tratémonos Social networks are noisy (Look, someone read your twits)
Too much noise makes social networks. Thus, it appeared layoffs and locks for journalists on Twitter. This week, they drove to a CNN for a comment on Twitter. (For much the same, the UK will shut down the blog to its ambassador in Lebanon).
The tweet that left without work after 20 years Octavia Nasr, editor of the Atlanta-based CNN, was " is sad to know the death of Sayed Mohamed Hussein Fadlallah, a Hezbollah giants whom I respect a lot. "
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The issue of the British Ambassador in Lebanon, Frances Guy, obviously politically different, but in his post only Fadlallah described the deceased as one of the figures with the most enjoyable found in Lebanon. " When I visited had a real debate asegurado.Dejabas their presence feeling better" , wrote the diplomat. Everyone can make value judgments you want about the Ayatollah. Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah was the leader of the religious Shiites in Lebanon and is considered the spiritual mentor of Hezbollah. In recent years, developed some liberal ideas, including aspects related to women's equality, but was openly critical stance toward the U.S. and always called for resistance against Israel.
The truth is that both women made their claims in their spaces of opinion, with your name and not on behalf of companies or countries they represented.
In May, a National Geographic editor in Brazil, Felipe Milanez, was fired for criticizing via Twitter also an article in the Brazilian magazine Veja.
Milanez wrote "Veja smell vomit more racist x Indians, now in Bolivia. As can be so cool after this century of the Holocaust? "After the magazine Veja a report entitled as" A farce gives nação Indian, "which criticized the Bolivian government and the country was branded as" false Indian nation ".
Cornald Maas, journalist and Dutch television, was fired by also be ironic in a tweet: " We are curious export products here in the Netherlands: Sieneke, Joran van der Sloot and the PVV.
Sieneke is a Dutch girl who won a competition in the channel that works Maas (ba) and represented the Netherlands at Eurovision. Van der Sloot is a young man, also Dutch-suspect in the disappearance of an American woman and the murder of another woman in Peru. The PVP is a far-right party, also clear-essentially Dutch anti-Islamist. Paradoxically, Sieneke said he was not offended by tweet ...
Several media have already made "recommendations" to the journalists on the use of social networks.
The Washington Post tells his reporters: " should renounce some of their privileges as private citizens " and prohibits "write or publish anything that might reflect bias or favoritism, racial, religious or sexual."
Reuters has just launched its "social media policy." It directly prohibits its journalists twittering firsts, asked to have a separate account for "personal issues" and that any twit journalist accompanied by the word "Reuters"
Globo Network prohibits journalists use social networks to discuss "issues related to the activities of the television, the media market and its regulatory framework" .
The BBC advises caution when retweet because " may seem that the journalist is to support the author's point of view."
The debate has to be, no doubt. It should be recalled in the midst of the debate that journalists are people who have ideas, humor and viewpoints that do not always have to agree with those of others.
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