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Libel and Defamation law for BloggersBeing a traditionally trained journalist (prior to entering the blogging world a few years ago) I have always had a healthy respect for the libel law in the UK, which is, in the main, anti-media, anti-journalism, and now out of date in the new online world. However, a recent conversation with an extremely helpful lawyer, Victoria McEvedy of McEvedy & Associates (www.mcevedy.eu), has resulted in her sending me a "Primer on Defamation for Bloggers" which (gasp!) actually points to a defence you could use in your blogging, were a libel action mounted against you and your content. It's not literally 'new news', but it's the best explanation I've come across yet about this subject. It turns out that bloggers - along with the rest of the media - are also now able to make use of a special form of privilege, known as "The Reynolds defense of Responsible Journalism." This requires a Defendant (that's you the blogger) to show that the publication was: (1) in the public interest (2) that the you met the standard of Responsible Journalism on the date the blog post went live Key to this is that the defence is not dependant on proving Truth, which is usually the defense a media outfit relies on and is often really hard to get at. That is a big deal. In other words, you don't have to prove what you are blogging about someone is true, but you have to prove you met the standard of "Responsible Journalism" before you pressed the Publish button. So if you publish material of public interest "in any medium" then bloggers, by definition, can use this defense. Most critical to your defense is the requirement that the subject of the blog post must be:
1. Given the precise allegations that are to be published
I am re-printing below what was sent to me in a word document. Let's spread this knowledge...
Primer on Defamation for Bloggers
The elements of a cause of action for defamation are:
1. A defamatory (pejorative) statement.
Be aware that repeating a statement makes you liable for it. It is no defense to libel that one was merely repeating the statements of another—this is the repetition rule. In addition, the republication rule means you can be liable for damages for all foreseeable republications by others who repeat it. This stems from the fact that every of a libel is a new libel, and each publisher is answerable for his act to the same extent as if it originated with him. Once the Claimant has proved the above, the burden shifts to the Defendant to establish one of 3 primary defenses:
• Truth (justification)
If the Defendant cannot make out a defense, the Claimant will succeed and the defamatory statement, if written becomes a Libel, and if oral, a Slander. The Claimant is then entitled as of right, to an award of general damages without need for proof of damage because it is presumed that some damage will flow from the invasion of the right to reputation. The real defense is privilege. The others are too onerous. The media now has a special form of privilege, the Reynolds defense of Responsible Journalism. This Reynolds defense requires a Defendant to show that the publication was (1) in the public interest; and (2) that the Defendant met the standard of Responsible Journalism as at the date of publication. The defense is not dependant on proving Truth. It is the main defense the media will rely on. The courts have indicated that this will be available to anyone who publishes material of public interest in any medium. That means bloggers. Bloggers should therefore be aware of the 10 point test below from Reynolds v Times [1999] UKHL 45. Most critical are the requirement that the subject of the article must be given the precise allegations that are to be published and a meaningful opportunity to respond to them and the gist of that response should be published in a balanced way. The table below is designed to act as a prompt or checklist.
The 10 point test
In plain English: This affects the rest, if it's career ending then all the more important that due caution is exercised. 2. The nature of the information, and the extent to which the subject-matter is a matter of public concern. In plain English: The hook on which everything else will be hung, this is the reason the public should know, irrespective of the fact that the writer can’t prove its true and it might not be. 3. The source of the information. Some informants have no direct knowledge of the events. Some have their own axes to grind, or are being paid for their stories. In plain English: What is the quality, how reliable are they, how direct is their knowledge? Are they biased, holding a grudge or beyond reproach? Are they being paid for the story? The answers to these questions should inform the writer of the level of verification necessary. Even if the identity of the source is withheld—as may be appropriate, these questions must be asked and answered. 4. The steps taken to verify the information. In plain English: What or who verified the source’s information? What steps were taken to verify even if unsuccessful or did they not bother? Who did not verify? 5. The status of the information. The allegation may have already been the subject of an investigation which commands respect. In plain English: What is the quality? Are they uncorroborated allegations or the subject of official inquiries, investigations or findings? Rumor and speculation has no status nor does the premature allocation of blame. Care should be exercised. 6. The urgency of the matter. News is often a perishable commodity. In plain English: News is a perishable commodity but is there an urgent need for the public to be told of untested and highly damaging allegations? The writer’s own interest in a scoop is not relevant nor is their convenience or deadline.
