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Friday, November 30

Sudanese Islamists call for Teddy bear lady's death
by
Bill Doskoch
on Fri 30 Nov 2007 10:58 PM EST
Demonstrators in Sudan called for the execution of British teacher Gillian Gibbons, who made the "mistake" of nicknaming a Teddy bear in her class Muhammad after her students held a vote.
But who do they speak for? more »

I shall overcome: Black
by
Bill Doskoch
on Fri 30 Nov 2007 10:43 PM EST
From CP via CTV.ca:
Conrad Black pledged Friday he will return to professional life even if he is handed a jail sentence for fraud and obstruction of justice, saying any time behind bars would "compound the injustice'' of his criminal trial.
"Even on a worse case, I'll be back,'' Black said Friday in an interview with BBC Radio 4's Today program. ...
He has also pointed to the fact that he was acquitted of 12 charges, vowing to get rid of the remaining four on appeal.*
* I seem to remember Black being convicted on four of 13 charges. Tonight's CBC.ca story reported Black as being convicted on four of 13, so somebody is wrong.
"It has been my honour to show the shortcomings of the plea bargain system and the shortcomings of the corporate governance zealots,'' Black told the BBC.
Any time served behind bars, he added, would mean he is "merely participating in compounding the injustice, which will be the accepted fact of this case before too long.''
The BBC story: Conrad Black protests innocence
Thursday, November 29

Facebook backs off slightly on the Beacon
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 29 Nov 2007 11:54 PM EST
From the NYT:
Faced with its second mass protest by members in its short life span, Facebook, the enormously popular social networking Web site, is reining in some aspects of a controversial new advertising program. more »

Well, this seems to be a blow against the credibility of Mr. al-Kawwaz
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 29 Nov 2007 05:55 PM EST
From the BBC:
The family of an Iraqi journalist - who he claimed had been killed by gunmen in Baghdad - have appeared on Iraqi television, apparently safe and well.
Dia al-Kawwaz, who lives in Jordan, said that several members of his family were killed by Shia gunmen on Sunday.
But a taped report on the US-owned al-Hurra TV showed his family, none of whom seemed distressed or injured.
Mr Kawwaz' sisters denounced his actions, saying there had never been any sort of threat against them.
One of his brothers-in-law suggested that he had made the story up for political reasons.
Here's the first post on this mess: Iraqi journalist claims his family's been massacred.

Impish fun at CBC Radio One this afternoon?
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 29 Nov 2007 05:40 PM EST
The "Totally Toronto!" station is giving hourly updates that Toronto Maple Leafs general manager John Ferguson hasn't been fired yet.

Outlets exploding, real reporting dwindling: NYT editor
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 29 Nov 2007 03:52 PM EST
From the Guardian:
Bill Keller, the executive editor of the New York Times, tonight issued a stark warning that the supply of reliable news reporting is dwindling despite the internet-driven worldwide information explosion. more »

Turkey considers prosecuting publisher of 'The God Delusion'
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 29 Nov 2007 03:40 PM EST
From the Nov. 28 Guardian:
A Turkish prosecutor is considering whether to prosecute the Turkish publisher of Richard Dawkins' bestselling atheist polemic, The God Delusion, on the grounds that it incites religious hatred.
The publisher, Erol Karaaslan, said today that he expected to be questioned on Thursday by an Istanbul prosecutor as part of an official investigation, and faces prosecution both as its publisher and translator. The book has sold some 6,000 copies in Turkey since it was published by his Kuzey publishing house in June. The inquiry apparently began after one reader complained that passages in the book were an assault on "sacred values".

Black's new appreciation for Kafka
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 29 Nov 2007 01:37 PM EST
From a Guardian story about a Conrad Black remote book signing in London on Wednesday, with sentencing looming a week from Monday:
Black admitted he would have to be "brain dead" not to be contemplating the four walls of a prison cell, although he refused to say whether he would attempt any more money-spinning LongPen signings from prison. As he sits by his Florida rose garden and awaits his fate, he joked he was seeking solace in Franz Kafka's The Trial.
"When I read it at first I thought it was a novel," he said. "Now I realise it's just journalism."

Conrad, we hardly knew ye
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 29 Nov 2007 12:20 PM EST
The portrait of Conrad Black painted in a defence document is distinctly at odds with the disgraced media tycoon's public persona. more »

Robots.txt doesn't cut it anymore for news sites
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 29 Nov 2007 11:14 AM EST
From AP via globeandmail.com:
The desire for greater control over how search engines index and display websites is driving an effort by leading news organizations and other publishers to revise a 13-year-old technology for restricting access.
Currently, Google Inc., Yahoo Inc. and other top search companies voluntarily respect a website's wishes as declared in a text file known as “robots.txt,” which a search engine's indexing software, called a crawler, knows to look for on a site.
The formal rules allow a site to block indexing of individual web pages, specific directories or the entire site, though some search engines have added their own commands.
The new proposal, to be unveiled Thursday by a consortium of publishers at the global headquarters of The Associated Press, seeks to have those extra commands — and more — apply across the board. Sites, for instance, could try to limit how long search engines may retain copies in their indexes, or tell the crawler not to follow any of the links that appear within a webpage.
Wednesday, November 28

Kind words for Stevie Cameron
by
Bill Doskoch
on Wed 28 Nov 2007 11:58 PM EST
In the Dec. 5 issue of Frank, of all places:
... A funny thing happened on the way to rewriting Muldoon's past; it's impossible to do so without acknowledging Cameron, and what cannot be altered is that Globe and CBC reporters -- justifiably revelling in their great moment -- owe her a large debt. (Greg McArthur, the Globe's lead reporter on the Muldoon-Schreiber investigation, was eight years old when Cameron first started tracking this story in 1988). The revelations contained in Schreiber's affidavit, which triggered Prime Minister harper's decision to torch Muldoon, were first published by Cameron years ago.
Frank quoted from two Nov. 8 blog posts by Cameron: "Cash came in like it was falling from the sky" and "Stepping down to private life."
Some others:
Nov. 13 - "Turns out it was all my fault"
Nov. 11 - "How they spent the money"
You can find Cameron's book output listed here, but the two big ones on the Mulroney years are On The Take and The Last Amigo: Karlheinz Schreiber and the Anatomy of a Scandal (co-authored with CBC journalist Harvey Cashore).

