Times editor James Harding has told the Society of Editors conference that readers will be paying for web access to the paper by next spring. Continue reading
Fee at the point of need
BBC salaries are in the news again. DG Mark Thompson, we’re told, earns – well, gets – £834,000 a year. Again, to use a comparison from an earlier post on this subject, he’s a long way from the J. Ross ball park. Continue reading
Long life for short links
I wrote recently about a student request to use shortened URLs to reference sources in dissertations. Continue reading
Nice big earner
Judging by the salaries of its senior management, the BBC is clearly weathering the recession reasonably well.
Licence fee to print money
A quick burst of arithmetic via my calculator revealed, for example, that senior managers in the Journalism Group pull in more than £4.5m a year in total.
Fee speech
OK, it wouldn’t pay Jonathan Ross’s salary.
Still … I mean, it’s not bad, is it? For an outfit that gets its money from a compulsory levy on everyone with a TV.
No matter what they earn.
From Labour MP Tom Watson via Twitter.
Internet excess?
The Danish government is to allow pupils full access to the internet during their final school exams.
What a piece of work
Fourteen schools are piloting the scheme and all schools are being invited to follow suit by 2011.
To thine own self be true
What about cheating? They have a plan. The plan is… er … to trust the students not to cheat.
A king of infinite [web] space
The minister for education in Denmark, Bertel Haarder, says he is proud that Denmark is leading the world on this, and believes other countries will follow suit.
Flaming youth
Maybe they will. Or maybe they won’t. Some are bound to think this is dumbing down deeper than many would deign to dumb.
A leading English academic said yesterday (or it might have been fifteen years ago…):
<splutter>We will fight this in the seminar rooms, we will fight this in the lectures, we will never surrender.</splutter>
Ora pro nobis
It seems there’s a new religion on the block: ecomentalism. New to the courts, that is. No-one who has seen an Al Gore movie or read a column by the Moonbat can doubt that these two are members of an eco-episcopacy, and are followed by a huge fervent faithful.
Lord have mercy on us all
Now there’s legal backing for this. A UK court has ruled that an executive can sue his employer for unfair dismissal because of his green beliefs – which means ecomentalism counts in law as a religion.
Mad hatters
The judge is right of course. I could tell this was a religion because of the hats. I mean,
- bishops have miters;
- rabbis have yarmulkes;
- the Yellow Hat school of Buddhism is even named after a hat;
- and the ecomentalist faithful all wear those Peruvian hats with the ear-flaps and the odd smell.
Dead giveaway. Nuff said.
China best at banging up bloggers
A map of bloggers in jail around the world shows that when it comes to arresting bloggers, China leads the pack, with 33 in the slammer. Continue reading
Anti-Mail campaigners seek tighter press control
The anti-Daily Mail campaign that followed Jan Moir’s column on the death of former pop star Stephen Gately is still going strong. Continue reading
An Eye for injunctions
There’s some useful background info on so-called ‘super-injunctions’ in this piece from Private Eye. Continue reading
I’ve been moderated
Non-fame at last – a Guardian moderator has deleted a comment I posted on the George Monbiot (aka The Moonbat) blog today. Continue reading