7. Whether comment was sought from the claimant. He may have information others do not possess or have not disclosed. An approach to the plaintiff will not always be necessary.
8. Whether the article contained the gist of the claimant's side of the story. In plain English: Formulaic references to a denial may not be enough nor any longer will the one paragraph at the end provide sufficient balance to an article full of allegations of the utmost seriousness laid out in great detail. 9. The tone of the article. A newspaper can raise queries or call for an investigation. It need not adopt allegations as statements of fact. In plain English: Sensational will cost the writer as will adopting mere allegations as facts, premature allocation of blame. 10. The circumstances of the publication, including the timing. In plain English: The writer’s subjective belief as to the truth of the story is important. Where publication is continuing in an online form –once the writer/publisher is advised of its untruth or the commencement of a libel claim –they can lose the benefit of the defense if continuing to publish without correction or qualification. So a story that originally qualified for the defense can lose it later if events render continuing publication irresponsible in light of facts of matters which have changed. It is now common practice for notices to be affixed online to inform readers that the item is the subject of a libel action. This article does not provide legal advice but rather general information. It is not a complete discussion nor a substitute for legal advice. This is general information provided on an as-is basis and no warranties are given and no relationship created.
McEvedy & Associates
Recent sightings of me on TV
Here are my recent appearances last week on Sky and Channel 4 News talking about the Microsoft bid for Yahoo. It was a crazy Friday involving getting across London twice in one evening. Kinda fun though. (Thanks to Paul Walsh for the videos).
On Sky News: http://qik.com/video/14393 On Channel 4: http://qik.com/video/14385 Is Twitter now an enterprise productivity tool?I would have to concur with Marshall Kirkpatrick. I also now use Twitter as a working tool, not just for 'status upates' (which I don't really do any more unless I can say something vaguely informative or funny). I use it to interrogate and interact with my work and social contacts. It's now one big ongoing conversation which can help me in my work, and especially in writing stories. I also was one of those who broke the story about Google buying Jaiku, and I got that because of seeing a Twitter post from a contact. As Marshall says: People laugh at Twitter, and they can go ahead and laugh for all I care, but I'm here to tell you that it can be invaluable. Aside from the personal connectedness and relationship maintenance it's good for, let's be honest - it's paying my rent. (Thanks Twitter!) I don't mean they've hired me as a consultant, though I would love that, I mean Twitter is great for news discovery. Here's why TV is in troublePeople in the TV business are some of the most creative people you will ever meet. So why is it that the body set up to market the major broadcasters to advertisers (Thinkbox) allows you, via their site, to watch some of the most creative, clever adverts you will ever see... but you can't embed the ads in a blog post or share them on a MySpace on Facebook profile. Like, er, duh. This would be obvious to anyone working in the 'digital media' business, but to the TV guys? Computer says no. Twitter killed the Status StarWhen Twitter started out it seemed like a cool new web application to update your 'status' (what you are up to) for friends and, well, the world in general. Like Facebook status updates, but out on the Wild Web. But when people started having conversations via their Twitter status updates using the "@" symbol (e.g. "@mike Yeah, I thought that")I was initially quite annoyed. I even direct-messaged some people to tell them to stop it! Go get a chat room! This was not the proper use of Twitter, I told them. How wrong I was. It quickly became apparent that this was turning into the best use of Twitter of all. Not for long, winding conversations you might have on instant messaging, but short, to the point wise-cracks between people interspersed with a little status update here, a small observation