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Media Bits & Bytes - Bursting Bubble Edition - September 25,
2012
Published by Portside
September 25, 2012
# # #
About 3,000 former Hearst interns join class action lawsuit
by Andrew Beaujon
Poynter September 11, 2012
http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/mediawire/188078/about-3000-former-hearst-interns-join-class-action-lawsuit/
Diana Wang served as an unpaid intern for Harper's Bazaar,
which is owned by Hearst. She filed a lawsuit asking for
wages and damages for what she contends was really an unpaid
job, and about 3,000 former Hearst interns have joined in
what is now a class-action suit. Hearst maintains that the
lawsuit is "without merit." In a statement to The Cut,
Hearst vice-resident of corporate communications Paul
Luthringer said the company's internship programs "are
soundly within the law and offer young people an up-close
view of the magazine business."
# # #
All the TV News Since 2009, on One Web Site
By Bill Carter
The New York Times Business Day - Media & Advertising
September 17, 2012
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/18/business/media/internet-archive-amasses-all-tv-news-since-2009.html
Inspired by that pillar of antiquity the Library of
Alexandria, Brewster Kahle has a grand vision for the
Internet Archive, the giant aggregator and digitizer of
data, which he founded and leads.
"We want to collect all the books, music and video that has
ever been produced by humans," Mr. Kahle said. As of
Tuesday, the archive's online collection will include every
morsel of news produced in the last three years by 20
different channels, encompassing more than 1,000 news series
that have generated more than 350,000 separate programs
devoted to news in both English and Spanish. Searching is
based on closed captions, and programs can be viewed via
streaming or borrowed on DVD for research purposes and
personal use.
[Full disclosure, I did some work on this project - Nan
Otek]
# # #
New technology helps Oregon inmates stay connected
By Les Zaitz
The Oregonian
September 12, 2012
http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2012/09/new_technology_helps_oregon_in.html
Most Oregon inmates are finding it cheaper to phone home
these days, as new flat-rate calling is part of a wave of
new technology rolling out in the state's 14 prisons.
Starting this week, the state's 14,200 inmates can buy MP3
players to receive text messages and photos, and to buy and
store music. Also, for the first time, inmates can be
contacted from the outside by phone and family and others
can leave a voice mail of up to three minutes. Another
system will enable them to "video visit" families who are
often hundreds of miles away.
State Corrections officials expect the technology to drive
down recidivism and cut prison costs that now consume nearly
a dime of every dollar in the state's general fund budget.
The system also gives prison officials a new investigative
tool, as all calls, chats and messages are recorded.
# # #
Salon Sells "The Well" to Longtime Members
By Nick Wingfield
The New York Times - Blogs
September 20, 2012
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/20/salon-sells-the-well-to-longtime-members/
One of the earliest online communities, The Well, has a new
owner: its members. On Thursday evening, Salon Media
Group, the previous owner of The Well, said it had sold the
community to the Well Group, a private investment group
consisting of longtime members of the community, which was
founded in 1985, long before the rise of the Web.
Created as the Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link by Whole Earth
Catalog founder Stewart Brand, The Well was never a huge
community by the standards of today's social media Web
sites. But it had a highly influential audience of cyber-
thinkers and entrepreneurs and was a true pioneer of the
digital age and a forerunner of today's ubiquitous social
networks.
# # #
Village Voice Media's Owners Are Selling All Their Papers
By Dashiell Bennett
Atlantic Wire
September 24, 2012
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/business/2012/09/village-voice-medias-owners-are-selling-all-their-papers/57175/
The owners of Village Voice Media have decided to sell all
their publications to distance the news from their
controversial adult services website. Michael Lacey and Jim
Larkin will transfer their nationwide network of alternative
papers including The Village Voice; SF Weekly; LA Weekly;
Denver's Westword; and the Phoenix New Times; to a new
company and sell control to several of those papers' current
publishers and editors. The pair will retain ownership of
Backpage.com, a classified ads website that has been
extremely lucrative but has faced several lawsuits and
criminal complaints due to its adult-services advertising.
The remaining employees will have to wait and see if this
new direction turns things around financially.
# # #
Corruption in Wikiland? Paid PR scandal erupts at Wikipedia
By Violet Blue
CNet.com September 18, 2012
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-57514677-93/corruption-in-wikiland-paid-pr-scandal-erupts-at-wikipedia/
A Wikipedia trustee and a Wikipedian In Residence have been
editing the online encyclopedia on behalf of PR clients. Add
the discovery of an SEO business run on the side, and this
tempest is out of its teapot.
Wikipedians In Residence liaison with galleries, libraries,
archives and museums to facilitate information between the
organizations and Wikipedia community editors. They are not
allowed to operate if there are conflicts of interest and
are not allowed to edit the pages of the organization they
liaison with.
