Eh bien moi je vais faire l'inverse.
Je ne me suis jamais abonné et pour soutenir CI je vais le faire pour deux ans.
Il faut dénoncer le mépris des entreprises qui manipulent la presse qui se servent des canards pour assoir leur publicité.
Vive Chasseur dImages
meme la presse étrangère soutient CI...
Chasseur d’Images, Nikon’s new NDA rules and why such rules
Chasseur d’Images is a huge photography magazine in France. Their opinion, camera reviews and ratings are paramount to some of their readers which blindly rely on what’s printed in their pages. Photography manufacturers know that. Their offices are a bit far away West from Paris. They aren’t used getting a presentation of such an important camera as the D800 only the day before the camera is officially unveiled. They need more time. Tired of the new rules, they break the news today and give their readers what they know about the D800, while being aware of the big-bang that is going to induce.
But what are these new NDA rules ? Why such rules ?
Nikon did not appreciate the major leak on the D4 of last month. That leak occured in France as an other paper photography magazine made a terrible scheddule mistake and the January issue went out a bit too early. (The same issue as the Fuji X-Pro1 announcement and the Canon Pro-1 vs Epson Stylus Photo R3000 A3+ printers review) This mistake was not made on purpose but here we are… Japanese HQ did not like it at all and came up with new rules to avoid such leaks : journalists will have the information the day before the launch date. Nothing before. That’s it. This rule should be applied in entire Europe soon. But they started with France…
Nobody likes that. Journalists firts, as they don’t have enough time to prepare their articles and may have to delay their monthly magazine release date. Their readers, while they don’t know what happens backstage, don’t get the same level of quality on the articles they read, especially on the web. I know that Nikon executives, at least in Europe, are not very confortable with that that and their press agency ends up with a lot of extra paper work and a bunch of angry journalist. Nikon is one of the brand that pays a lot of attention to their customers and photographers opinion. They have tight relations with magazines and medias. Every body likes them. Their press staff is very stable and have developed a lot of friendships with journalists. This is Chasseur d’Image thing is going to put the fRench staff in an awkward situation with their European boss, Takumi Tsushida, the former Nikon France manager, but also with their Nippon offices. In the meantime, this incident may help Nikon France / Europe show their Japanese top management that these new NDA rules are both negative and not efficient.
Source :
http://www.photographydailynews.com/201 ... king-news/