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SG internet news very KUMPUNG! Behind Malaysia by 10 years!

McDollar

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http://malaysiakini.com/news/118477

Malaysiakini turns 10, so where's Singaporekini?


Cherian George
Nov 27, 09
8:07am

Singaporeans may fancy ourselves the most envied nation in the region, but there are some things across the Causeway that make us wide-eyed with wonderment.

Why is it, for example, that the average Malaysian 'roti canai' beats even our most highly-rated prata in taste and texture?{SR NATHAN PSE ANSWER!} How in the world did Malaysia end up with the region's most charismatic budget airline when we're supposed to be the transport hub of Asia?

And why, as Malaysiakini celebrates its 10th anniversary this weekend in Kuala Lumpur, are we still waiting for a Singaporekini?

I am not an expert in food or aviation, but I have been following the ups and downs of Malaysia's leading independent news website over the years and can hazard a few reasons why Singapore has no equivalent. The theory you'll most commonly hear is that Internet laws in Singapore are more restrictive.

In fact, the legal minefields in the two countries are basically similar. Indeed, the Malaysian government has been more trigger-happy than its Singapore counterpart with laws such as the Internal Security Act and Sedition Act. What's more, it would be an insult to Malaysia's activists to say that they are more active only because they face less risk. The ones I know don't equate what is permissible with what is possible.

Three reasons

Instead, there are at least three more credible reasons why, compared with Malaysiakini, Singapore's alternative media are still so 'kampung'.

First, Malaysiakini benefits from the country's more pluralistic politics, including a fractured political elite, strong opposition parties and energetic civil society organisations. These diverse forces ensure that the supply side of political news never runs dry.

Their unrestrained, unpredictable contests make political news as gripping as the tautest thriller and as melodramatic as a soap opera. In contrast, a Singaporekini would be, most weeks, about as compelling as a commercial for detergent.

Second, Malaysiakini has been able to count on both domestic and foreign support that is not available to wannabes in Singapore. Domestically, Malaysiakini is embedded in networks of solidarity with various well-organised pro-democracy groups such as Suaram and the Centre for Independent Journalism.

They don't always see eye to eye, but they do make up a broad social movement that has no equivalent in Singapore. Malaysiakini's overseas funding would also be tough to replicate in Singapore. Under the Political Donations Act, the government could ban overseas funding for a Singaporekini simply by gazetting it as a political association.

Third, Malaysiakini's success has been built mainly on the mainstream media's failure. Founders Steven Gan and Premesh Chandran are not media superstars. They are simply competent, courageous, creative and conscientious journalists like thousands of their fellow professionals around the world.

In Malaysia, however, they shine because their peers in the mainstream media are so smothered by government. Singapore's mainstream media are also subordinate to the government, but there is a difference in degree that produces qualitatively different outcomes.

At critical moments in Malaysia, government control did not just strain press credibility, it tore it up, crushed it underfoot and set it on fire for all to see, causing a mass exodus to alternative media. In Singapore, the likes of The Online Citizen might reach the heights of Malaysiakini if The Straits Times were forced to stoop as low as The New Straits Times.

Could all this change? Could a Singaporekini match Malaysiakini? Anything is possible. But, the odds are slightly higher of our 'roti prata' becoming as good as their 'roti canai'.
CHERIAN GEORGE ([email protected]) is an academic at the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He blogs at www.journalism.sg. A fuller study of Malaysiakini can be found in his 2006 book, 'Contentious Journalism and the Internet'.
 

KuanTi01

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Asset
Mr Cherian, despair not!
In Malaysia, the political climate despite its race-based communalism has a much wider and much more level playing field and an equally resilient and fearless audience. That's why Malaysiakini was born, alive and still kicking. Here, the opposition gets kicked, ridiculed and sports a black eye everyday for 365 days all the way till election time when they gets kicked even harder and have more black eyes. That's why u can't ever conceive a Singaporekini. Even if it can be conceived, it's destined to be a stillbirth! But wtf, we still have our bikinis!:biggrin: Btw, that's why Malaysia Boleh! Hip Hip Huray!
 

lky_hearse

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Loyal
SingaporeKINI is unnecessary. Only SingaporeMATI is needed. Once LKY mati and go up the hearse, our Internet News & TV News & Papers will all be different. Malaysia is not the same, not under one single bastard dictator. Tunku already died for so long. LKY's hearse is still waiting for him, HONK! HONK! Come up the lorry bastard!
 

Areopagus

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Although I would not put it so crudely, you are quite right...

