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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 24 Jul 10, 20:10 
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China's star blogger says women is his biggest problem Independent


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 29 Sep 10, 14:17 
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The heavy price of blogging in Iran


Hossein Derakhshan, the Iranian 'blogfather', has been jailed for 19 years – a longer sentence than for commissioning a murder
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 06 May 11, 15:58 
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'Here it is. I am dead': Canadian blogger announces own death in heart-rending post from beyond the grave
Mail


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 11 May 11, 9:18 
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Media freedoms in the balance

Cabinet to consider legislation including privacy law and regulation of social media


By Nigel Morris and Cahal Milmo Independent


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 11 May 11, 9:21 
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Adam Sherwin: How long can Twitter remain above the law?

A series of legal actions will mean that the millions of users of sites like Twitter and Facebook can no longer post their comments without impunity
Independent


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 12 May 11, 14:44 
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Feature Launch: Photo tagging for Pages
www.facebook.com]www.facebook.com


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 12 May 11, 14:54 
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Roman Caple will be the first in his family to graduate college, but unless something changes, he won't be walking with his classmates.

He says he doesn't know why, so he asked the ABC11 Eyewitness News I-Team for help.

"For me to get this far, this far, and somebody tells me no because of something that I said on my Facebook page," Caple said. "Something I said on my page, for them to tell me no. It hurt. It hurt."

abclocal.go.com/


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 15 May 11, 12:09 
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Pamela Geller: American patriot or extremist firebrand?
Robert Chalmers meets the right-wing blogger to find out
Independent


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 25 May 11, 16:01 
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Governments NOT people should make rules about how much freedom there should be online, claims Sarkozy in extraordinary outburst Mail


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 29 May 11, 23:55 
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South Tyneside Council 'gets Twitter data' in blog case
BBC


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 30 Jun 11, 16:17 
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Emails that should never be sent...

The families are war before the wedding cake has been cut. ::lol::



‘She has her head stuck so far up her own a*** she doesn't know whether to speak or f**t’: Father of bride-to-be brands email mother-in-law from hell ‘Miss Fancy-Pants’

Carolyn Bourne told Heidi Withers she was 'an ideal candidate for Ladette to Lady television series'
She sends vitriolic email three times in a day and tells bride-to-be she needs 'guidance from experts'
Heidi's shocked father hits back and says he will never forgive Carolyn for abusing his daughter

It's going to be some wedding.
The furious father of a bride-to-be who received an abusive email from her future 'mother-in-law from hell' criticising her manners has entered the war of words calling her 'snotty' and a 'Miss Fancy-Pants'.
Today Alan Withers said Carolyn Bourne 'has her head stuck so far up her own a*** she doesn't know whether to speak or f**t.'
Groom-to-be Freddy Bourne's 60-year-old step-mother has sparked outrage across the world after sending an outrageously rude e-mail to her future daughter-in-law Heidi Withers, 29.


Family-to-be at war: Alan Withers (left) has said that his family all call Carolyn Bourne (right) 'Miss Fancy-Pants' and say they do not like her 'snooty' attitude saying 'she thought she was better than us'
The vitriolic message, sent to her three times in one day six weeks ago, said Heidi had a ‘staggering uncouthness and lack of grace’ and branded her 'an ideal candidate for the Ladette to Lady television series'.
Stunned Heidi then forwarded the email to friends, but soon afterwards it became an internet sensation appearing on thousands of international websites and message boards.
Speaking from his home in Ledbury, Herefordshire, Alan Withers, 64, said he would never forgive Carolyn for her harsh words to his daughter.

Happier times: Heidi Withers and her fiancee Freddie Bourne are reeling after the venomous message sent by his step-mother Carolyn Bourne bemoaning Heidi's manners
'I was surprised when I read Carolyn's email to Heidi,' he said.

Confused: Heidi Withers (pictured) still wants to marry Freddie Bourne despite his step-mother's abuse towards her
'Heidi was very upset and the two of them obviously don't see eye to eye. I met Carolyn and her husband Edward for dinner at a pub in London last year.
'Edward was a jovial chap but Carolyn was quite snotty. She had a look about her which made us think she thought she was better than us.
'Ever since that meeting we call her "Miss Fancy-Pants".
'It's very sad what has happened but it's pointless us getting involved.
'I don't care if she apologises. You can't take back what has been said once it's said.
'Of course at the wedding we will shake hands and toast Heidi and Freddie.'
Carolyn Bourne, a renowned grower of pinks and dianthus flowers, told Miss Withers, 29, she should attend a finishing school in ‘utmost haste’ to get rid of her ‘bad manners’.
Her email was apparently intended to be a private rant but it went viral with thousands writing comments about the ‘mother-in-law from hell’.
Mrs Bourne sent the email after the young couple had spent a weekend at her £500,000 five-bedroom detached home on the picturesque outskirts of Dawlish, Devon.
Incensed by her future daughter-in-law’s behaviour, she wrote: ‘It is high time someone explained to you about good manners. Yours are obvious by their absence and I feel sorry for you.’
Mrs Bourne, who is married to Freddie’s 63-year-old father Edward, even said Miss Withers’ behaviour had left their pet dog Bomber ‘profoundly upset, depressed and anxious’.

