, and newspaper and magazine postal subsidies, order Altace online overnight delivery no prescription. Altace in japan, These subsidies could be paid for through taxes on broadcast spectrum, consumer electronics, Altace prescriptions, Where to buy Altace, advertising, or ISP-cell phone bills, sale Altace.

— Tax code changes to make it easier for news organizations to gain tax-exempt status, Buy Altace Without Prescription. Buy Altace online without a prescription, — Pass various FOIA-related laws to make government data easier to access and search.

It's worth noting that the FTC isn't explicitly endorsing these proposals; the draft reads more as a list of possible proposals that might be worth exploring further, Altace craiglist. Order Altace from mexican pharmacy, Still, j-prof and new media pundit Jeff Jarvis saw a perspective of old-media protectionism running through the draft, Altace to buy, Altace in australia, as he tore it apart point by point. The FTC is defining journalism through established news organizations and looking to prop them up instead of supporting visionary startups, order Altace no prescription, Buy Altace online with no prescription, he wrote. "If the FTC truly wanted to reinvent journalism, the agency would instead align itself with journalism’s disruptors, where can i order Altace without prescription. But there's none of that here." Buy Altace Without Prescription, Jarvis' charges were seconded by two newspapermen, the Washington Examiner's Mark Tapscott and the Los Angeles Times' Andrew Malcolm, who likened the proposals to the government trying to save the auto industry by reviving the gas guzzlers of the 1960s. Altace in usa, Steve Buttry of the new Washington news site TBD chimed in, too, buy Altace from canada, Altace paypal, homing in on the assertion that newspapers provide the overwhelming majority of our original news.

Free Press' Josh Stearns responded by cautioning against "throwing the baby out with the bath water, buy Altace without prescription, Altace from international pharmacy, " noting a few of things that he liked about the FTC's proposals. And at the Huffington Post, Altace to buy online, Where can i buy cheapest Altace online, Alex Howard praised the FTC's open-government proposals. NYU j-prof Jay Rosen chipped in his own tweet-length proposal for the FTC: "Subsidize universal broadband; fight for sensible net neutrality."

Steve Jobs' pitch for paid news: The folks from the Wall Street Journal's All Things Digital interviewed Apple chief Steve Jobs on stage this week as part of their D8 conference, where can i order Altace without prescription, Altace over the counter, and Jobs had a few words for the news industry: Yes, he wants to help save journalism, real brand Altace online, Altace in canada, because, as he put it, buy Altace from mexico, Altace san diego, "“I don’t want to see us descend into a nation of bloggers myself." But if they're going to survive, news organizations should be more aggressive about getting people to pay for content, Altace prescriptions, Where can i buy Altace online, Jobs said, like Apple did in helping raise e-book prices earlier this year, buy Altace online no prescription.

As it turned out, there was something for everybody to pick apart in that exchange: Ex-Saloner and blogging historian Scott Rosenberg took issue with Jobs' "nation of bloggers" jab, and Steve Safran of the local-news blog Lost Remote said that what Jobs really wants to save is paid, professional journalism, Buy Altace Without Prescription. Buy Altace from canada, GigaOm's Mathew Ingram argued that an "iTunes for news" model that Jobs proposed might benefit Jobs, but probably won't work for news outlets, fast shipping Altace. Altace for sale, And here at the Lab, Laura McGann pointed out a statement Jobs made elsewhere in the interview that rejected Apple app applicants (sorry, Altace trusted pharmacy reviews, Altace in usa, couldn't resist) should simply resubmit their apps, unchanged, over the counter Altace. Altace tablets, Meanwhile, we got another diatribe about Apple's app censorship from Advertising Age's Simon Dumenco, purchase Altace, Altace paypal, and a few other interesting pieces of app news: Statistics showing just how big game apps are on the iPhone and iPad (though content apps aren't doing bad on the iPad), lessons for iPad news apps from Hacks/Hackers' recent app-creating binge, purchase Altace online no prescription, Buy cheap Altace no rx, and a cool iPad news reader designed by Stanford students.

To link or not to link?: Author Nicholas Carr, buy cheap Altace, Buy Altace without prescription, who's about to release a book about how the Internet is hurting our ability to think, highlighting one of the points from that book in a blog post this weekend: The link, Altace in uk, Altace in japan, Carr argues, hurts our ability to concentrate and follow an argument, Altace to buy, Buying Altace online over the counter, and in some cases we may be better off without them. Buy Altace Without Prescription, He calls links a high-tech version of the footnote, like little distracting textual gnats buzzing around our heads. "Even if you don't click on a link, your eyes notice it, and your frontal cortex has to fire up a bunch of neurons to decide whether to click or not. You may not notice the little extra cognitive load placed on your brain, buy generic Altace, Order Altace from mexican pharmacy, but it's there and it matters." Carr approvingly noted a couple of experiments in leaving links to the bottom of articles.

