• J-Source

    Daniel Leblanc and protecting sources

    Expect the press-rights case of Globe and Mail reporter Daniel Leblanc — who is ordered to appear in Quebec’s Superior Court to testify about a source in the infamous sponsorship scandal — to make news in coming weeks. Noted a report in the Globe, “Groupe Polygone, one of the companies alleged to have over-billed the…

  • J-Source

    Information not free in Canada

    Access to Information is broken in Canada. OK, ok, nothing new about that. But there is a new report, some attempts at explanation, and plenty of blame on the failure by the current government (the Stephen Harper Conservatives campaigned on accountability) to fix the system while at the same time plugging casual information channels.

  • J-Source

    Newspapers losing print readers faster than they gain readers online

    It’s well known newspapers are losing advertising dollars from print operations faster than revenue is growing at their online operations. It turns out the same thing is happening to readers, according to a study by the the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press. If newspapers can’t change this trend, there is little chance they’ll ever build online revenues…

  • J-Source

    Search term trends reflect economic worries

    Internet searches using terms like “unemployment benefits”, “bankruptcy” and “foreclosure” have leaped dramatically in frequency during the past year, according to an analysis by comScore Inc. Call it a digital sign of the times.

  • J-Source

    Context needed

    “Democracy needs dialogue more than it needs bumper stickers,” writes Stephen L. Carter, a novelist and Yale law professor, in a persuasive essay arguing for more context — more thoroughness — in journalism. The piece is American, but applies elsewhere.

  • J-Source

    Teaching j-students about Twitter

    Suddenly, it seems, everyone is twittering. Or,  if they’re not, they feel they should be. Journalists who first dismissed it as a useless time waster are now seeing it as a good way to find sources, leads and breaking news. Journalism educators are scrambling to learn to use it well enough to teach their students to…

  • J-Source

    CBC funding crisis

    [Note: This post has been updated] “The CBC is heading toward a new fiscal year with little clarity about its funding from Ottawa, even as it suffers a projected 2008-2009 shortfall in ad revenue of up to $65-million,” reports the Globe and Mail.

  • J-Source

    Fewer newspapers = more corruption

    Even those of us who care about news and newspapers can become cynical about the wailing over the demise of print. Fortunate then that Paul Starr has written a passionate and thought-provoking argument in The New Republic for why all of us should care.

  • J-Source

    Murdoch apologizes

    Under his own byline, News Corp chairman Rupert Murdoch apologized for an editorial cartoon run by The New York Post showing a police officer telling his colleague, who just shot a chimpanzee, “They’ll have to find someone else to write the next stimulus bill.” Wrote Murdoch…

  • J-Source

    Throttling the net

    The CRTC’s examination of Canadian content on the web is overshadowing a much fiercer debate boiling over in cyber-land. The Commission is considering allowing service providers to slow down or charge additional fees for band-heavy content like videos, a practice known as throttling. The hearing’s terms of reference arise from a complaint against Bell Canada,…