on life there. Twitter was no longer about 'status' or 'what are you doing'. It was about conversation, 'what are you thinking', 'what are we talking about'. The key difference is that people who say "take this conversation over into IM" don't get it. IM can't do what Twitter does. You can't instant message into "the cloud". With Twitter you can. You can shout or whisper whatever you want to say out into the ether and anyone online can hear you. And anyone following you, even if you don;t follow them, can reply - then you may well become connected. Of course, the problem comes when people abuse this. They Twitter constantly. The worst are those who Twitter their status all the time (making tea, reading paper etc). According to one statistics site I saw, I Twitter roughly every 2 hours. Too much for a status update but about right for an ongoing conversation. Status updates - unless they are funny - now seem irrelevant and boring. Status updates are dead for me. It's all about conversation now. I'm on Twitter here. Social media cafe as flash mobLast year fellow blogger and social media expert Lloyd Davis came up with an idea for something called a "social media cafe" where people working in social media (bloggers, marketing people, technologists etc) could get together in the same space and work. Sort of 'vertical co-working'. He's been looking for potential venues - I'm talking physical space here - in London. But this requires cash investment. However, it strikes me that a mashup of co-working and a flash mob might work better - or at least be a way of starting the idea without investment. What you need is a cluster of about two or three cafes within walking distance of each other, all offering free WiFi. Then simply flash-mob (all turn up at the same time) those places on one particular day, with people who are signed-up to the project. At lunchtime, try to gather in one of them to meet your fellow "workers". Then do whatever you need to do that day from your allotted cafe. Crazy? It's been a while
I hate blog posts saying sorry for not updating here for a while, but.... sorry for not updating here for a while. I have been busy trying to crank up TechCrunch UK since the re-launch and doing some glamourous-sounding (but hard-working I might add) trips to events abroad, including Web 2 Expo Berlin and Les Web 3 in Paris.
And on that note, the fruits of my efforts appear to be paying off. TechCrunch UK is now among the top 20 blogs in Europe:
And I was also recently granted an interview with the [geek world] famous Robert Scoble, reproduced below. The New New NewspaperAs I was reading the free daily Metro on a train the other day I was daydreaming about a different kind of newspaper but similar in form to the Metro. Instead of giving me a brief run-down of the news which lasted 20 mins, my "New Metro" would have similar stories, but also print lots of URLs so I could go and find out more information. And I don't mean URLs which pointed to the paper's web site. I mean real links to both the paper online and other reading. The Guardian's printed Technology Section is already doing this a lot (using TinyURL.com)and it really helps the experience. But what my idea about a New Metro also suggested to me was that this, ultimately, would be a newspaper in reverse. Instead of printing stories on paper and having further material to view online, my New Metro would actually be the online product slowed down and freeze-framed for print. Because the chances are I would have seen a few of the stories online already - but I'd still consume plenty more in print because it's a different medium. I can see a time when a device like the iPhone will just replace most of my currently printed reading, but a 'freeze-framed' print version could still offer me more in terms of quick scanning and... well, just a different, more tactile experience. It would probably be a smaller paper and different in terms of story selection, but there would be no reason for print to die out. It would just adapt. (In fact in the early 1990s I wrote about a Guardian project to have an A4 newspaper printed by your home printer, along these lines). I was reminded of this daydream today as I caught up on the battle currently raging between the Guardian's Roy Greenslade and the National Union of Journalists (I came to it via MessyMedia). Greenslade argues here and here