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Apr 03 2008



Study show BN lost media war

Posted by poobalan at 3:05 am under BornInMalaysia, TechStuff | | View blog reactions


The study did not indicate how the respondents were chosen, data collection method, and number of respondent for each age group. But if the study is to be accepted, then it means nearly 2/3 of those aged between 21 and 40 would have anti- views. Added with the probability that this group would have high mobility (thus able to convey things they saw/read to more people) as compared to those in their 50s or 60s, the did a terrible mistake by overlooking the Internet.

I also doubt that the opposition had more than 7500 blogs and websites way back in year 2000. Blogs became popular from year 2002 onwards throughout the world. Maybe the Reformasi movement in late 1990s would have given birth to large number of free-hosted websites, but 7500? Looks a bit of a stretch. And how can government just have 3?

Study shows why lost war

source

KUALA LUMPUR: Barisan Nasional’s apathy towards the use of the Internet was a major contributor to its losses in the recent general election, a new study revealed. The study by Zentrum Future Studies Malaysia, conducted from Feb 20 to March 5 and involving 1,500 respondents aged between 21 and 50, showed that the alternative had a big influence on voters.

Universiti Malaya Studies department senior lecturer Dr Abu Hassan Hasbullah said in the recent election, lost in the “information war” due to its misjudgment on the importance of the alternative . “Young people are relying more on these new alternative rather than the conventional ones like newspapers and television,” he said at a forum themed “Society and in the 2008 Election” yesterday.

In the study, 64.5 per cent of those aged from 21 to 30 years trusted blogs and online for reliable information compared with 23.1 per cent who relied on the television and only 12.4 per cent on newspapers.
Of those between 31 and 40 years, 61.7 per cent believed that the information in the blogs and online was true while 23.5 trusted the television and 14.8 per cent the newspapers.

But the older generation, those who are from 41 to 50 years old, seemed to trust the traditional more than the new .

“Realising how powerful the new is, the opposition parties have used the opportunity since 1998 when the Internet started to penetrate the country. “In the mid 2000, the opposition had more than 7,500 blogs and websites while the government had only three,” said Abu Hassan who is also a researcher for the study.

Newspaper columnist Datuk Johan Jaafar felt there was a need to have a critical thinking to deal with these new modern . “This is a new influence that we need to carefully think of,” he said.

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