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Paul Bradshaw asks “what should happen after a news story has been reported, using a familiar framework: the 5 Ws and a H – who, what, where, why, when and how.”
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“Over the past couple of years they have quietly changed the way in which the best of the BBC’s journalism gets out to our audiences.”
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“When someone (anyone who updates in public) mentions “NYC,” you’ll get it on your device in real-time…”
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“The BBC.com ads, which started to appear from yesterday in certain key markets such as the US, are framed at the top and on the right hand side of web pages, with three major brands signed up for the first slots – British Airways, Airbus and watch maker
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the new BBC Radio Labs blog will give behind the scenes access to new prototypes, development work and ideas at BBC Audio and Music Interactive
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“As Web companies look to boost advertising revenue by offering to target ads to their users’ hobbies, interests and behavior, Facebook’s move could change the tone of the site and revive privacy complaints it faced last year.”
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One participant responds: “The bebo idea was terrible. It descended into a mob of fascist, ignorant yobs hounding out the people who actually had enough brain cells to justify their beliefs. I’m embarassed to be called a teenager at the moment.”