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Norway retouched photo law: Why adding labels won t work

Norway retouched photo law: Why adding labels won t work
washingtonpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtonpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Easier said than done: the regulation of media concentration in Argentina

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes Argentina’s media policy landscape has gone through various changes in recent years. Ariel Riera, Research & Impact Manager at Chequeado, writes here about the steps to take to tackle media concentration in the country. This is the third in a series of posts by former MSc students of LSE’s Department of Media and Communications, looking at various issues in media governance around the world. God is everywhere, but his office is in Buenos Aires. This Argentinian saying refers to the political and symbolic centrality of the city and the same could be said about the media landscape. In recent years, economies of scale have pushed the country’s media landscape to be increasingly concentrated in the Metropolitan Area of Buenos Aires, while a contraction of the national economy has also triggered media closures, mergers and acquisitions. Consequently, most popular news outlets are part of large multimedia groups based in that area, which to some

Cultures of Repair : Cargo-cycles and Kinship in Kolkata

The labour of repair rooted in tutelage and kinship, and the loyalties and discontents that surround repair worlds regulate social order. They recast questions of interdependence and difference in cities. Kolkata’s cargo-cyclists and repair workers who assemble and maintain these old vehicles redeem the city from its disrepairs. Their location and lives are read against the history of capital, contemporary infrastructure building and the logistics of labour. While tutelage fulfils the promise of labour for those who were previously excluded from it, the kinship fostered in Kolkata’s repair worlds continues to keep workers at the margins of capital and profits.

Audiences have revolted Will newsrooms adapt?

Audiences have revolted. Will newsrooms adapt? “To flourish in the third decade of the 21st century, journalism has to stop conceiving of audiences in its own image.” Once upon a time, journalists conceived of audiences in their own image. That is, members of the audience were seen as interested in matters of the polity at large. Moreover, they were content with being recipients of well-sourced and well-argued information about these matters, and also with processing it somewhat dispassionately. Finally, they were largely trusting of the news they read, watched, and listened to in reputable, mainstream outlets. But a quick glance at the content, tenor, and dynamics of contemporary practices and conversations related to the news, at least in the United States, reveals a different picture. Audiences appear to be more tribal, expressive, emotional, and skeptical than what they used to be or at least than what they were assumed to be in the canonical discourse about them in man

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