MEDIA REFERENCE AUGUST 2003
1. KELLY AFFAIR : SHOULD THE BBC TAKE THE BLAME ?
As BBC executives prepare the corporation's case for the Hutton inquiry into the events surrounding the death of David Kelly, staff in the corporation's newsroom have begun to question whether the corporation's thirst for agenda-setting scoops has damaged its credibility.
BROADCAST (July 25, 2003)
2. ON YOUR GUARD AGAINST HACKERS
Broadcasters going digital are vulnerable to a form of terrorism - hacking. How can they prevent vital information and other materials from getting hijacked?
ASIA PACIFIC BROADCASTING (July 2003)
3. CHASING THE WORLD'S CHINESE READERS
There is a growing market of Chinese readers from New York to Malaysia looking for news from home. Give them Chinese language newspapers and you can earn a packet of change - and maybe enough political leverage on the mainland to one day print your publications there too.
FAR EASTERN ECONOMIC REVIEW (August 7, 2003)
4. RADIO REVOLUTION IS COMING
Digital Audio Broadcasting is on the march with improvements to content and coverage. But is the sector being held back by a lack of receivers? It's fair to say that looking at where we are at the moment, it's not a question of if digital radio is going to happen, it's a question of when.
BROADCAST (July 4, 2003)
5. INTERACTIVE TELEVISION : THE GOLD RUSH IS ON
There was a time when broadcasters viewed interactivity services as a nice-to-have feature, but not crucial to their bottom line. But times are changing.
OPEN PERSPECTIVES (Issue 8, 2003)
1. KELLY AFFAIR : SHOULD THE BBC TAKE THE BLAME ?
As BBC executives prepare the corporation's case for the Hutton inquiry into the events surrounding the death of David Kelly, staff in the corporation's newsroom have begun to question whether the corporation's thirst for agenda-setting scoops has damaged its credibility.
BROADCAST (July 25, 2003)
2. ON YOUR GUARD AGAINST HACKERS
Broadcasters going digital are vulnerable to a form of terrorism - hacking. How can they prevent vital information and other materials from getting hijacked?
ASIA PACIFIC BROADCASTING (July 2003)
3. CHASING THE WORLD'S CHINESE READERS
There is a growing market of Chinese readers from New York to Malaysia looking for news from home. Give them Chinese language newspapers and you can earn a packet of change - and maybe enough political leverage on the mainland to one day print your publications there too.
FAR EASTERN ECONOMIC REVIEW (August 7, 2003)
4. RADIO REVOLUTION IS COMING
Digital Audio Broadcasting is on the march with improvements to content and coverage. But is the sector being held back by a lack of receivers? It's fair to say that looking at where we are at the moment, it's not a question of if digital radio is going to happen, it's a question of when.
BROADCAST (July 4, 2003)
5. INTERACTIVE TELEVISION : THE GOLD RUSH IS ON
There was a time when broadcasters viewed interactivity services as a nice-to-have feature, but not crucial to their bottom line. But times are changing.
OPEN PERSPECTIVES (Issue 8, 2003)