Saturday, 19 April 2008

2000

Political

2000 George Bush declared president
September 11 terrorist attacks
2005 Iraq Elections take place
2005 July 7th London attcks

Social

· 2004 Asian Tsunami killed thousand
· 2005 same sex were allowed to get married


Media Issues

2002 BBC four launches ‘people for more television’
2000 Big Brother gets introduced
1990

Social
· 1995, the first gay and lesbian BBC

Political


· Margaret Thatcher resigns as British Prime Minister
· Labour wins Landslide Election ( 1997)
· Kin Jong II Becomes new leader for N.korean people

Media Issues


1996 Simpsons get introduced by Sky to new audiences
1997 Channel 5 gets launched by the power of five (spice girls)
News 24 1997 first News bulletin 24 gets shown
1980

Social

· Police Women introduced

Political

· 1981 Royal Wedding

· Falklands War – Argentina invades Falkland
.

Media Issues

· 1982 channel 4 launches
· 1989 sky lanches first satellite service
1970

Social

Supreme Court rules that blacks and other minorities are entitled to retroactive job seniority (1976)
Equal Pay Act both men and woman did the same job and got paid equally

Media Issues


1972 Newsround, News channel for children’s.
1972 Emmerdale Farm long running soap on British Soap

Economic

Britons count pence in tens and hundreds ( 1971)
Gas prices in US needed to increase by 35%

Political

1979 Margaret Thatcher first female Prime Minister
Democratic party in HQ leads to a huge crisis
President Richard Nixon’s resignation (1974)


1960

Political

  • 9 November 1960, JFK first youngest elected president (35th president)
  • 12th June 1964 Nelson Mandela sentenced to imprisonment (found guilty)
  • JKF assassinated 1963

Media Issues

  • Marilyn Monroe found dead (36 year old actress)
  • South West and Scotland receive ITV signal ( 1961)
  • 1967 News at Ten forst British News programme last 30 minutes

Social

  • Students riot in Paris
  • First heart transplant 1967 (South Africa)

Economic
·

  • Colour Television cost £500,000 attracted over a million viewers ‘quality television’

SHEP Timeline

1950

Political

  • 1950-1953 Korean War-
  • North Korean Communist forces invade South Korea
  • Korea, a Japanese colony since 1910, was to be occupied north of the 38th parallel by Soviet Russia.
  • The 29th Brigade set sail in October 1950, reaching Korea a month later just as it seemed that the war was over.

Media Issues


  • 11 July 1950 Andy Pandy
  • This was the first toddler programme to be seen on BBC , Andy was seen in a wooden outfit. 2000s he has returned.
  • Hollywood develops wide-screen processes

Social

  • George VI dies; his daughter becomes Elizabeth II
  • she trained as a junior subaltern (second lieutenant) in the women's services


Wednesday, 27 February 2008

MPs get web filter 'dark ages' warning

A Microsoft executive told MPs today that forcing software companies to install internet content filtering technology with high-security settings as standard to all computers would send the UK back to the "dark ages".
The idea of forcing companies such as Microsoft to pre-install high security content filters was raised today at a Commons culture, media and sport select committee hearing on protecting children from harmful content on the internet and in video games.
Asked what he thought of the idea, Matt Lambert, head of corporate affairs at Microsoft, admitted that internet content filtering technology already provided by the company as standard with its software products was "not widely used".
But Lambert rejected the idea of a mandatory setting of content filters to a high security level, arguing that it would block too much content that posed no risk to children.
Lambert said a better solution would be for parents to be better educated about what their children are looking at online and what content filters are available.
He added that Microsoft runs a schools programme aiming to educate children about internet content and online safety.
"There has been low takeup but intriguingly there is not low awareness of it ... parents are not acting," he said.
"Setting [filtering controls] at a high level is the equivalent to blocking the internet ... it would be living in the dark ages in my view."
Lambert was responding to a suggestion made by another witness before the culture select committee today, who had said filtering software should be pre-installed at a high security setting.
John Carr, the executive secretary of the Children's Charities Coalition for Internet Safety, said that the industry could not be expected to be some sort of "moral arbiters" or "priests" for the public, deciding which content should be screened.
"In school the headteacher sets the standards surrounding internet content," Carr added. "It should be the same in the home ... there is no way we can legislate from the centre.
"The public policy challenge is in helping parents to understand the internet and in turn help children. Parents feel at sea about what to do. Safety software should be pre-installed and set to a high level."
Stephen Carrick Davies, the chief executive of Childnet International, a charitable body that promotes online safety for children, told the committee that one problem with policing the internet is that the concept of harmful content is difficult to define, unlike obviously illegal content such as child abuse images and websites.
"Illegal content is easy [to define and regulate] while harmful is difficult," said Davies. "We need to recognise there is 'grey'. There is black and white but also grey."
He also pointed out that legislation against such a "grey" area could result in curbs of freedom of expression and that in a web 2.0 world of user-generated content it can often be young people themselves - those often seen as "passive victims" - who can perpetrate cyber bullying online.
Davies suggested the answer might lie in a three-pronged approach. He said this strategy would involve self-regulation by the industry; empowering, supporting and educating schools; and making sure that parents help children so they are savvy enough and "equipped just as how they are when they walk down the high street".