Guardian: ‘Google tax’ proposed on web firms’ online ad revenue in France
Friday, 8 January 2010, 14:34
"Online giants including Google and Yahoo are facing a tax on advertising revenue in France under controversial proposals being examined by Nicolas Sarkozy to help save creative industries from a 'free-for-all' internet culture."
AFP-MediaWatch: Newspaper bailout: what role will Google play in the news ecosystem?
Tuesday, 16 December 2008, 17:26
"The head of Google News, Josh Cohen, who came to Paris specially to see how Google could 'be part of the solution' for dying newspapers, was given a rough welcome Thursday when he appeared at the ongoing French government and industry initiative to seek solutions for the survival of newspapers in the digital age."
AFP: News Blind Frenchman fined for drunk driving
Saturday, 23 August 2008, 07:04
"A blind journalist was given a month's suspended jail sentence and fined €500 by a French court Friday for driving while drunk and without a license." (HT: Craig McGinty)
Friday, 18 July 2008, 19:12
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"A French magistrate placed a journalist under formal investigation on Thursday over the unauthorised publication of pictures of a new model of car, drawing protests from press freedom campaigners."
Wednesday, 14 May 2008, 16:08
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Just click the link. I won’t spoil it by copying out the punchline…
Saturday, 5 January 2008, 10:35
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Political journalists in France are leaving newspapers to launch two new web sites because they are disillusioned with the state of French press. Both sites rely on citizen journalism, but one is ad-supported and free while the other is betting on paid c
Saturday, 15 September 2007, 18:07
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"France’s Les Echos is now offering up an electronic flavor of its product to those with an iRex iLiad or STAReBook."
Tuesday, 11 September 2007, 19:27
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"Alex Malihoudis delivered a clutch pinch-hit RBI single as Great Britain squeezed past previously unbeaten France in a thriller in Sant Boi." GB and France are now joint top of their group with a 3-1 record.
Sunday, 24 June 2007, 14:17
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"It has been the work of les blogueurs, the country’s new chattering class, whose discussions of their leaders’ peccadilloes now threatens to undermine the country’s notoriously strict privacy laws."
Tuesday, 10 April 2007, 18:15
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“France’s Le Monde Group expects to break even or make a profit this year thanks to digital revenue”, online director Bruno Patino told AP.
Weekend blog catchup
Sunday, 17 April 2005, 23:25
Jeff Jarvis of Buzzmachine says “there’s something very wrong with your life when you start looking on Saturday as blog catch-up day.”
Sunday isn’t much better, I guess. But following a manic couple of days, here are some quick links to things I have somehow managed to find the time to find interesting over the last two days:
- Presenting a list of WMDs that terrorists might want to obtain, the head of the Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND), Germany’s international intelligency agency, says he doesn’t think al-Qaeda has managed to obtain nuclear weapons, but that he his concerned about radiological weapons.
- The Periscope notes a provocative New Statesman article that says organisations in both Saudi Arabia and the United States are exporting fundamentalism.
- Tony Blair should be more careful about where he sticks his fingers — especially when photographers are present.
- Matthew Yglesias has discovered that he would be a Labour supporter in the British election, largely because of Iraq. British readers will find the comments section on this post interesting as an example of how the American centre-left is discussing the British election.
- Speaking of American perceptions of the election, be sure to check out the Christian Science Monitor’s take on MG Rover and the election.
- Looking at the looming referendum in France, the Monitor also has a pro-adoption editorial on the European Constitution:
… one overarching appeal should be made: The EU and its precursors have successfully overcome the aggressive nationalism that caused so much suffering in the past century. Overall, the EU has proven such a success that other countries are clamoring to join. The constitution — no, let’s say the “simplifying treaty” — is the next logical step in this historic experiment.
- Timothy Garton Ash and Timothy Snyder have a lengthy piece about Ukraine’s Orange Revolution in the New York Review of Books.
- Dan Gillmor has an important post linking to various thoughts on the changing economics of journalism.
- Via Gillmor, I also came across a topical article by Chris Daly, a journalism professor at Boston University, entitled “Are Bloggers Journalists? Let’s ask Thomas Jefferson”.
- Major sporting events are bad for the environment, reports the New Scientist. Researchers have found that the 2004 FA Cup final at Cardiff’s Millennium Stadium had an ecological footprint of 3,051 hectares.
- And oh yes: John Foster is the first baseball player to have played in both Britain’s top domestic baseball competition and Major Leagues. While he was a college player in 1997, he spent a summer with my club, the Brighton Buccaneers, before going back to the States and becoming a professional. Following a serious injury last year, he’s just been promoted back to the Major Leagues by the Atlanta Braves.