When an old 86 year old dies, Singapore will blossom! All those creative Singaporeans will come out of the woodwork, we will have a dynamic multi-party democracy
 

nkfnkfnkf

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http://malaysiakini.com/news/118555

wait 2 secs to reload the image
穷得脱裤子去当也要支持的媒体
许国伟
11月29日
下午 4点46分
特约评论

朋友“老友辉”是当今大马的订户,这么多年来,虽然他有时穷得要脱裤子去当(他自己说的),但订阅当今大马的期限一到,他二话不说就缴费继续订阅。

老友辉看当今大马,只看中文版;淡米尔文版看不懂,马来文版免费的,至于英文版才需登录用户看完全文,但老友辉还是继续支持。

全球少数收费网络媒体

wait 2 secs to reload the image《当今大马》是除了《华尔街日报》(Wall Street Journal)外,全球少数是收费的订阅方式网络媒体。当然,除了订户的支持,还是少不了广告,毕竟广告还是媒体的命脉,但就如《当今大马》10周年,所坚持的格言“只有财政独立才能确保媒体独立”。

一语中的,这是媒体独立的关键。

上个世纪四十年代,美国的资深媒体人殷格索(ralph ingersoll)曾经做过一次试验,就是创办一份名叫PM的报纸,这份《PM》报最大的特色,就是完全不刊登广告。

殷格索开宗明义告诉读者,《PM》反对任何人欺压他人;《PM》不接受任何广告;《PM》不属于任何政党;《PM》绝对自由不做新闻审查;《PM》收入的唯一来源就是读者;《PM》是能讲也敢讲真话的报纸。

不党,不卖,不私,不盲

wait 2 secs to reload the image这六大宣言,就跟一代报人张季鸾办《大公报》,提出的四不主义:不党,不卖,不私,不盲;一样掷地有声,也是历年来多少在新闻前线上拚斗的媒体人梦想。

《PM》所处的美国,是资本主义社会,殷格索担心广告利益会影响编采言论的独立,因此拒绝了广告;

只是《PM》办了8年,就亏了8年,最后投资的金主也有意见了,金主告诉殷格索,《PM》要活下就要接受广告,殷格索的答复是:辞职走人。

不卖广告,媒体的试验是失败了;但没有广告的如台湾公视,真的能圆殷格索,或者张季鸾“不卖”的梦吗?

张季鸾的四不主义,是把不党摆在不卖之前,可见在东方社会,就是如南方朔说的:东方社会是传统的专制政治,政治人物不习惯媒体对他的挑剔;媒体也永远在看政治的脸色。而只要面对政治,一切都很脆弱。

政治力,才是扼在媒体颈喉,最黑最粗的手。

人人好像都成了太上总编辑

wait 2 secs to reload the image马来西亚的环境比较特殊,电视台及电台,不是国营就是党营;平面媒体除了面对印刷及出版法令的限制,

政治人物明的暗的干预和指示,还有广告金主的要求;更大的压力还是在现今市场萎缩情况下,报份是每份必争,结果人人好像都成了太上总编辑,只要对新闻不满就可恫言杯葛抵制再来退报……

相比之下,网络媒体的空间比较大,过去10年来,经历政治力压缩媒体空间日趋严重的世代,都会觉得网络媒体,是荒原中的绿洲。

但是,实情是否如此?

南方朔曾在评论台湾经历解除报禁后的报纸生态时说,把媒体立场区分为三种:一种是当权派的第一线打手,言论亢奋;一种是和当政者关系搞坏,写起评论来又凶又猛;第三种是不知所措,今天投靠这边,明天投靠那边。

wait 2 secs to reload the image台湾解除报禁后,是人人可办报(只要有钱),我国的网络媒体生态,也跟台湾解除报禁后类似,只要有钱,也是人人可办报,而南方朔评论台媒的三种立场,对照现今国内网络媒体生态,也不让人觉得陌生。

就像《当今大马》首席执行员詹德兰说的,网络媒体过去如同没有人愿意尝试的“危险蓝海”,不过现在已经出现许多竞争者,如同变成一片“红海”。

《当今大马》能做到财政独立的“不卖”,能做到不属任何政党的“不党”,但在网络媒体“红海”中不会迷航,不私及不盲,才是更大挑战。

这,也才是值得“老友辉”穷得要脱裤子去当也要支持的收费网络媒体。
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Kid278

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Loyal
http://malaysiakini.com/news/118477

Malaysiakini turns 10, so where's Singaporekini?


Cherian George
Nov 27, 09
8:07am

Singaporeans may fancy ourselves the most envied nation in the region, but there are some things across the Causeway that make us wide-eyed with wonderment.

Why is it, for example, that the average Malaysian 'roti canai' beats even our most highly-rated prata in taste and texture?{SR NATHAN PSE ANSWER!} How in the world did Malaysia end up with the region's most charismatic budget airline when we're supposed to be the transport hub of Asia?

And why, as Malaysiakini celebrates its 10th anniversary this weekend in Kuala Lumpur, are we still waiting for a Singaporekini?

.


I cuncurred Sporekini a set back. Except for some good journalist who believs in what jounalism is a ll about, the stuation remains. For things to change, the goverment must be denied a 2rd majority in parliament.When that happens press freedm, freedom of speech will have little, less or no restrictions. There will more state media pro and for with interesting criticism exposing each other if there's any.

In the internet I am not surprise it will be more robust as digital media travels extrememly faster than printed ones. And believe it or not cyber journalist posses more professionlism, they're not so much bogged down by office bureaucratic protocols.

Well, MalaysiaKini took 10 years, SingaporeKini though not anytime soon it will be there, if there ever is going to be a paradigm shift within PAP with results of a tsunami then SingaporeKini is going to be there sooner then anyone would imagine. Wishful thinking but not impossible.:p
 
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