# # #
On Web, a Fine Line on Free Speech Across the Globe
By Somini Sengupta
The New York Times September 16, 2012
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/17/technology/on-the-web-a- fine-line-on-free-speech-across-globe.html
For Google last week, the decision was clear. An anti-
Islamic video that provoked violence worldwide was not hate
speech under its rules because it did not specifically
incite violence against Muslims, even if it mocked their
faith. Although Google says the anti-Islamic video,
"Innocence of Muslims," was not hate speech, it still
restricted access to the video in Libya and Egypt because of
the extraordinarily delicate situation on the ground and out
of respect for cultural norms. Google is not the only
Internet company to grapple with questions involving the
anti-Islamic video, which appeared on YouTube, which Google
owns. Facebook on Friday confirmed that it had blocked links
to the video in Pakistan, where it violates the country's
blasphemy law.
Every day, Internet companies write their own edicts about
what kind of expression is allowed, things as diverse as
pointed political criticism, nudity and notions as murky as
hate speech. Most vexing are the decisions that involve
whether a form of expression is hate speech, which has no
universally accepted definition. Around the world,
countries, including democratic ones, have widely divergent
legal approaches to regulating speech they consider to be
offensive or inflammatory.
# # #
Hanoi Web Crackdown Hits Blogs; Foreign Firms Fret
By James Hookway
Wall Street Journal
September 13, 2012
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444433504577649361464660658.html
Vietnam's leaders are stepping up their campaign against
critical blogs, ordering government investigators to arrest
the operators of three websites, at a time when global
Internet companies are growing more worried about doing
business in the tightly policed country.
A government statement issued late Wednesday named three
blogs that allegedly posted articles accusing the government
of corruption and human-rights abuses, describing the blogs
as being part of a "wicked plot of the hostile forces" - a
term often used to describe advocates of democratic reforms.
Two of the three sites vowed to continue.
# # #
Racist NYPD Facebook Group Prompts 17 Cops To Be Disciplined
Huffington Post
August 30, 2012
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/23/nypd-racist-facebook-group-punished-17-employees_n_1824774.html
The NYPD has disciplined 17 department cops who took part in
a racist Facebook page titled "No More West Indian Day
Parade Detail." Last December, lawyers compiled nearly 70
pages worth of racist and violent comments in which police
officials called parade-goers a slew of derogatory names
including "savages" and "animals." One cop wrote,
according to the report, "... when they all gather drop a
bomb and wipe them all out."
The Facebook group caused so much outrage, some local
lawmakers even proposed new requirements mandating NYPD
officers to live within the five boroughs in order to
prevent racist misconduct. The announcement comes nearly a
full year after the 2011 Parade and just days before the
2012 Parade. which was scheduled on September 3rd.
# # #
It's Official: The Era of the Personal Computer Is Over
By Arik Hesseldahl
All Things D.com
September 15, 2012
http://allthingsd.com/20120915/its-official-the-era-of-the-personal-computer-is-over/
As a signpost on the road to the so-called Post-PC Era, as
of this year, personal computers no longer consume the
majority of the world's memory chip supply. Word of this
tipping point came during the second quarter of 2012, when
PC memory chips, also known as DRAM (pronounced "DEE-ram")
accounted for only 49 percent of DRAM produced around the
world, down from 50.2 percent in the first quarter of the
year.
PCs have consumed the majority of memory chips since the
1980s, but now they are going into tablets and smartphones.
For PC-making companies, notably Hewlett-Packard, Dell and
Lenovo, the shift marks the beginning of an overall decline
in the importance of PCs.
# # #
Facebook's Growing Silent-Majority Problem
By Kevin Kelleher
Pandodaily.com
September 15, 2012
http://pandodaily.com/2012/09/14/facebooks-growing-silent-majority-problem/
For all its talk about bringing people together online,
Facebook has always had two vocal camps: One took to the
social network enthusiastically, the other took the opposite
direction, avoiding the site entirely, or canceling their
accounts.
All along, there was a third camp - people who were not
drawn to publish their daily activities but check in as
needed, maybe daily or weekly, to communicate with their
friends. This third group - the silent majority of Facebook
users - hold the key to the company's future. Inactivity
among Facebook users is becoming a growing problem, because
although FB's overall user base continues to grow globally,
people are using the site less. The migration to mobile
devices accounts for some of that decline, but not all. The
remainder appears to be that FB is simply not taking over
all of our on-live lives, as their business model predicted.
# # #
ABC News, Univision Soft-Launch Website For New Cable
Channel
By Alex Weprin
MediaBistro.com
September 19, 2012
http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/abc-news-univision-soft-launch-website-for-new-cable-channel_b146409
Although it doesn't have a name yet, ABC News and Univision
have quietly launched a website for the upcoming cable news
channel the two companies are developing. As promised, the
articles on the site have a focus on issues important to
Latinos, and are all in English. While it is still early,
the new site is a first step in getting the network off the
ground, and gives it an online presence in advance of the
upcoming Presidential election, which will likely drive
tremendous traffic to most online news outlets.
# # #
Power, Pollution and the Internet
By James Glanz
New York Times
September 22, 2012
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/23/technology/data-centers-waste-vast-amounts-of-energy-belying-industry-image.html
[This is a long feature article about the huge demand for
uninterrupted energy required by today's giant server farms
and the growing environmental impact of their inefficient
design and operations.]
There are tens of thousands of data centers around the
world, all with rows and rows of servers spread over
hundreds of thousands of square feet and using industrial
cooling systems, solely to support the overall explosion of
digital information and the stupendous amounts of data set
in motion each day.
A yearlong examination by The New York Times has revealed
that this aspect of the information industry is sharply at
odds with its image of sleek efficiency and environmental
friendliness. Most data centers, by design, consume vast
amounts of energy in an incongruously wasteful manner, and
online companies typically run their facilities at maximum
capacity around the clock, whatever the demand. As a result,
data centers can waste 90 percent or more of the electricity
they pull off the grid.
To guard against a power failure, they further rely on banks
of generators that emit diesel exhaust, and the pollution
from data centers has increasingly been cited for violating
clean air regulations. Considered an industry dirty secret,
on average these centers use only 6 percent to 12 percent of
the electricity powering their servers to perform
computations. The rest was essentially used to keep servers
idling and ready in case of a surge in activity that could
slow or crash their operations.
# # #
Portside [Media Scan] - September 25, 2012 Occasional
stories, comments and analysis about reports IN the media
# # #
Brought to You by...Big Oil? Washington Post hides industry
sponsorship of energy debate
FAIR - Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting
September 14, 2012
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=4619
The Washington Post had a two-page spread in its September
11 edition devoted to a "debate" on energy policy. "Ahead of
2012 Vote, Energy Generates a Lively Debate," read the
headline on page 14. The two-page spread that followed was
presented as an election-year discussion of U.S. energy
policy. As Editor Jordan explained, the debate grew out of
discussions held at both the Republican and Democratic
conventions. Those forums were sponsored by the Post and the
Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington think tank.
But the Post failed to credit another sponsor:
Vote4Energy.org, whose logo appears on the Post Live website
that features the forums. What is Vote4Energy? It's a
project of the American Petroleum Institute, the main
lobbying group of the oil and gas industries. And entirely
missing from this "debate" were environmentalists or any
strong critics of the fossil fuel industry.
# # #
Marikana, murder and journalism
By Mara Kardas-Nelson
Pambazuka.org
September 12, 2012
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/84051
On 16 August, television cameras captured the police
shooting at an advancing group of miners. When the police
stopped shooting, the cameras showed bodies of the injured
and dead. Official figures put the number of dead at 34. It
was widely assumed that all 34 were killed in the incident
captured on television. But Greg Marinovich published an
article on the Daily Maverick website which presented
evidence that miners were executed at a koppie away from the
scene we saw on television.
The report stated that "Some of the miners killed in the 16
August massacre at Marikana appear to have been shot at
close range or crushed by police vehicles. Yet there is not
a single report on an injured policeman from the day."
# # #
Media Missing The Big Picture On Solar
by Jill Fitzsimmons
Media Matters
September 11, 2012
http://mediamatters.org/blog/2012/09/11/media-missing-the-big-picture-on-solar/189835
A solar industry group announced this week that the U.S. is
on track to install as much photovoltaic solar power this
year as we did in the last decade. But the media's myopic
focus on Solyndra has overshadowed promising signs that the
U.S. could be headed towards a clean energy revolution if we
provide clear, long-term incentives, rather than walking
away after one company's demise.
# # #
Mug-shot websites move beyond journalism to mainstream
profiteers
by Tracie Powell
Poynter.org
September, 12, 2012
http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/making-sense-of-news/186127/mug-shot-websites-move-beyond-journalism-to-mainstream-profiteers/
Former crime reporter Greg Rickabaugh launched The Jail
Report, one of several weekly newspapers that features crime
news, analysis and features on most wanted criminals. But
the staple of the publications are pictures of people who
have been arrested - publicly available mug-shots.
Rickabaugh's business is booming, and boasts that he's
earning more money publishing mug-shots than he ever did as
a reporter.
These days, mugshot websites are popping up all over the
place, started by people with no journalism background and
no journalism intent. They import public records from
sheriff's office websites and then charge people hundreds or
even thousands of dollars to have the content removed.
Making money by exploiting state public records laws and
Google's search algorithms to publicly shame people is a
growth industry.
# # #
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