that the NUJ now stands in the way of journalists taking up their digital tools and running with them. He says the survival of an organised media and journalistic business depends on the Union coming to terms with the fact that newspapers must now invest in online and get journalists to keep the web site updated every day including weekends - you name it. If they don't then other players who aren't tied down by lots of rules and regulations will just do it, and win the audience and the advertising. It seems particularly appropriate to read and blog about this subject now since, in the last week or so I have felt like hell due a heavy cold, but still kept posting to TechCrunch UK, even breaking the odd exclusive and even (horror!) posting on the weekend and at night. If it was that sort of blog I might have uploaded photos and video too. I even went to Barcelona and back this week, using WiFi at the airports and hotel to keep the blog going. I know that is a no-brainer for the average blogger but it's a world away from the average journalist, who has to wait to submit copy when other people are in the office to edit it. Maybe I'm odd. Maybe I do it because I am passionate about the subject. Maybe also I could take advantage of the flexibility of a blog to post, especially this last two weeks, when I felt physically up to it, not when I was 'in the office'. To me, 'the office' is when I am online, so the office is the nearest WiFi, regardless of where I am physically. But I am still, at heart, a journalist/blogger/storyteller/whatever who gets a kick out of the scent of a good story. So in that respect the same rules would apply to a journo on a local paper who felt like cracking out a story in the middle of the night rather than waiting for 'the office' to open in the morning. House style killing US newspapers?When I wrote for a US-owned magazine (The Industry Standard), the house style on almost any story, for example about a company closing, was like this: "John Smith looked at his watch. As the seconds slowly passed, he knew it was time to step up to the plate and tell the board what was going to happen in the next six months. But something stopped him... yada yada." This was totally different to the British style which was basically: "CEO John Smith today told employees they would be out of a job inside 6 months." Now I notice a great letter to The Washington Post, which basically suggests that in the age of the Internet, mobile phones and a plethora of digital media we now no longer have time to sit down and read what in journalism we call a 'drop intro'. To quote: "Newspaper circulation in the United States has been sliding for about 20 years. I have an idea that might help these papers get back on track. If the average paper has about 200 stories and the average reader has about 20 minutes to read it, he can spend only about six seconds on each story. But stories are often written in the meandering style of William Faulkner. If the headline reads, "Bridge Set to Close Down for Repairs" the story might begin with: "Bob Wilson gazed down at his empty coffee cup and listened to the patter of rain falling gently against his window pane." Then, after reading about two paragraphs of fluff like this, the reader is told to "See BRIDGE, C21, Col. 1" to learn when the bridge will be closed. We clearly need a newspaper digest that will get to the point more quickly. I'm sure that it would be a huge hit for any publisher smart enough to offer it." There's no doubt that blogs now offer that fast filter, which is perhaps why they took off so well in the US - where readers became tired of the Faulkner style, and have not been so dramatically big in the UK, where.... ahem... the media tends to get to the point a lot faster. As in the The Sun's "Gotcha".... I rest my case... Digital design eventIf you are interested in current digital technology and creativity developments, or have something to contribute about the importance of good design principles in interactive media, then check out iDesign: design for life on September 18th, at London's Southbank Centre, Purcell Room as part of this year's London Design Festival. There'll be an exhibition and debates to examine the impact of digital interactive media on all of our daily lives, and how our collective digital future will pan out. Tickets can be bought here. Standard coming back?
