26 June 2012, 260612, Apple, Facebook, Fairfax, Google+, journalism, mass media, new media, news limited, Stuart Washington, traditional media
Stuart Washington says technology is transforming journalism but just how our future media will look is still unknown.
The massive cuts to Fairfax and News Limited is part of the worldwide trend pitting newspapers against online media.
But what will bloggers and twitterers “link” to if traditional media is decimated? Who will fund investigative journalism? And will opinion be reduced to the “comments” section of blogs where extreme views and abuse proliferate?
International digital businesses like Google, Apple and Facebook are radically changing (and profiting) from the new media landscape yet pay minimal tax rates. Google paid just $74,000 in taxes in Australia last year despite $1 billion in revenue, while traditional media companies are struggling to stay afloat as their advertising clients drift to the cheaper and trackable world of online.
Fairfax journalist Stuart Washington tells 3Q his concerns about the brave new digital world.
250612, 26 June 2012, CFMEU, employment, Gina Rinehart, Mining Boom, mining jobs, Racism, resources job board, Rita Mallia, Roy Hill mine
Rita Mallia speaks of the importance of unemployed locals getting the first pick of mining jobs as well as her union’s proud multicultural ethos.
Importing foreign workers has rocketed during the mining boom. Last year almost 90,000 workers were employed under 457 visa grants allowing them to stay and work in Australia for up to four years. The number of visas granted is up nearly 50 per cent on last year.
Since Gina RInehart received permission to bring in 1700 workers for her Roy Hill mine and the subsequent uproar, a Resources Jobs Board has been created.
The CFMEU’s Rita Mallia tells 3Q 60,000 people have already visited the website — putting paid to claims that Australians don’t want to do remote mining work.
26 June 2012, 260612, Adelaide, city planning, Ken Morrison, Melbourne, PCA, Perth, Sydney
Ken Morrison explains why people, place and ease are the ingredients which get cultural entrepreneurs thinking big in the city.
What set of ingredients turns a drab, pocket of town into a new must-go place?
For Melbourne, it was the economic decline of the 80s which saw Jeff Kennett relax liquor laws to allow small bar owners to take over empty city shops and laneways which gave the city its cultural vibe.
Others are following their footsteps: Sydney is seeing an emergence of small bars thanks to new licensing laws; Adelaide is building city centre apartments to bring the population back in and previously staid old Perth is thriving thanks to a laneway revitalisation program to cater for international guests who are in town for the mining boom.
The Property Council’s Ken Morrison of the Property Council of Australia tells 3Q it’s still up to city planners to follow through and get the funk back into town squares.