Archive for February, 2015

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Anonymous - You, ITU, Internet Censorship
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PIB's first step towards overhaul: Control news flow

In a first-of-its-kind workshop for the government's media managers, the Press Information Bureau (PIB) will work on providing 'authentic' information through different media platforms. At a workshop organised by the PIB, top officials in various ministries with years of experience in dealing with the media offered interesting suggestions ranging from feeding media to curb them from "imagining news" to preventing civil servants from serving anyone's agenda.

The workshop - Streamlining Government Communication - was organised by the PIB under the aegis of the Ministry of Information & Broadcasting at the National Media Centre. It was chaired by minister of information and broadcasting (I&B) Arun Jaitley and attended by minister of state Rajyavardhan Rathore, I&B secretary Bimal Julka, public relations officer in the Prime Minister's Office Jagdish Thakker and Prasar Bharati chairman A Surya Prakash.

The seven-hour long meeting also saw participation from senior officials of various ministries and private secretaries to the ministers along with senior officers of I&B, heads of noted media groups, and veteran journalists.

Jaitley, known as a skilled media manager, said in his address to the PIB officers to package data, facts and information by keeping in mind the current trends and media requirements. Jaitley made it clear its the minister who has to be the face of the ministry. He said civil servants, who have a large amount of government-centric information, should not carry out any propaganda but only put it in public domain," said a senior official who attended the meeting. Echoing the same opinion, Rathore said there should be social media engagement to ensure transparency in the government.

Business Standard had reported in November that the PIB was undergoing a massive overhaul trying to be a newsmaker. This included its online functioning via wide social media presence, refurbished interactive website, instant mass communication and real-time updates.

In an interesting presentation on the changing media scenario, Prasar Bharati's Prakash said that in the Twitter era, the time to respond to an adverse story was 12 seconds. In his presentation, Prakash mentioned that news should first break on Doordarshan and All India Radio, then on private channels, said a person who attended the discussion.

According to sources, Hasmukh Adhia, secretary in the finance ministry, said one should keep feeding the media with positive news, else the press would "create their own news". Thakker supported the view and stated there should be a single window interface with the media.

Julka said there should not be any vacuum in the news flow from the ministry to the PIB officials concerned. Anil Swarup, coal secretary and former Project Monitoring Group chief, said one should be clear about what, when, how, why and whom to say to the media.

Business Standard had reported in November 2014 that the PIB was undergoing a massive overhaul trying to be a newsmaker. This included its online functioning via wide social media presence, refurbished interactive website, instant mass communication and real-time updates.

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PIB's first step towards overhaul: Control news flow

David Carr: Media titans Murdoch, Bloomberg at play in politics and news

When Mitt Romney announced on Friday that he would not seek the Republican presidential nomination for a third time, he cited the desire to "give other leaders in the party" a chance to win the White House. He did not mention the public mugging he had received from Rupert Murdoch, the media titan who had called him "a terrible candidate" and whose Wall Street Journal had suggested that his run in 2012 had been "a calamity."

There are a lot of reasons that the third time did not prove to be a charm for Romney's presidential ambitions, but Murdoch's public rebuke sure didn't help.

Having tried and failed to get his hands on Time Warner, Murdoch is back to king-making. As the man who controls both the Fox News Channel and The Journal, he doesn't exactly have to attend a precinct caucus to exercise political influence.

He's clearly enjoying life as a mogul and newspaper titan, enough to invite others to the party.

(New York magazine had earlier reported, based on not very much, that Bloomberg might try to buy the newspaper.)

Only two people in the world could have this conversation, whether in public or private: both are New York media owners, both with more money than many sovereign republics and both huge fans of the news and the organisations that trade in it.

Murdoch has a big national newspaper, The Wall Street Journal, and though Michael Bloomberg does not, they are otherwise similarly situated overlords. And so Murdoch's entreaty to his friend Bloomberg: C'mon in, the water is fine.

I don't think The New York Times is for sale, but it is a telling sentiment, a conversation among kings about what possessions are truly precious to the man, or men, with everything.

Even if The Times were for sale, how would it benefit Murdoch to have a rival paper in the hands of an equally moneyed media baron? It wouldn't, but it is in Murdoch's nature to stir the pot and create mischief.

He's mostly just having his version of fun, all the while tweaking a competitor, which is another hobby.

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David Carr: Media titans Murdoch, Bloomberg at play in politics and news

Shell: the best British company at social media

The report concluded that British companies lag significantly behind their American peers, with Britains top performing company ranking just fourth on the global index, BP scraping into the top 10 and a total of four London-listed companies making the top 20.

Cisco presides at the top of the ranking with a score of 85.82, followed by Hewlett Packard and Citrix.

Technology companies account for eight of the top 10, with the London-listed energy giants Shell and BP the sole exceptions.

The UK is improving: the number of FTSE 100 companies that link from their websites to corporate social media accounts has more than doubled in the last three years, from 35pc to 72pc, although this is still some way behind the S&P 100s 89pc.

Just 5 companies in Londons biggest index, and none in the S&P 500, have no social media account for corporate communications at all.

But owning the Facebook pages and Twitter handles is not enough, the report found.

Companies that reply to Facebook posts have more than 16 times the number of likes than those that do not engage with Facebook users -- 52,544 compared to 3,317 -- while Twitter account that tweet more than 30 times a month have an average of 20,800 followers, eight times higher than the 2,546 followers of accounts that tweet less than once a day.

Businesses are no longer able safely to ignore social media as a means of communicating with their corporate and wider audience, the report said, mentioning moves from regulators such as the SEC in the United States and the FCA in the United Kingdom to rehaul their publishing guidance.

Numerous, high-profile incidents have demonstrated that when a company is not in control of its social media presence, the company is at risk: for some companies, the effect has been calamitous, the report said.

Last year, an official TfL Twitter account was forced to apologise after replying to a disgruntled commuter with the remark, "Leave early you will not be late next time", US Airways accidentally tweeted a link to a pornographic image, while a number of companies, from McDonald's to Mastercard, have had their marketing hashtags hijacked by Twitter users unwilling to play by the rules.

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Shell: the best British company at social media

SEE IT: George Zimmerman makes indefinable noise in cop …

What are you apologizing for, George?

A patrol car video released Friday by Lake Mary, Fla., police shows a shackled George Zimmerman being driven to the city's police station after his arrest Jan. 9.

For much of the ride, the 31-year-old Floridian, wearing a white shirt emblazoned with the image of a military-style assault rifle on the back, sits with his head resting against the back seat, his hands bound behind his back.

But halfway through the 15-minute clip, there's a curious pop that causes Zimmerman, with a sheepish grin on his face, to turn forward the front of the car and apologize.

For what, it's not clear.

"Sorry, that was me, sorry," Zimmerman says during the ride.

Did he pass gas? Smack his leg against the patrol car's divider? Unfortunately, Zimmerman couldn't immediately be reached for comment Friday. You be the judge by watching the video.

The clip's release came after a local prosecutor declined to press charges against Zimmerman for a Jan. 5 scuffle because the alleged victim recanted and refused to press charges.

The accuser, Brittany Brunelle, originally told officers that Zimmerman, who made national headlines for killing unarmed teen Trayvon Martin in February 2012, had broken her phone and thrown a wine bottle at her as she tried to break things off.

She called Zimmerman, who was acquitted of murder for shooting the 17-year-old Martin, a "psychopath," according to a police report.

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