Blogs nominated for online journal award

Politikerbloggen, the political blog that TV4 yesterday purchased, has been nominated for the award as the best Swedish online journal. The award was established by FSN, Föreningen för Sveriges Nättidskrifter (The Association of Swedish Online Journals), and will be handed out on Sept 28 at the Swedish book fair 2007. Interestingly enough, that is also when FSN will decide if it shall cease to exist as an association.

The other nominees are:

Bisonblog (Go Fredrik!)
Bloggywood
Forskning.se
NummerSalongen

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TV4 buys political blog

Swedish TV4 recruits the former Expressen journalist Niklas Svensson and buys his new political blog Politikerbloggen for an estimated 1 million kronor (about 108,000 euro).

The site has 20,000 visitors per week, according to Svensson and has sold advertising space since May for 450,000 kronor. The blog has quickly established itself as a political force to be reckoned with and it is currently the fifth most linked to Swedish blog according to Bloggportalen.se.

Politikerbloggen has been quoted with several scoops in traditional media, but not very often by TV4 – only once (online that is). Dagens Media (29), Expressen (23), Resumé (21), Aftonbladet (15) and Metro (15) are the media that most frequently mention Politikerbloggen.

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Swedish dailies look at blog links and mashups

Daily newspapers in southern Sweden will start to link articles to blog comments with the Twingly service. At least if Joakim Jardenberg gets his way. Jardenberg is Managing Director of Mindpark, a new development corporation owned by Bonniers in Skåne, Gota Media, Helsingborgs Dagblad and NWT.

– We should take the blogosphere seriously. SvD (Svenska Dagbladet), DN (Dagens Nyheter) and IDG have all seen positive effects of using Twingly, he tells Medievärlden.

Joakim Jardenberg also says he believes strongly in mashups with existing services developed by other sites like Google, Facebook and Wikipedia.

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Ljungkvist got citizen journalism award

A huge congratulations to my friend Magnus Ljungkvist who yesterday was awarded “Nyhetspriset 2007, Årets avslöjande”, a new citizen journalism award that was founded by the political blog Politikerbloggen and the PR agency Prime PR. Ljungkvist received 25,000 kronor for his articles that later led to the resignation of Sweden’s Minister for Trade, Maria Borelius. A series of negative articles took off after Magnus Ljungkvist revealed some startling facts about her and her husband’s income during the 90’s. Borelius only lasted a record short period of 8 days as Minister. More background here.

The Swedish tabloid Expressen got the prestigious journalism award Guldspaden 2006 for the same story, although they published their “scoop” after Ljungkvist.

Johan Larsson, the man behind blog portals like knuff.se, intressant.se and nyligen.se, also got an award yesterday for his efforts to build great services for the Swedish blogosphere.

Metrobloggen a success in trouble

Metro’s new blogging service Metrobloggen, which was launched on June 18, has made quite a splash in the blogosphere. The idea to pay bloggers half a cent (3 öre) per page view has lured some 2,300 bloggers to sign up in just three days, according to Dagens Media. But I get just a tad bit suspicious when the service has already closed for new sign-ups in order to expand the capacity. Who builds a system that can only handle 2,000+ users in this day of blog hysteria? I may be totally out of line here, but a more reasonable explanation could be that Metrobloggen hasn’t been able to sell enough ads on the service to finance the flood of users. In a comment to blogger Makan Amini, Mattias Nyman at Metrobloggen says that “Yes, we sell ads but we haven’t really started yet […]”. I would like to get answers to these questions to believe that there isn’t something fishy going on here.

– How many blogs was the system initally built to handle?
– What are the bottlenecks?
– Exactly what capacity is it that needs to be expanded and how long will this take?

All in all, Metrobloggen has done a pretty bad job PR wise. Most bloggers have focused on negative aspects in the user agreement, like:

– You need to have at least 5,000 page views per month to get paid.
– Metrobloggen can introduce a maximum level that a popular blog gets paid.
– Payments are done through a MasterCard with several limitations to it.
– Bloggers aren’t allowed to publish any other (graphic) ads on their blogs.
– Bloggers give Metro permission to use anything you write and publish it without giving you compensation.

Then there was the kerfuffle with a blog that aimed to raise a million kronor for the Swedish Red Cross, but Metrobloggen closed the blog down within 13 hours. I can understand some of the rationale behind closing it down, but the blogosphere isn’t pulling its punches. Makan Amini made a video about the whole thing and posted it to YouTube where it has been viewed at least 2,000 times.

Beas tankar also noticed some striking similarities between Metrobloggen’s icons and Blogger’s icons.

Now one of the “professional bloggers” that were engaged have decided to quit and return to its old blog, Konsumbloggen.

What was really a very good initiative has been given a luke warm reception in part due to bad PR tactics and a desire to own and control content.

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