ReadWriteWeb's Marshall Kirkpatrick responded with a thoughtful look at the purpose of links, buy Altace online with no prescription, Buy Altace without a prescription, wondering if they really might be better off at the end of articles, and the Columbia Journalism Review's Ryan Chittum was sympathetic to Carr's point as well: "It’s not a trivial question to ask what the Internet is doing to our attention spans, Altace overseas, Altace price, coupon, " he wrote. "I know mine, for one, is shot to hell."

Carr, who's had his runins with the Internet cognoscenti in the past, predictably caught some flak for his post too, including from Mathew Ingram, who argued that links are at least as much an intellectual discipline for the writer as the reader. The Scholarly Kitchen's Kent Anderson noted that links are part of a long academic tradition that includes footnotes and inline citations: "Do they distract. Of course they do, Buy Altace Without Prescription. ... But it’s distraction through addition, if done well." And author Scott Berkun brings up a few variables that others missed, including the skill of the author, web design, and the "open in new tab" function.

'The Twitter of news': The link-sharing site Digg gave a preview of its new version, which will implement some Twitter-like features and emphasize the news links that the people you follow have shared, rather than just the top overall links. The net effect is an attempt to become, as GigaOm's Liz Gannes put it, "the Twitter of news." That, of course, raises the question, "Isn't Twitter already the Twitter of news?" But Digg's advantage, founder Kevin Rose says, is that it does away with the status updates and Justin Bieber memes and gives you purely socially powered links and news.

Tech pioneer Dave Winer was intrigued by the concept, and The Next Web's Zee Kane lauded Digg for integrating more deeply with Twitter. Buy Altace Without Prescription, Alexis Ohanian, co-founder of Reddit, a competitor of Digg's, bashed Rose for "just re-implementing features from other websites," and TechCrunch's Michael Arrington knocked both Rose and Ohanian down a peg in response.

Bidders for Newsweek: Wednesday was The Washington Post Co.'s deadline for formal expressions of interest in buying Newsweek, and it received three offers: OpenGate Capital, a private equity firm that bought TV Guide for $1 in 2008; hedge fund manager and failed Chicago Sun-Times bidder Thane Ritchie; and conservative magazine and website Newsmax. On Twitter, Jeff Jarvis called the bidders "tacky" and wondered whether Newsweek would be better off dead.

Earlier in the week, The New York Times' David Carr offered an explanation for why Newsweek and other magazines seem to be worth so little to potential buyers: "In the current digital news ecosystem, having 'week' in your title is anachronistic in the extreme, what an investor would call negative equity." At its Tumblr blog, Newsweek responded by arguing that while everyone seems to have the perfect idea of what Newsweek should have done, no one can change the simple business reality that Newsweek is no longer alone in its niche for readers and advertisers.

Reading roundup: A couple of updates on stories from last week, plus a bunch of interesting articles and resources.

— There wasn't much new said in the continuing argument over Facebook and privacy, but Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg gave a couple more interviews defending its privacy policy and last week's changes to NPRAll Things Digital and Wired, the latter of which included the revelation that Zuckerberg donated to Diaspora, Facebook's open-source startup competitor, Buy Altace Without Prescription. Wired's Fred Vogelstein also defended Facebook's privacy stance, and Jay Rosen took him to task for it.

— An addendum to last week's Publish2 News Exchange launch: Publish2's Ryan Sholin told the Lab's Megan Garber that it only intends to disrupt the AP, not kill it. The exchange is aimed at the content distribution side of the AP, not the production end, he said. Poynter's Rick Edmonds gave some more explanation of Publish2's plans.

— The New York Times announced it will host Nate Silver's political polling blog FiveThirtyEight, one of the web's top operations at the intersection of data and journalism. Yahoo News' Michael Calderone examined the fact that Silver's been open about his liberal political views and asks how that will work out at the Times.

— Several smart, thought-provoking analyses here: journalism researcher Michele McLellan surveyed online local news publishers, news business expert Alan Mutter looked at Yahoo's hints at a challenge to local newspapers, search guru Danny Sullivan examined a case of traditional media stealing his blog's story; and media analyst Frederic Filloux explained why online advertising is so lousy.

— Finally, a 'why' and a 'how' for a couple of aspects of digital journalism: MediaShift's Roland LeGrand gives journalists the reasons they should learn computer programming, and Poynter's Jeremy Caplan has a great list of tips for crowdsourcing in journalism.

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This is the personal blog of Mark Coddington, former reporter and University of Texas graduate student in journalism, and home of his thoughts on all things media-related.