The Industry Standard, my former magazine, appears to be considering re-launching. Its six years since the death of the “newsmagazine of the Internet Economy”, but at least it left a good looking corpse. Many people still respect the kind of in-depth investigate coverage it brought to the Internet industry. Quite why owners IDG are considering bringing it back is beyond me. Time-Warner pulled the plug on Business 2.0, a similar title, only last week. A web-only format is more likely than a print magazine. And since blogs are now 'the thing', it would be odd not to incorporate those., We'll see.... By Mike Butcher at 10 Sep 2007 - 10:39 | add new comment
New-ish pasturesYou may have picked this up elsewhere, but here's a brief announcement for mbites readers. I am the new Editor of TechCrunch UK & Ireland. Some may know that I helped launch the site for the first time late last year. I also resigned after what I perceived at the time to be unnecessary editorial interference from the US site in a UK editorial issue. It's hard to explain it all now, but all I can say is, hell, you had to be there... However, after a long "time out" I am back again and happy to say that TechCrunch has decided to show its firm commitment to this market and to editorial independence. For my part, it’s great to be editing the site and I want people to be re-assured that TechCrunch UK & Ireland is here to stay. The other sites I have been working on recently - including mbites.com - remain personal projects, but I will do all my 'news breaking' and heavy blogging about the Web 2.0, tech and startups business on TechCrunchUKI. I'll also be contributing to TechCrunch US. To contact me:
Email: mike [at] mbites dot com
My talk at PSFK LondonLast May, at the PSFK Conference London 2007 I gave a talk on how media owners are on a race for survival against technology companies that put the power to publish in the hands of the ‘audience.’ Here it is, including my embarrassing stall half way through where I need to go get some water: This week I am mostly at...I HATE blog posts that apologise for the lack of updates. Like, who cares?! Either blog or don't blog. Just don't apologise. However, I do find that these days I update my Twitter microblog more than this blog! And I have been working on other stuff other than blogging lately. And thinking. However, I will be writing about the Brunch Bites event last week soon. This week I have been working with Seedcamp to help young Web 2.0 and Mobile 2.0 startups get off the ground and doing a lot of writing to profile the startups involved. It's been a fascinating experience. I'll publish more info later... At TV UnfestivalI’m in Edinburgh today for the TV Unfestival, an unconference about TV, as an adjunct to the Media Guardian TV Festival. By Mike Butcher at 25 Aug 2007 - 10:06 | add new comment
iPhone hackedNow for all networks it seems...
Will closed social networking kill off User Generated Content?I just need to blog this while it's still in my head. I'm sure others have come to the same conclusion in a more erudite manner, and posted longer pieces. But I'm starting to wonder if the "User Generated Content" revolution, which was supposed to be taking over the world somewhere around about now, may not hit the heights it was predicted to. Why? Because social networking could well take over from where content creation left off. Ok, that is a massive generalisation. Of course that won't happen for all demographics all of the time. But think about it. Even the biggest bloggers of the last 2 years - Robert Scoble, Loic Le Meur etc - are now producing almost as much content and getting possibly more interaction inside social networks than they did out on the wild-web or blogosphere. Of course, I'm referring in large part to the enormous pull of Facebook right now. But I'm also thinking that it's specifically proprietary social networks, such as Facebook or Twitter, which are not open platforms in the way blogs were, that will have this effect. We all have a limited amount of time. If the former Live Journal member or Blogspot Blogger switches to Facebook, then they are going to spend a lot of the time which they used to create content now socially networking (writing on walls, checking mini-feeds, staling people's statuses etc). I'll try and add more to this later... UPDATE: I added more in my comment below. Eight reasons why Facebook owns your assThanks to the "Facebook Isn’t Private, and 7 Other Things You Should Know" post I have taken the main points about its Terms and Conditions and summarised below. It makes for gritty reading. 1. The terms can change at any time of Facebook's choosing. 2. Facebook is legally for personal use only (only actual people can create profiles. And you’re not supposed to profit from it. A profile for a business technically would be banned/deleted). 3. A single, individual user account (you can’t - under their T&Cs - have two accounts on Facebook) 4. You’re giving up a HUGE license (posting content gives Facebook a license to do whatever they want with your content). 5. Applications are NOT guaranteed safe (In other words, “installer beware.” A malicious application developer could break through Facebook’s security protocols and expose your info. That would probably be difficult to do, but Facebook wouldn’t have to take the blame). 