Etiquette guide: Renowned flower arranger Carolyn Bourne, gave her daughter-in-law to be a stern dressing down via e-mail. She is pictured here at a plant show in Coventry with her husband Edward
Mrs Bourne, who runs Whetman Pinks, a sprawling plant nursery based around 30 industrial greenhouses in the grounds of her home, went on to list several examples of Miss Withers’ apparent lack of manners.
She accused her of poor table manners, insulting the family in public and failing to send a hand-written card to say thank you after her stay.
And she rounded off the email with a withering attack on the nature of the couple’s relationship.
‘One could be accused of thinking that Heidi Withers must be patting herself on the back for having caught a most eligible young man,’ she concluded. ‘I pity Freddie.’

'Perfect candidate': Mrs Bourne compared her future daughter-in-law to the television programme Ladette to Lady
Mrs Bourne also criticised Miss Withers’ parents for failing to save enough money for their daughter’s wedding.
Miss Withers’ mother Sylvia, a nurse, and father Alan live with their two Yorkshire terriers in a five-bedroom £450,000 detached cottage set in half an acre in the village of Aylton, near Ledbury in Herefordshire.
A neighbour said: ‘They are such a lovely family and Heidi is a brilliant girl. They really are the salt of the earth.
‘I don’t know why the lad’s stepmother is getting involved.’
Enlarge
Mother-in-law from hell Carolyn Bourne, 60, sent the e-mail to Heidi Withers after she was less than impressed with her etiquette when she visited her Devon home in April
Last night 29-year-old Freddie, who runs online bicycle shop Capital Cycles and lives in Putney, South-West London, declined to comment.
Mrs Bourne also refused to answer any questions as she attended a Horticultural Trades Association plant show at Stoneleigh Park, Coventry.
Her husband Edward said: ‘We are aware of what is being said. I know it is very boring, very repetitive and very dull but we will not be making any comment and neither will my wife.’
Miss Withers and Mr Bourne are not the first to suffer acute embarrassment because of out-of-control email round robins.
A derogatory email exchange between Harry Fildes, 25, and Sebastian Marsh, 24, about Mr Marsh’s ex-girlfriend spread rapidly in March after Mr Fildes accidentally sent a copy to the girl in question.
Mr Marsh was later sacked by his company, Miller Insurance.
And Holly Leam-Taylor, a graduate trainee at consultants Deloitte, quit in December 2009 after sending an email discussing attractive male staff.
MRS BOURNE'S GUIDE TO GOOD MANNERS
It is high time someone explained to you about good manners. Yours are obvious by their absence and I feel sorry for you.
Unfortunately for Freddie, he has fallen in love with you and Freddie being Freddie, I gather it is not easy to reason with him or yet encourage him to consider how he might be able to help you. It may just be possible to get through to you though. I do hope so.
If you want to be accepted by the wider Bourne family I suggest you take some guidance from experts with utmost haste. There are plenty of finishing schools around.
Please, for your own good, for Freddie’s sake and for your future involvement with the Bourne family, do something as soon as possible.
Here are a few examples of your lack of manners:
When you are a guest in another’s house, you do not declare what you will and will not eat – unless you are positively allergic to something. You do not remark that you do not have enough food. You do not start before everyone else. You do not take additional helpings without being invited to by your host.
When a guest in another’s house, you do not lie in bed until late morning in households that rise early – you fall in line with house norms.
You should never ever insult the family you are about to join at any time and most definitely not in public. I gather you passed this off as a joke but the reaction in the pub was one of shock, not laughter.
You should have hand-written a card to me. You have never written to thank me when you have stayed.
You regularly draw attention to yourself. Perhaps you should ask yourself why.
No one gets married in a castle unless they own it. It is brash, celebrity style behaviour.
I understand your parents are unable to contribute very much towards the cost of your wedding. (There is nothing wrong with that except that convention is such that one might presume they would have saved over the years for their daughters’ marriages.)
If this is the case, it would be most ladylike and gracious to lower your sights and have a modest wedding as befits both your incomes.


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 30 Jun 11, 19:19 
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Mother-in-law's manners e-mail: Right or wrong?

By Katie Fraser

For any bride (or groom) to-be, one of the most nerve-wracking aspects of entering married life is winning over the future in-laws.


So when one young woman, Heidi Withers, returned from visiting hers in Devon, it's unlikely she welcomed the detailed critique of her manners that dropped into her inbox from her fiance's stepmother, Carolyn Bourne.

Having forwarded the e-mail that described her behaviour as "staggering in its uncouthness and lack of grace" to her friends, it then went viral, attracting attention from around the world.

