Daily Camera
Summary
The Camera is a daily newspaper in Boulder, Colorado. It is owned by Prairie Mountain Publishing, a division of MediaNews Group.Frederick P. Johnson and Bert Bell founded the weekly Boulder Camera in 1890, and it became a daily in 1891. Ownership has changed several times. In recent years, the paper has been owned by Ridder (1969-1974), Knight-Ridder (1974-1997), Scripps (1997-2009) and MediaNews Group (2009-present).The official name of this newspaper at various times has been the Boulder Camera, the Boulder Daily Camera, the Daily Camera, and most recently, simply the Camera. Although the paper's name is officially only one word as of 2009, its web site is still DailyCamera.com, and all names listed are still in common usage as nicknames for the paper..
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University of Colorado will no longer demand copyright from students
Gil Asakawa, adviser to the University of Colorado student newspaper, the CU Independent, emails with an update on the rights to a bear photo that went viral last week:.
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University acknowledges that student Andy Duann retains copyright to falling bear photo
Six Times an Hour | Daily Camera | Student Press Law Center The saga of Andy Duann’s bear photo appeared to conclude Monday evening. Newspaper adviser Gil Asakawa had previously asserted the University of Colorado paper, the CU Independent, owned… Read more.
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AP pulls falling bear photo after copyright dispute between student photographer, newspaper
On Saturday the Associated Press issued a “photo elimination” of Andy Duann’s falling bear pictures, advising its members to “eliminate from your systems and archives” AP’s “Campus bear” photos shot by Andy Duann and credited to the CU Independent,… Read more.
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Changing social power is reflected in the sales of newspaper offices
Newspapers across the US are shedding large downtown buildings in favor of more modest facilities, often away from the center of cities. The downsizing is the consequence of reduced need for office space following staff cuts, changes in production technologies that reduce space requirements, and the outsourcing many printing and distribution activities.
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Boulder Newspaper Publisher to Lay Off 17
BOULDER - The Boulder-based publisher of the Daily Camera will lay off 17 advertising design and production employees in an outsourcing move, the newspaper reported Wednesday, Jan. 8.
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Quick Hits: Google+ Hits 49 Million December Visitors, Trada Gets $9M in Funding, Predicting Iowa Via Twitter
ADOTAS – According to an Experian study, Google + saw 49 million visitors in December — a 55 percent increase from the previous month. While it’s impossible at this point to whether those numbers suggest substantially increased engagement on the network and how much is traffic from new users or older users curious about its newer features, we can at least hold that 55 percent increase in traffic up against a study that determined 24 percent of Google+ users joined in December alone.
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5 Reasons E-Books Are Awesome, Even for the Very Reluctant
This week on MediaShift, we are exploring the dramatically changing publishing industry in our "Beyond the Book" special series. Stay tuned for more pieces like this one in the coming days. Sign up for our new weekly newsletter on e-books and self-publishing here.
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Tool of the week for journalists – TwentyFeet, analytics for your site and social networks
What is it and how is it of use to journalists? TwentyFeet is an analytics platform allowing you to use one site to keep track of your web page impressions, retweets, Facebook likes, YouTube plays and bit. ly shares.
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Weston Gentry: Aspiring Writers Take Note: Not All Can Live the Life of ESPN's Reilly
Rick Reilly -- ESPN. com columnist and 1981 University of Colorado alumnus -- delivered what amounted to a farewell speech to CU's School of Journalism and Mass Communications on May 5th. True to his journalistic style, he offered a mixture of advice and risqué one-liners that kept graduates in stitches and school administrators in a cold sweat.
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University Of Colorado J-School To Close
The University of Colorado board of regents voted 5-4 to close the university's journalism school as of June 30, the Boulder Daily Camera reports.

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