Bloggers coached or edited by journalists to produce an alternative to regional media, either online, or in print, using emerging blog-to-publishing tools such as Tabbliod or being developed by the team behind the Things Our Friends Wrote On The Internet 2008 project.
Britain’s got cyber squatted

- Image via Wikipedia
The need to protect your brand identity online is an age old issue.
Now Internet users seeking to cash in on interest in Britain’s Got Talent have registered unofficial web addresses and Twitter accounts in the names of many of the semi finalists, who were announced at the weekend.
Digital planners at Speed reckon that so far the online moniker of 33 of the 40 talent show contestants have had domains snapped up by cyber squatters hoping to cash in should they win Britain’s Got Talent.
Many of the users have snapped up both .com and .co.uk domain names and now just six .co.uk web addresses remain unregistered.
Just five contestants registered web addresses in their name before entering the contest. Guitar player Martin Macham and dog trainer Jackie Prescott are the only two contestants that have as yet completely escaped the clutches of cyber squatters.
Canny cyber squatters have looked to Twitter as a way to make money from the show, with some 18 accounts snapped up by fans. Just four web-savvy acts registered accounts in their name on the microblogging site; Brit Chix, Merlin Cadogan, Darth Jackson, and Faces of Disco.
Using the web to locate the North Korea nuclear test site
Politicians and international media have been rightly quick to condemn North Korea’s second detonation early today of a nuclear device. The latest nuclear test, like a previous detonation in October 2006, was identified by seismologists as an earthquake.
The so-called secret test site in North Korea is no longer much of a secret to anyone with a web browser. US Geological Survey (USGS) data from today’s detonation (Magnitude 4.7 – NORTH KOREA, 2009 May 25 00:54:43 UTC ) and the initial one in 2006 (Magnitude 4.3 – NORTH KOREA, 2006 October 09 01:35:28 UTC) pinpoint the epicentre of the explosions to a 10km square site in Chik-tong, P’unggye-yok, on the north east edge of North Korea, near its border with China. I’ve plotted the two ‘earthquake’ sites on a Google Map.

The Cryptome Eyeball Series is a project that uses web mapping applications to circumvent government and military secrecy. After the first nuclear test in North Korean in 2006 it collated data from sources across the web and published a series of Google maps of the test site including potential mines, works, drilling rigs and test facilities.
In a similar timeframe, Global Security Report, a US intelligence gathering organisation, reported that it had identified the North Korean nuclear test site after “a member of the intelligence committee of South Korea’s National Assembly reported on the construction of a tunnel at Mount Mantap in North Hamkyong Province”.
Teepee’s up: here comes the weekend
Here comes the weekend. Monday is a public holiday in the UK. I’ll be mainly hanging out with my family in our teepee. So until Tuesday – have a great weekend.

Wolfram Alpha on Speed
Inspired by BlogStorm’s post I’ve had a quick look at what Wolfram Alpha knows about the Speed domain. The answer is that there’s work to be done. Its got the host owner completely wrong (Loewy not Amazon.com – see Network Solutions’ domain directory) and the page visits at 4,400 are closer to our monthly stats, rather than daily, but the site visualisation is neat.

Speed handles Freerunner free WiFi launch
When wireless broadband (WiFi) was first introduced in the early noughties, free access points were popping up all over the place. Now all the networks are locked down and access for an hour can cost more than your home broadband for a month.
Today we’re handling the launch of a company called Freerunner that provides free end-user access to wireless hotspots across the country.
Community-oriented venues, public spaces, libraries, transport hubs, community centres and schools, will receive the service completely free of charge. In commercial venues, such as coffee shops, pubs, clubs, restaurants and sports stadia, the free access will be largely funded by the venue and its partners. The advantage to commercial venues is that they pay for the service at just a third of the current rate set by other operators.
Freerunner is pledging to host 2,500 free public Wi-Fi hotspots by the end of Q2 next year starting in the North East.
Phil and Will’s meetups
Inspired by the post digital session at Thinking Digital last week here are two meetups that you might want to add to your diary.
Late notice, but tonight MarCom Professionals’ Phil Sheldrake (@sheldrake) has invited the community to the Dog & Duck, Bateman Street from 6.30pm.
Lewis PR’s Will Sturgeon (@willsturgeon) has organised a tech PR meetup from 6.30pm on 3 June at De Hems (sounds much posher than it actually is) on Macclesfield Street.
See you there if you can make it to either gig. Mine’s a pint of bitter please.








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