Skip to main content

Home/ Media in Middle East & North Africa/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Ed Webb

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Ed Webb

Ed Webb

Live blog Feb 8 - Egypt protests | Al Jazeera Blogs - 0 views

  •  
    Wael Ghonim interview important - immediately went viral via twitter, youtube and others.
Ed Webb

How Businesses Have Responded in Egypt - IHRB Staff Blogs - 0 views

  •  
    Important questions raised on ethics of media companies in revolutionary circumstances.
Ed Webb

Egypt crisis: Hosni Mubarak loses control of state media - Telegraph - 1 views

  •  
    Unprecedented
Ed Webb

Jadaliyya - 0 views

  •  
    Aggregated site
Ed Webb

Tahrir media wars: State TV gives ground before Al Jazeera-led rivals | Al-Masry Al-You... - 0 views

  • Facebook and Twitter might be the media keywords in these "Days of Anger," but in Egypt, television dominates as a way of disseminating information; it is why protests went on even when the government shut down the Internet and cell phone service. Al Jazeera's coverage has been characterized by its scope and commitment, as well as its timeline: on Friday, 28 January, while state TV ignored the protests, Al Jazeera broadcast constant live footage from the 6th of October bridge.
  • Al-Jazeera's "Gulf War moment"
  • Over the past twelve days, state television has been providing skewed coverage or willfully ignorant non-coverage of the demonstrations that has amounted to unabashed propaganda. Broadcasts have attempted to evidence some of the most destructive rumors: that protesters morphed into looters as soon as police were withdrawn; that foreign journalists were part of a conspiracy to overthrow the government; that the majority of Egyptians, Mubarak supporters, are being bullied and intimidated by thuggish activists whose uprising has paralyzed Egypt's economy. One protester described state TV to Moheyldin this way: "It would make Nazi propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels proud."
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • it hasn't just been the past twelve days that has exposed the biased and obsolete agenda of Egyptian state TV--that's been happening gradually for the last 15 years. The model for controlling a people, once a great tool, is "locked in the past, in a world where the government controls the message," according to Lawrence Pintak, a professor, former journalist, and the author of forthcoming book "The New Arab Journalist: Mission and Identity in a Time of Turmoil."
  • News media in Egypt are "weapons of war," said Pitnak. "Government media is a weapon of pro-Mubarak people; the majority of the rest of the media have become weapons of people."
  • "As journalists, we're human beings. Once they start shooting at you or beating you up, it's hard not to take it personally. It is no longer objective, unbiased coverage. It has become a struggle between media--Arab and Western--and Mubarak."
  • Perhaps most indicative of the changing face of Egyptian television is Shahira Amin, whose departure after twelve years at Nile TV drew attention to the network's habit of prioritizing regime solidity over truth. Her resignation became a news story in and of itself, and when she told it to the media, she did so live from Tahrir Square--in an interview with Al Jazeera.
Ed Webb

YouTube - Broadcast Yourself. - 0 views

  •  
    Playlist
Ed Webb

Is That Egyptian Facebook Sign for Real? (Updated) | techPresident - 0 views

  • One takeaway: the debate over what real true role of the Internet (and Facebook, and Twitter) has been in this historic Egypt uprising has to include consideration of what the idea that is the Internet (and Facebook, and Twitter) means to the ones doing the rising up.
Ed Webb

Sorting through claims about the internet and revolutions, part 1 - 0 views

  •  
    Typology
Ed Webb

Egypt: Why 25 January will be a date forever enshrined in the country's history | Ayman... - 0 views

  •  
    Excellent, pithy summary of events and what's at stake.
Ed Webb

Egypt's big disconnect | Andrew McLaughlin | Comment is free | The Guardian - 1 views

  • The internet cutoff shows how the details of infrastructure matter. Despite having no large-scale or centralised censorship apparatus, Egypt was still able to shut down its communications in a matter of minutes. This was possible because Egypt permitted only three wireless carriers to operate, and required all internet service providers (ISPs) to funnel their traffic through a handful of international links. Confronted with mass demonstrations and fearful about a populace able to organise itself, the government had to order fewer than a dozen companies to shut down their networks and disconnect their routers from the global internet.
Ed Webb

Algeria to lift emergency powers - Africa - Al Jazeera English - 0 views

  • Algeria's 19-year state of emergency will be lifted in the "very near future", state media has quoted Abdelaziz Bouteflika, the president, as saying.During a meeting with ministers on Thursday, the president also said Algerian television and radio, which are controlled by the state, should give airtime to all political parties.He added that protest marches, banned under the state of emergency, would be permitted across the country of 35 million except in the capital. His comments come as anti-government protests escalate in Egypt and follows a wave of similar uprisings in other Arab states including Tunisia and Yemen
Ed Webb

What Al Jazeera Shows and Doesn't Show | The Middle East Channel - 2 views

  •  
    Important
« First ‹ Previous 2101 - 2120 of 2777 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page