Ipso is a creature of the publishers in which they will continue to hold the strings – including the purse-stringsAt last, the new press regulator is emerging from the shadows. The Independent Press Standards Organisation (Ipso), the great invention of the majority of Britain's newspaper and magazine publishers, has assumed human form.Well, up to a point. One man selected in opaque circumstances to head the project, Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers, and another man similarly plucked from obscurity, Sir Hayden Phillips (no relation), have together appointed an "appointment panel".Note first their qualifications for this task. Phillips one is a former supreme court judge, its founding president no less. Phillips two is a former senior civil servant. They are indisputably members of that gilded, privileged and unelected set known as "the great and good".No surprise, then, that two of their choices for the appointment panel should come from the same background – another former supreme court judge, Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood, and another former civil servant, Dame Denise Platt, who chaired the Commission for Social Care Inspection.In their wisdom, doubtless with crucial input from anonymous publishing representatives, the Phillipses also chose a former editor and a current editor to join the panel.They are Paul Horrocks, the engaging ex-editor of the Manchester Evening News who also happened to serve for four years on the Press Complaints Commission (PCC), the body that... Continue reading at 'The Guardian'
[ The Guardian | 2014-01-09 00:00:00 UTC ]
Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation has reported a 43% hit on its publishing arm, which includes its UK national newspapers, reducing the unit's operating income to $218m (£138m) as it was hit by multimillion-pound costs relating to the phone-hacking scandal at the News of the World. Continue reading at Media Week
[ Media Week | 2012-02-09 00:00:00 UTC ]
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Rupert Murdoch's US media giant News Corp is expanding its presence in the Middle East media market and beyond by agreeing to acquire a minority stake in Dubai-based media company Moby Group. Under the deal, News Corp will relinquish its 50 per ... Continue reading at Editor & Publisher
[ Editor & Publisher | 2012-01-18 00:00:00 UTC ]
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Vanity Fair gets a compilation into the Kindle and Nook stores: Twenty previously published stories for $4, heavy on the Michael Wolff. Continue reading at AllThingsD
[ AllThingsD | 2011-07-30 00:00:00 UTC ]
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