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September 7th, 2010 by Wadds

The News of the World’s print vs web experiment

The News of the World broke the story on Sunday about footballer Wayne Rooney allegedly cheating on his wife and followed with further allegations involving the Pakistan cricket team.

It was too much for the newspaper’s web site which according to Web User, “failed to cope with the huge surge in traffic”.

According to an apology issued on the News International web site, its servers experienced a “huge volume of visitors” as media outlets sign posted consumers to the News of the World.

It’ll be interesting to see if the site failure had an impact on sales when the September circulation figures are published by ABC. You’d expect it to have driven print sales as people sought content that wasn’t available on the web.

The Financial Times reported in August that the News of the World is expected to be the first tabloid to go behind a paywall “from October, with The Sun to follow soon after”.

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September 5th, 2010 by Wadds

News of the World web site down

Is the Rooney story too big even for the News of the World’s web servers? I’ve been receiving this error since 9am.

July 17th, 2009 by Wadds

Lockup your passwords, beware of the cloud

Last week the News of the World came under fire for allegedly hacking the voicemail of public figures in a bit to snare stories. This week Twitter’s business plans are circulating the blogosphere after a hacker cracked the Google Document account of an administrator at Twitter.

Both stories raise the issue of ethics and whether it’s appropriate to publish a news stories based on information sourced by dubious means. But as Broadstuff’s Alan Patrick spotted there’s another issue in play that threatens confidence in businesses services delivered via the internet.

If you store your data in The Cloud, you are far more at risk from these sort of occurrences. Especially if it’s free, as we have noted before the only Service Level at zero cost is zero service, and that if you ain’t paying, you ain’t the customer.”

The BBC’s Rory Cellan-Jones has advice for advocates of cloud based computing on his blog.

Companies promoting cloud computing – from Google to Amazon to Microsoft – are all confident that their systems just cannot be hacked. But if you allow your employees […] to send confidential information on cloud-based e-mail then you’d better make sure their passwords are super secure.

Tighten your passwords and pin codes. You have been warned.

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July 10th, 2009 by Wadds

Dustbin eye view of journalism

As a journalist Steve Earl did his fair share of doorstepping and dustbin scavenging during the early 90s. Sometimes the role of a journalist investigating a big story skirts close to the tolerance of the law.

Details of how the mobile phones of people in the public eye were allegedly “hacked” by journalists at News of the World as reported by the Guardian today remain undisclosed. But one of the questions any ongoing investigation will no doubt ask include whether what is claimed to have happened was hacking per se, and whether it broke any laws.

Without making any inference whatsoever on the allegations currently facing individuals at the News of the World, here are some possible ways that an individual could conceivably, if they were so minded, get information from mobile phone services:

  • Bug on the handset – unlikely that anyone would go this far and difficult to implement en masse anyway
  • An intercept during the conversation – difficult and expensive, requiring military-level expertise
  • Phone company insider – paid to listen-in or record calls, or provide access to voice packets or voicemail files
  • Voicemail hacking – each network has a default voicemail pin. If you don’t change your pin, your messages could be hacked anytime your phone is switched off or you miss a call. You could call this hacking, but it could be viewed as the equivalent to leaving a window open

Two things surprise me about this case: how quick other publishers have been to turn on News International, publisher of The News of the World, The Sun and The Times, and that journalists at the News of the World would risk using such a tactic after seeing a colleague and private investigator jailed for a separate but phone-related incident in 2007.

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