5/10/13by the Center for International Media Assistance
Tips for journalists on Facebook, a look inside the Internet archive, and more are found in this week's Digital Media Mash Up, produced by the Center for International Media Assistance (CIMA).
A leading investigative reporter and media trainer explains why it's essential for journalists to encrypt their documents and shows how easy it is to do.
Readers are more likely to find your stories by clicking a link from social media than by visiting your homepage. Here's how to find out more about who is reaching your content via Facebook and Twitter.
The Boston Marathon bombing posed a series of challenges for journalists, who turned to social media and online tools to report the scene and its aftermath.
Pageviews, unique visitors and demographics are the Google Analytics basics, but there are less commonly tracked metrics journalists can use to find meaning behind the numbers.
IJNet talked with Laressa Watlington, a multimedia journalist and trainer who helped create a handbook in Spanish to help journalists thrive in an ever-shifting media landscape.
Vine, Twitter’s app that lets you edit and share six seconds of video, is capitalizing on the current micro-video-sharing trend, but this iOS-only tool is leaving Android users out of the loop.
More than 30 Brazilian journalists and students are translating into Portuguese the free collaborative book that shows journalists how to use data to improve the news – with Arabic, Chinese and Spanish translations on the way.