6. Disputes are arbitrated under Delaware law in the US (If Facebook does something horridly wrong and you want to sue you can't because you’ve already agreed to “final and binding arbitration”) 7. You surrender "all submissions" (If you give them a good idea for Facebook it becomes their property) 8. Privacy is NOT guaranteed: "[W]e cannot and do not guarantee that User Content you post on the Site will not be viewed by unauthorized persons. We are not responsible for circumvention of any privacy settings or security measures contained on the Site... ...Please keep in mind that if you disclose personal information in your profile or when posting comments, messages, photos, videos, Marketplace listings or other items , this information may become publicly available." If somebody hacks Facebook, steals all your content and contact info you have no remedy against Facebook. Dvorak just doesn't get itJohn Dvorak is an old-fashioned tech jounralist in the US who thinks we're going to have another dotcom bust: "Every single person working in the media today who experienced the dot-com bubble in 1999 to 2000 believes that we are going through the exact same process and can expect the exact same results—a bust...Today everything from YouTube to the local church has a social-networking angle. And this doesn't even consider the actual social-networking sites, from MySpace to LinkedIn to Facebook to even Second Life. This scene is totally out of control and will contribute to the collapse for sure." Marshal Kirkpatrick is a startup guy and a former TechCrunch writer who nails this rubbish to the wall: "I say: Social networking is an emerging utility that combines the functionality of blogging's self publishing with the usefulness of email list serves. Social networking services make these activities more accessible than ever before... Why on earth is this man considered a leading voice on tech? I'm guessing that it's because he speaks to the potent paranoia of much of the aging population - afraid in the face of a changing, confusing world that they will face humiliation if they bet on new tech, that they will be unemployed if things take a downturn or that they will lose their self-righteous know-it-all credentials if this new economy does succeed." By Mike Butcher at 2 Aug 2007 - 10:50 | 2 comments
Live blog- Hammersley talk on BBC's social media experiment -Live blog of Ben Hammersley talk at Frontline Club. - excuse typos/errors.... QUESTION (supplied by Graham Holliday and delivered by me) You had 91 twitter folowers, but you 'follow' just 2 Yu posted 44 pictures on flickr, but got few comments You had 110 subs on YouTube , 6,000 views, few comments, but replied twice The blog did not allow comments at all. Only 20 Facebook 'friends' Beyond any comments you may have made on blogs, as far as I can tell, you "interacted" exactly seven times - one comment on YouTube and six replies - including one to Richard Sambrook and another to The Guardian's Neil McIntosh - on Twitter. With this in mind - and the fact that you and the BBC called this a social media experiment - how social was it really? Ben's Answer (paraphrased): The story was not 'pushed' by the BBC. Not that many people are interested in Turkish politics. These were not successful traffic/ interaction figures, yes. But the real point was that from the bbc.co.uk/turkishjourney page, 80% of the content there was built were built with social media tools / public tools All were consumer social media tools. In essense it was an internal facing project. The vast majority of the content was not run off BBC software. The key thing is - there is a huge driving force from the IT dept to do only stuff built 'in house' But this is done specifically on tools which were free, simple and available now. So the question was can we get this thing into the BBC site under the radar? Asnwer - yes - that was a huge success. Yes, we screwed up a lot - it wouldn't have been an experiment otherwise. We did the behind the scenes videos in black and white on YouTube to separate them from BBC editorial. [Q: What about lack of comments on the blog?] Very little added value would have come from comments . Mark Mardel's blog has been great but "every single comment thread has gone to shit." [later] British Libel law prevented us from allowing coomments. And it was on MY BLOG and I didn't want to get sued. By Mike Butcher at 1 Aug 2007 - 19:30 | 1 comment
Brunch Bites 1.0 - A new salon for a new eraBrunch Bites 1.0, the first "salon" style event from Bites Media (the new mini-network of digital business blogs: tbites, mediabites, mobbites, musicbites) went very well today. In attendance were a wide variety of people drawn from digital media, marketing, mobile, music and the startup world of Web 2.0. These included Luke Razzell who is currently developing a Facebook application called Blog Friends; Walid Al Saqqaf, co-founder of TrustedPlaces; David Jennings, author of a book about to be published on social media and music (which I'll review soon); mobile guru Helen Keegan of Beepmarketing; Thayer Driver from Chinwag; a new startup still in stealth mode; Anthony Goh, advertising strategist; Lloyd Davis; and serial Internet entrepreneur Steve Bowbrick, who I described as the Grande Dame of the UK internet industry. (I was trying to be reverential but it came out wrong!) Look out for the next Brunch Bites on August 29 (venue to be announced) or join the Facebook group or keeping an eye on bitesmedia.com / mbites.com. There are some photos on Flickr already (thanks Thayer! and here are mine) which make me look - entirely incorrectly - like I was holding court, but which were taken during the two minutes when I just outlined what the event was about an introduced people to each other. Honest!
