Tag: entries

  • Amy Winehouse’s journal entries to be published in new book

    Amy Winehouse’s journal entries to be published in new book

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    A collection of Amy Winehouse’s previously unseen journal entries, handwritten lyrics and personal photos will be made public this summer.

    The late singer’s personal ephemera will be shared for the first time in Amy Winehouse: In Her Words, a new book published on 31 August by HarperCollins.

    Her parents Mitch and Janis Winehouse, who provided the foreword for the book, said in a statement: “This beautiful new collection of Amy’s notes and musings shows another side of Amy – her fun and witty side.

    “We wanted to share this with Amy’s fans so that they too can enjoy Amy, in her words.”

    The publication date is scheduled for two weeks before what would have been Winehouse’s 40th birthday. She died by an accidental alcohol overdose in July 2011, aged 27, after a string of public struggles with addiction and poor mental health.

    “To fully understand Amy Winehouse on what would have been her 40th birthday, this extremely personal and revealing book, filled with her private thoughts and emotions, uncovers the heart of the artist who dreamed big and cared deeply,” said Lisa Sharkey of HarperCollins. “We could not be prouder to publish this cherished keepsake and are grateful to her parents Janis and Mitch for sharing their daughter in this sensitive beautiful book.”

    All of the book’s royalties will be donated to the Amy Winehouse Foundation, with a promised minimum donation of £70,000. Since its establishment by Mitch Winehouse in 2011, the charity has supported vulnerable or disadvantaged young people through the provision of recovery housing, resilience training and music therapy workshops.

    In 2012, a year after the singer’s death, Mitch Winehouse published a memoir detailing his daughter’s life. Amy, My Daughter featured exclusive extracts from his own diary as well as unseen photos from their family album. All proceeds went towards the Foundation.

    A new film biopic of Winehouse’s life, Back to Black, is in production, directed by Sam Taylor-Johnson. While official promotional material has not yet been circulated, behind-the-scenes paparazzi images shared on Twitter sparked a backlash earlier this year, with some calling the project insensitive and exploitative.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Adani Group used paid editors to ‘clean’ its Wikipedia entries: Report

    Adani Group used paid editors to ‘clean’ its Wikipedia entries: Report

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    In a new development in the Adani-Hindenburg report, Wikipedia’s online newspaper The Signpost published a news report stating that Adani Group employed several undeclared paid editors to ‘clean its Wikipedia page’.

    The Signpost focuses on English Wikipedia, its sister projects, the Wikimedia Foundation, and the Wikimedia movement at large.

    It categorically says “no entirely on-Wiki investigation of a user’s edits can completely identify an editor’s name or employer. Even if the editor identifies themself as an employee of a company, they may be simply trying to embarrass the company…We can, however, examine the nearly complete record of edits made to Wikipedia and identify editors that are likely to be fraudulent, or that appear to be working together with other accounts.”

    Hindenburg Research’s founder Nate Anderson tweeted about the report on his page, “Of all things—now the Signpost, Wikipedia’s independent newspaper, is out w/ an article showing how Adani systematically manipulated its Wikipedia entries using sock puppet accounts, undisclosed paid editors & removing the evidence of conflicts of interest.”

    The article was written by a Wikipedia user called Smallbones. Smallbones has now been staged under the ‘disinformation report’ category.

    The article titled ‘The “largest con in corporate history”?’ states that Hindenburg accused the conglomerate of alleged financial fraud, stock price manipulation and money laundering.

    Signpost recently banned over 40 sockpuppets (a false online identity, typically created by a person or group in order to promote their own opinions or views) or undeclared paid editors who were employed to create a clean image of the industrialist, his family members including wife Priti Adani, son Karan Adani and nephew Pranav Adani as well Adani Group. Wikipedia reported that all 40 sockpuppet accounts have been banned.

    Signpost also reported that there was one person who activated from the company’s IP address and rewrote the article for ‘Adani Group’ entirely.

    “Many of them edited several of the articles and added non-neutral material or puffery. A declared paid editor, using a company IP address, completely rewrote the Adani Group article. Others removed warnings about conflict-of-interest editing. Some created articles by unusual methods that avoided Wikipedia’s quality control systems,” the report says.

    Another account called ‘Hatchens’ misused its power of position and edited seven of the nine articles edited by the Signpost team.

    The report also mentions about two single-purpose accounts or SPA – ‘Adanigrouponline’ and ‘Adani Group’- which were later blocked after they were found of editing and cleaning Adani’s image. The two SPAs were dedicated to rewriting or editing Adani-related articles as well as adding a detailed list of business units, and a list of awards, the report noted.



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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )