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“Businesses which write fake blog entries or create whole wesbites purporting to be from customers will fall foul of a European directive banning them from “falsely representing oneself as a consumer”.
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In an echo to the UK case of Godfrey v Demon, a web hosting company in the Phillipines has landed itself in court after users of a forum run by one of the sites it hosts posted potentially libellous comments.
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A good but basic list of tips to help avoid the problem of objectionable user comments
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“Did one online column irreparably damage Post national security journalism? No. But it does show that an online column rubs off on the newspaper.” and “writing a blog is like playing with live ammo”
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basically, they’ve decided to publish, in the form of a blog, all of the letters they receive (excluding ones that are patently offensive). There’s also a comments section for each one…
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They’re from August, when flickr first launched their geotagging features, so probably aren’t similar to what they’re seeing today but in the first 24 hours they had over 1.2 million photos tagged.
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“this morning’s press release which accuses News International of being “totally irresponsible in increasing its print run by 100,000 when it is clear that many of the existing free papers are being dumped on the streets”
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What a great idea – a whole website dedicated to following how American presidential hopefuls are using the web and, in particular, social media in their campaigns.
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They list three rolls: 1) journos who publish on whatever platform as part of their rolling news roll; 2) the host/editor roll and; 3) the webified reporter