The Great Internet Crash of '07Remember back in '07 when you put your whole life online? One day a man opened too many tabs in Firefox spent too long on Facebook and took the Internet down... Life was never the same again. People were forced to print out their blog and hand out pages on the street. Nigeria's spam economy collapsed... (thanks to Valleywag)
New event: Brunch Bites 1.0
Come for brunch with blogger and journalist Mike Butcher, this Wednesday in Soho... EVENT: Brunch Bites 1.0 (BETA) Date: Wednesday, August 1, 2007 Time: 10:30am - 12:00pm Location: The Breakfast Club, Soho
33 D'Arblay Street
Venue:
Contact: 07720291095 Email: editor@bitesmedia.com Description: Into digital media, marketing, music, mobile and Web 2.0? Got a startup? Come for brunch with blogger and journalist Mike Butcher, mbites.com and Bites Media, and publisher of:
tbites.com
A new 'mini network of blogs'. I'll also be doing some video and audio interviews there. This event is the first from Bites Media Banning Facebook is like banning loosI am reminded of the days when Web access was banned by employers because employees would spend too much time on it. Now Facebook is getting banned by City firms. I mean you might as well ban email and the phone. Dennis Howlett has a good quote on this subject from a former CTO at Dresdner: "I remember a time, it must have been the early 1980s, when it was common to ban phones with direct dial facilities. Why? Because people might talk to their friends and family during work time…Banning Facebook is the equivalent of banning coffee shops and water coolers and loos." Surely education is the answer, not banning stuff? Besides it'll all settle down when people get bored with being bitten by Zombies or poked by strangers...(or will they...?) Online offers smart media owners potential for growth. Fact.Head of digital for the Guardian Media Group Simon Waldman hits back with both barrels today at John Duncan and his assertion in a previous issue of Press Gazette that online teams have ‘conned’ unsuspecting newspaper boards into making investments in online publishing. Here are some key quotes from his piece in today's Press Gazette: "The current forecasts for growth in the UK market indicate that, on average, digital spending in the UK will grow from a £2bn market to approximately £4bn over the next two years. In other words, there is likely to be some £2bn of new money coming online. But isn’t much of this going to search engines (particularly, Google)? Well, even if 50 per cent of it is, that still leaves £1bn of new money left for us to fight for...."
"...Last month PricewaterhouseCoopers forecast that we will move from 50 per cent of households having broadband this year to 80 per cent by 2011. All the evidence shows that the longer people have a connection, the more time they spend doing things online. So internet use in the UK is set to grow for many years yet..."