Stevie Cameron given a skip and a miss
by
Bill Doskoch
on Wed 28 Nov 2007 11:26 PM EST
On CTV's Question Period last Sunday, author William Kaplan had some kind words for several journalists' work on the Schreiber-Mulroney file -- and a notable exception. more »
Tuesday, November 27

Top Christmas toys for online journos
by
Bill Doskoch
on Tue 27 Nov 2007 05:38 PM EST
Noah Barron, writing at Online Journalism Review, offers up nine cool suggested toys for online journalistos and journalistas this Yuletide season.
Monday, November 26

Egyptian editor convicted over 'indecent' photo
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 26 Nov 2007 09:05 PM EST
From Reuters:
An Egyptian newspaper editor was sentenced to a year in jail on Monday for publishing a front-page photograph of an Egyptian television and film actress that was found to be indecent, court sources said.
The verdict against editor Hatem Mamdouh Mahran was the latest in a string of rulings that have handed jail terms to at least 12 journalists since September on charges ranging from defaming President Hosni Mubarak to misquoting the minister of justice.
The sources said Mahran's al-Naba weekly newspaper, known for testing conservative Egyptian sensibilities, had published a picture in January of actress Hala Sidky that prosecutors said "reveals a sensitive part" of her body. They did not say which part of her body.
Mahran, who was also fined 20,000 Egyptian pounds ($3,600) and granted bail of 5,000 pounds, said he would appeal.

Iraqi journalist claims his family's been massacred
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 26 Nov 2007 07:30 PM EST
From the BBC:
An Iraqi journalist who lives in Jordan has said that 11 members of his family have been killed by Shia gunmen in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.
Dia al-Kawwaz said his two sisters, their husbands, and seven children were shot at the family home on Sunday.
The police in Baghdad have not confirmed the attack, but one officer told the BBC the killings had occurred.
Mr Kawwaz edits a website that has been critical of the Iraqi government and the US military presence in Iraq.
He has lived outside Iraq for more about 20 years.

Car crash takes BBC reporter's life in Bolivia
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 26 Nov 2007 07:26 PM EST
From the BBC:
A BBC journalist working in Bolivia has been killed in a car crash to the south of the main city of La Paz.
Lola Almudevar was travelling in a taxi in the early hours of Sunday as she made her way to Sucre to cover ongoing political unrest in the city.
The taxi collided with two trucks which had already crashed. ...
Clotilde Fernandez, the wife of the taxi driver, and three men, including the two lorry drivers, were also killed in the crash.
Eduardo Garcia, a Spanish reporter working for Reuters who was travelling with Ms Almudevar, was seriously injured.
Three Bolivians were also hurt.
Sunday, November 25

ABC News and Facebook team up
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sun 25 Nov 2007 09:48 PM EST
From the NYT:
Facebook, the popular social networking site, has become a full-fledged platform for communicating, sharing and advertising. ABC News is betting that it will become a platform for political coverage, as well.
ABC News and Facebook have formally established a partnership — the site’s first with a news organization — that allows Facebook members to electronically follow ABC reporters, view reports and video and participate in polls and debates, all within a new “U.S. Politics” category.
To underscore their collaboration, the two organizations will announce today that they are jointly sponsoring Democratic and Republican presidential debates in New Hampshire on Jan. 5, three days before the primary election there.
“Through this partnership, we want to extend the dialogue both before and after the debate,” said Dan Rose, Facebook’s vice president for business development.
The announcements are another sign that news organizations are looking to capitalize on the potential power of Facebook, which began as a database of college friendships, and other social networking sites. Media companies like The New York Times and The Washington Post have produced pages for use on Facebook and some newspapers, magazines and television stations have recently invited users to join special pages that are set up to follow reporters’ political coverage. But ABC’s new relationship is intended to be deeper.

How 'What It Takes' pushed American political journalism off-stride
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sun 25 Nov 2007 06:24 AM EST
Richard Ben Cramer's What It Takes, a book about the 1988 race for the White House, stressed the notion of presidential contest as ordeal. It also promoted the formula that great candidate = great president.
Wrong, says Mark Halperin, senior political analyst for Time magazine. more »
Saturday, November 24

'Bangladeshi writer moved to Delhi'
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sat 24 Nov 2007 06:14 PM EST
From the BBC:
Controversial Bangladeshi feminist writer Taslima Nasreen has been moved out of the western Indian city of Jaipur to a location in Delhi.
Ms Nasreen had flown from Calcutta to Jaipur on Thursday after violent protests by Muslims.
But she has now been transported to the Indian capital, Delhi, for her safety.
On Wednesday, police in Calcutta used tear gas and baton charges to control crowds calling for her Indian visa to be cancelled.
Rioters blocked roads and set cars alight. At least 43 people were hurt. More than 100 arrests were made.
Critics say she called for the Koran to be changed to give women greater rights, something she denies.
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