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Bivings takes a look at Fox’s blogs – and finds them sorely lacking in blog features such as permalink, comments or rss. So what is a blog?
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This is the second in a series of postings about citizen media business issues.
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CBS says the inspiration for EyeLab came from a video montage of CSI clips posted on YouTube. The clip, just over seven minutes long, has been viewed more than a million times, according to YouTube.
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Those of you that wish you said no to random friend requests on Facebook now have a discreet filtering tool in the form of friend groups.
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THE next meeting of the Digital Editors’ Network, at UCLan in Preston, will be focussing on what works in online publishing, getting the best out of video and how blogs and the established media can work together.
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When asked why anyone would set up a blog on My Telegraph my standard reply is that we’re not giving them a blog, we’re giving them an audience.
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The Sun and The Telegraph are really showing how this can be used to a paper’s advantage. Their websites now better reflect the concerns and interests of their users, who get to write about them in their own words.
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Building a network hub means you provide content filtering services in addition to your own researching and reporting
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The growing number of websites that mix and match low-quality articles produced by amateurs in order to generate traffic is causing concern
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The text-to-audio system, called Click-2-Listen, was applied to the newspaper’s Web site Friday, allowing users to follow links beside each story to a computer-generated audio file.
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Discussion at Picnic between Marc Canter, Susan Kish and Danah Boyd.
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In the debate led by Personal Technology Editor Walt Mossberg of the Wallstreet Journal it was David Weinberger versus Andrew Keen, author of The Cult of the Amateur:
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The ever-growing warehouses of information being built by European Union mandate and by private companies such as Google Inc. are a major threat to freedom and privacy, author and activist Cory Doctorow said in an interview.
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Burmese citizens are using Web 2.0 to publish information about this week’s unrest to the world.
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Facebook is holding seminars in D.C. next week to teach politicos how to use the social network:
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“I think that if newspapers are going to blog, they should have lots of blogs at lots of addresses, lots of people creating lots of brands…”