The online world, meanwhile, "offers smart media owners potential for growth – in reach, reputation and revenue. That’s not a con. It’s a fact. And it’s time to learn to deal with it." Turn Facebook statuses into a twitter feed?Julian Bond at Voidstar has a great post on routing all your and your friend's Status updates from Facebook to Twitter using Mario Menti's excellent TwitterFeed service. Now, here's my question. Is this not completely insane? Keeping up with Twitter feeds is hard enough. Adding Facebook status updates would hasten my "Twitter Bankruptcy". At least with Twitter most people tend to keep in the back of their head that at least some of their key followers get Tweets sent direct to their mobiles via SMS. That means Twitter posts - which are also limited to 140 characters - tend to be much more concise than Facebook status updates, which can be even more throwaway that Tweets, if that doesn't sound like an impossibility... To illustrate, here's is an example of my friends' facebook status updates this morning: XXXX XXXX is swapping one kind of chaos for another. one minute ago XXXX XXXX is pleased that there is finally some sunshine! 7 minutes ago XXXX XXXX is back once more like the renegade master. 11 minutes ago XXXX XXXX is in the other only caff on the A4. 30 minutes ago XXXX XXXX is hoping the weather at 5am this morning holdup for the rest of the week for the folks back home. 44 minutes ago XXXX XXXX is prodding Drupal with a sensitive implement. 49 minutes ago XXXX XXXX is in the office. 50 minutes ago XXXX XXXX is pleased to see that Mike Reid's death is getting billed above Ingmar Bergman's on BBC Online. That will probably change. Right? Runaround! 56 minutes ago XXXX XXXX is back in the office. 57 minutes ago XXXX XXXX is in the office. about an hour ago What I call 'conversational status' is a great way of just shooting the breeze, but the added element of mobile changes the character of the conversation to be pithier and often far more relevant to location. Which reminds me of how one Twitter friend of mine recently said he was 'pruning his Twitter friends' down to just those in London. His Twitter conversation wouldn't make any sense otherwise... German hacker turned away from the USI have written about security and terrorism before (in The Guardian). One conference I went to a few years ago in Dublin involved sitting around working out how to hack into WiFi. 'Black Hat' security is about things like 'reverse engineering' software to work out how to break into it. It's pretty useful both for governments and for companies to work out how secure their systems are. So I'm amazed this morning to find that a German hacker has been turned away from the US for carrying 'training materials' into the country. Here's a guy who has actually trained US government officials about online security. But after a 9 hour flight and a 4.5 hour interview they sent him packing back home. There's more on his blog here. Are we to take it that the US no longer wants to hear from people willing to educate its people? Roll on a new President... Facebook is not the Holy GrailToday I've been reading Rex Hammock's Weblog (thanks Voidstar for the link) who writes about how Facebook it's not really the Holy Grail for either social networking or being the ultimate tool for collaborative working and tracking. He calls it' "geek play", and I agree. He says: Facebook is not even close to being what will ultimately be that thing which alters fundamentally the way in which we relate and communicate. It may show us the way, but there are some important factors related to personal identity and social interaction that Facebook — or any platform that requires us to create community that is locked inside a wall — will not be able to overcome if it is to become the next be-all, end-all. He also mentioned Ning which was previewed last year at Content 2.0 here in London when Marc Canter got up on stage and pointed out that MySpace users couldn't own theor own profiles or move them around networks. Well guess what? here we are again with the same old issue all over again, this time with Facebook. Meanwhile over here, "A VC in NYC" agrees with Jason Calacanis that "Facebook Bakruptcy" is where you have total overload of friend requests and incoming stuff to deal with. Plus FB is becoming so successful, startups are wondering if they should just build an application for Facebook rather than build out a whole web service. My view is that building a site is a marathon not a sprint. If you can't control your content then you have no business long term. Sure, market your site on Facebook - but don't for pete's sake put your whole idea into it. WordCamp for the UK?It seems to me that something like Wordcamp should be done in the UK. The techies have their BarCamp. Why not something around content? And it doesn't have to be just about WordPress skills.... (I use Drupal for instance). Perhaps someone could provide a venue? People can showcase their skills/services. And I can learn how to be a better blogger! I dare say there are a few other people we could bring together to make something happen... Email me on mike at mbites dot com if you are interested.New Statesman New Media AwardsHere are a few camphone snaps I took at the recent New Statesman New Media Awards. It was hosted by Rory Cellan-Jones, the BBC's technology correspondent. It was held in some rather lovely gardens next to Westminster Cathedral which I daresay not that many people get to see. The guys getting their pictures taken are MySociety who won a couple of well-deserved awards, and at the bottom you can see the red trousers belonging to Guido Fawkes, the political blogger. Much fun was had by all, especially at the pub afterwards. I was a judge on the awards, ran the dedicated blog and wrote much of the awards supplement. |
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