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Kathrin Moosmang

Virgin Australia using Creative Commons content - 0 views

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    Interesting case, though I don't know if something has been done about that licence problem by now (it happened in 2007)
yunju wang

A New Horizon for the News - The New York Review of Books - 0 views

shared by yunju wang on 12 Sep 09 - Cached
  • Still, the Times seems likely to attract many readers even after it begins charging for content.
  • Last year, circulation dropped on average by 4.6 percent on weekdays and 4.8 percent on Sundays. Earlier this year, Detroit's two daily papers reduced home delivery to three days a week, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer ended its print edition, and the Rocky Mountain News shut down altogether. This summer, The Boston Globe, which is losing more than $50 million a year, survived only by giving in to the draconian cutbacks demanded by its owner, the New York Times Company, while the Times itself, weighed down by the Globe, had to take out a $250 million loan from Carlos Slim Helú, Mexico's richest man, at a junk-bond-level interest rate of 14 percent a year.
  • The traditional three staples of newspaper advertising—automotive, employment, and real estate—have all drastically declined, thanks to Craigslist, eBay, the travails of Detroit, and the consolidation of department stores (resulting in fewer retail ad pages). Meanwhile, the steady expansion of space on the Internet has caused online ad rates to crash, and these are not expected to recover even when the economy as a whole does.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • advertising
  • When it comes to mismanagement, then, the newspaper business seems in a class with Detroit. Unlike GM, though, newspapers offer a product that consumers still value. But how to cash in on it? As the old business models fade, new ones are urgently being tested. Surveying the blackened landscape, I searched for new buds—and stumbled upon something much larger.
  • it seems overwhelmed by gadgets and gizmos, features and fluff. Technologically in a class by itself, the paper has seemed less adept at grasping the Web's potential to spotlight issues and stir debate. This summer, for instance, the blogosphere lit up over "The Great American Bubble Machine," Matt Taibbi's provocative Rolling Stone article about the political and financial power of Goldman Sachs.
  • building sufficient Web traffic to attract advertisers.
Sandra Rivera

Using Twitter as a Collective Mood Ring - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Two Vermont statisticians are analyzing Twitter's river of messages to monitor the public's changing moods and what affects them.
Suzanne Cardwell

Sony Turns the Page with Its New Reader - BusinessWeek - 0 views

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    Two e-book readers due in late August aim to close Sony's sales gap with Amazon, whose Kindle continues to sizzle. Again, interesting in light of Thompson article.
Suzanne Cardwell

Amazon.com's 1984 Problems Are Just Beginning - BusinessWeek - 1 views

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    The uproar, including a lawsuit, over the removal of copies of 1984 and Animal Farm from Kindle devices comes as Amazon faces renewed e-book competition. Interesting article in terms of some of the issues discussed in the Thompson reading this week re the digital revolution and the publishing world.
Amit Kelkar

How citation distortions create unfounded authority: analysis of a citation network -- ... - 1 views

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    Objective: To understand belief in a specific scientific claim by studying the pattern of citations among papers stating it.
Renee Xin

TG Daily - Twitter Lists lets users pigeonhole their friends - 0 views

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    "Twitter is testing a new feature allowing the more anal of its users to compile lists of Twitter accounts."
HUANHUAN XU

Economist introduces pay-wall for archive articles - 0 views

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    From 13 October, it is no longer free of charge to read articles which are more than 90 days old on Economist's website. Online subscription fee needs to be paid for those who want to access those articles.
Huang Jing

Book trade seeks a deal with Google - 0 views

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    the price of ebook is the point for ebook publishers to think about. Faceing the challenge of the free content shared internet, they have to think about the way to compete with free internt distrubution.
HUANHUAN XU

The death of a gatekeeper - 1 views

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    Open-source softwares and social networking allow anyone anywhere to share and create contents online. People on longer need printed press such as newspaper, magazine as the cultural gatekeeper.
Huang Jing

Digital Rights Management (DRM) Architectures - 0 views

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    This is an essay talking about DRM systems, which can give you an overview of the lock up system.
HUANHUAN XU

iTWire - Report: China ready for cyber war - 0 views

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    The Chinese government is preparing to fight a cyber war, and China is probably already practicing some of the techniques against the U.S. and other countries.
Huang Jing

Will E-readers Help Save the Newspaper Industry? - 0 views

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    "E-readers will save the publishing industry. E-readers will become the mobile equivalent to the eight track tape."
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    most publishers are looking at E-readers as simply a fourth platform for delivering content-besides print, Web and mobile.
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