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Ed Webb

Brotherhood critical of state-run media |GulfNews.com - 0 views

  • journalists accused the Muslim Brotherhood of trying to control the state-run publications by picking editors who will allegedly toe its line. The Shura Council, the nominal owner of these publications, has recently unveiled controversial criteria for editorship of these publications and asked journalists interested in the job to forward applications. Officials in the council have said the aim of the move is to revamp the state-owned press institutions. “The Freedom and Justice Party has replaced [Mubarak’s] National Democratic Party in attempting to dominate the national press,” Yehia Qalash, an ex-member of the Press Syndicate board, told Gulf News. “If the Brothers were really sincere about their call for reforming these intuitions, they would remove these institutions from the Shura Council’s control. In fact, they merely follow in the footsteps of the Mubarak regime,” he added.
Ed Webb

Ministry escalates fight against Maspero dissent - 1 views

  • Six dissident journalists and crew members calling for media freedoms within state-run TV were referred to investigation Sunday upon orders by the minister of information, who also filed complaints to the prosecutor. In addition to the internal investigation, Information Minister Ahmed Anis accused the six of vandalism, endangering national security, and disrupting the work process in a complaint to the Prosecutor General’s office, according to TV director Abdellatif Abou Hemela.
  • they aired a rerun of an old episode instead of the live show, since we were protesting in front of the show's studio. They feared that our voices could be heard if the show was on air,
  • a director in the Nile News channel, Ihab El-Mergawy, who raised a banner that said: "Freedom for Nile News Channel," which was visible from the glass behind the anchor of "Al-Mash-had" (The View). El-Mergawy was suspended for two weeks and referred to Maspero's internal investigations office as Anis accused him of storming the studio, disrupting the work process and squandering public funds, according to a statement published by Association of Freedom of Thought and Expression (AFTE).
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  • "El-Mergawy did not have access to the disciplinary bylaws that regulate the investigations process in Maspero, which are always dealt with as top secret by Maspero's administration,"
  • last week’s protest was filmed by Maspero administration using the building's internal monitoring cameras. The footage was used to identify the protesting workers. At first, 45 were referred to investigations. "The number then was lowered to 33 and finally to six protesting employees, the ones who always take part in Tahrir Square protests and sit-ins,"
Ed Webb

Syria uprising, Twitter, and social-media revolution fatigue. - Slate Magazine - 0 views

  • As we can see from these estimates below, the volume of Syria-related tweets (as a percentage of overall tweets) appears considerably lower than the volume related to the uprisings in Egypt and Iran. The estimates were constructed using multiple published Web sources reporting on number of tweets for the observed events as well as total Twitter traffic over time, including Twitter's blog, Customer Insight Group, Mashable, the Sysomos blog, and a dataset acquired via Twapperkeeper.
  • The Iranian protests in 2009 marked the first time that social media let us witness this kind of protest in a closed society from the citizens' point of view. The world watched, transfixed, as the death of protester Neda Agha-Soltan was caught on video. Now, these kinds of horrifying images have become alarmingly common.
  • The revolution in Egypt was relatively short, fast, and explosive. The Syrian uprising, by contrast, has been going on for 11 long months. Certain moments have refocused the world's attention, such as the siege of Homs in early February or the deaths of journalists Anthony Shadid, Marie Colvin, and Rémi Ochlik. Otherwise, much of the Syrian uprising has tragically resembled, as NPR's Andy Carvin puts it, "the proverbial boiling of the frog." While Carvin and others have been devotedly tweeting about Syria, he acknowledges that the length of the uprising might deter some news coverage. "I could imagine editors saying, what's the new angle here?" he says.
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  • social media and mainstream media tend to be mutually reinforcing, so the dearth of one affects the other
  • for the average observer, the Syrian uprising lacks a clear and consistent narrative. The Assad regime's brutal repression is plain to see, but other aspects of the 11-month uprising are less clear. Some ask: Who exactly is the opposition, and what do the majority of Syrians actually want? Jillian York of the Electronic Frontier Foundation says that this confusion and lack of context spreads to the Twittersphere. With some exceptions, the Syrian tweeps who "are tweeting in English are not tweeting in the same way as Egyptians. They are not providing accuracy and context, nor is it really specific or retweetable."
  • there is no clear or easy solution to Syria's suffering
Ed Webb

Proposal for Governmental Monitoring of Information on the Internet : Tunisia Live - 0 views

  • sites need to be monitored by the government in order to ensure the accuracy of the information circulating on these networks. “I want to help make the media more reliable,” he said, adding that, “I’m not talking about individuals. I’m talking about journalists who use Facebook and all types of social media. They must be sure not to release false information that could subvert the facts and divide Tunisia.”
  • It’s a matter of organizing things to make the media seem more ordered and reliable
  • the commission would not supervise individuals, only news sources. It would be tasked with monitoring Tunisian media in all of its forms, including things that are published by journalists on websites like Twitter and Facebook
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  • the commission would largely serve the purpose of alerting media when the information published is inaccurate
Ed Webb

Egyptian editor backtracks after saying 'Americans will be killed in streets' | World n... - 0 views

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    Bakry, a donkey well known for decades as being close to Egypt's state security police. Not a real journalist.
Ed Webb

Independent newspaper Al-Shorouk bans Belal Fadl's articles - News - Aswat Masriya - 0 views

  • Journalist Belal Fadl said on Sunday that Al-Shorouk has refused to publish his new articles about Field Marshal Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and instead published an apology on his behalf without his knowledge.
  • "My articles were not banned under Mubarak, Tantawi or Mursi," Fadl said, adding that Sisi is not even president yet. 
Ed Webb

Egypt: Al Jazeera journalists 'to face charges' - Channel 4 News - 0 views

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    "The Egyptian security state is on the march, a jackboot in the face of press freedom"
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    Deeply depressing.
Ed Webb

Censure for reporter over Gaza tweet sparks BBC rethink over social media - TV & Radio ... - 0 views

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    If you report on Israel/Palestine and are not getting attacked by people on both "sides," you are almost certainly not doing your job as a journalist.
Ed Webb

2009 March Archive at 3arabawy - 0 views

shared by Ed Webb on 02 Mar 09 - Cached
  • SS intimidation..
    • Ed Webb
       
      SS = State Secuity
  • live-blogging today’s discussion, led by trade unionist Fatma Ramdan
  • police corruption
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  • increase in the fees of court procedures, which means people will not afford any more filing legal suits..
  • How can we build a media network to monitor strikes? The best solidarity we can give the labor movement is spread its news, and alert activists and journalists to what’s going on minute by minute. Jaiku is a good service for that.. Why don’t we launch a jaiku channel for labor news. We have to train fellow journalists and activists on how to use Jaiku and the internet tools to disseminate information quickly.. The State TV directors and presenters, because they read about the workers strikes, got inspired into action. This means we have to put more effort into spreading the word about the workers actions.
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