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March 31st, 2010 by Wadds

Speed on the future of media – roundup of recent posts

We spend a lot of time at Speed thinking about the future of media and how we need to innovate our services to help clients build and protect their reputation in traditional, online and social and media.

We’re out and about speaking on this issue in the coming weeks at CIPR, PIRA, Strategic Social Media and Social Media in Business events.

Here’s a round-up of posts from the past month.

  1. Regional online media’s content conundrum
  2. How do you make money from online news content?
  3. NLA web licensing won’t make a dent in online losses for newspaper industry
  4. Is the Daily Mail the UK’s most successful online newspaper?
  5. Online newspaper circulation figures: ABC Multi-Platform Monthly Report – February 2010
  6. BBC web site set to become content hub; iPlayer 3.0 to incorporate social features
  7. Media industry urged to stop worrying about Murdoch
  8. Newser and Wikipedia founders spotlight start-up media business opportunities
  9. Newser founder Michael Wolff on the future of media – “smaller less profitable news organisations”
  10. Reputation Online on Times Online blocks
  11. BBC Strategy Review: BBC 1 – commercial sector 0
  12. Future of media according to Sorrell
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March 17th, 2010 by Wadds

Reputation Online on Times Online blocks

Vikki Chowney was kind enough to ask me for my thoughts on the news yesterday that Times Online has blocked Meltwater from spidering its site for her latest article on Reputation Online - Meltwater in a tizz over Times block, but does really anyone care?

Here’s my interview with Vikki in full.

The action by The Times to block News Now and now Meltwater is another example of a publishers setting out the battlelines in the fight to challenge the business model of aggregators and online clipping agency. The move will inevitably hurt Meltwater. Clients rely on it to provide a comprehensive service and a fragmented monitoring service isn’t helpful if you are charged with managing the reputation of a business.

But it’s odd that The Times is taking this direct action against Meltwater and News Now yet News International is not exercising the NLA’s new web clipping license despite being an NLA member. It shows the ongoing turmoil in publishing industry and it attempts to shift from print to online.

The publishing industry is in real pain as it attempts to monetise its content online. Ad revenues have collapsed and circulation figures are down. Publishers are seeking to create new business models around their content online and believe that third parties that generate income from aggregating and monitoring their content should share the income they generate.

Attitudes will change over the next 18 months as newspaper publishers raise paywalls in front of their sites – and news articles are replaced by summaries in Google News searches.

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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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