Here are some examples from the missive, followed by some expert opinions.

"When a guest in another's house, you do not lie in bed until late morning in households that rise early - you fall in line with house norms."

Staying at someone else's home can be a minefield of dilemmas for many a guest but choosing what time to appear at the breakfast table is one that can be easily cleared up the night before, says etiquette expert Liz Brewer.

"Even when staying at the grandest houses, the hostess will say breakfast is at X o'clock and we'd like you to join us then. If you are very tired, it is acceptable to maybe ask 'would you mind if I have a lie in?'. But that has to be established beforehand.

"When staying with the in-laws you'd have thought you would have wanted to make a good impression."

"No-one gets married in a castle unless they own it. It is brash, celebrity-style behaviour."


Madonna and Guy Ritchie tied the knot at Skibo Castle in the Scottish Highlands
For many couples - and brides in particular - their big day is something they have spent years imagining and planning. With this in mind, it's no surprise that the choice of venue tends to be somewhere special, like a castle.

Andrea Ventress of Wedding magazine says just because you don't happen to live in one doesn't mean you have to rule it out, particularly as more and more stately homes and castles have got wedding licences in the last decade.

"It's a way that a lot of these big places stay open.

"Yes, someone like Madonna got married in a castle but a lot of very normal, real-life couples can get married in these settings. There are lots of castles around the UK where you could absolutely afford to get married. Everyone has the right to a fairytale wedding. "

"You do not take additional helpings without being invited to by your host."

The suggestion that Miss Withers helped herself to seconds before being offered more by her hostess is seen as a definite no-no. Unless, that is, you are considerate enough to look out for your fellow diners first, says etiquette expert William Hanson.

"If there are communal dishes, and wine, on the table the polite thing to do is turn to the person next to you, offer them some more sprouts, wine or whatever it is and then help yourself."

"I understand your parents are unable to contribute very much towards the cost of your wedding. (There is nothing wrong with that except that convention is such that one might presume they would have saved for their daughters' marriages.) If this is the case, it would be most ladylike and gracious to lower your sights and have a modest wedding."

By discussing money Mrs Bourne is mentioning the very British unmentionable. And on the subject of a bride's parents paying for a wedding, it is outdated, says Miranda Eason, editor of You & Your Wedding and Cosmopolitan Bride.

"Our research [21st Century bride online survey 2010] shows that only around 10% of couples rely on their parents for funds. Forty-two per cent of weddings are an all-in-it-together venture with everyone contributing - the couple and both sets of parents. But nearly half (47%) of couples now finance the entire celebration themselves, largely because they are older than when their parents married - the average age for a bride is 29 - and are more financially independent.

"They want to plan the wedding they want without feeling obliged to give into pressure from the parents paying the bills."

"When you are a guest in another's house, you do not declare what you will and will not eat - unless you are positively allergic to something."

In a world full of food awareness and choice, people are increasingly picky about what they eat. But when sitting at someone else's table in their home, Jill Harbord, the headmistress in ITV's Ladette to Lady, says suggesting a dislike for something that has been prepared for you is unacceptable.

"You certainly don't go into the house and say I hate X. That would be very bad manners. If you are allergic to something, you don't say it as you arrive. You should give prior warning before your visit. It's about having respect for your hostess."

"I suggest you take some guidance from experts with utmost haste. There are plenty of finishing schools around."


Is there still a need for finishing schools?
For William Hanson, this was the comment that "tipped it completely over the mark". Mrs Bourne's decision to comment on her future stepdaughter-in-law-to-be's manners is one that could call into question her own manners.

"Whilst she's technically correct on all the points she made she was rude herself handling it in the way she did. She could maybe have gone for the softly, softly approach, or just picked up on a couple of things that particularly bugged her."

Her decision to put her thoughts down in an e-mail could itself be described as a social faux pas. In person, it would have been easier to use tone to lighten the conversation.

"What she needed to do was address this one-to-one, in a friendly tone, not antagonising or dictating to her. She should have given an explanation why.

"Where there is a rule there is always a plausible reason and the reason is normally common sense."


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 05 Jul 11, 20:58 
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Forget Moss and Middleton, Withers-Bourne is the wedding to be at
If I don't get an invite to the nuptials of the season, I will be filled with self-loathing and forced to claim business overseas
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 16 Apr 12, 14:42 
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'Tramps who watch Jeremy Kyle while knocking back Lambrini': Police officer in Facebook slur against women at Aintree Ladies' Day

Pc David Crawford investigated by bosses for slur in which he also suggested the women "feed their kids pork scratchings"
Mirror


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 Post subject: Re: The blogosphere
PostPosted: 17 Apr 12, 14:14 
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Web freedom faces greatest threat ever, warns Google's Sergey Brin

Exclusive: Threats range from governments trying to control citizens to the rise of Facebook and Apple-style 'walled gardens'
Guardian


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