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April 18, 2013

Guardian news editor Simon Rogers joins Twitter in US as first data editor

By Press Gazette

Guardian News and Media news editor Simon Rogers is leaving after 15 years with The Guardian to join Twitter in the US as its first data editor.

Rogers is a news editor for The Guardian and also edits the title's Datablog and Datastore online sections.

He is being replaced by former Wikileaks and Bureau of Investigative Journalism staffer James Ball who has been with The Guardian since 2011.

Here is the GNM announcement in full:

Guardian News & Media (GNM) today announced that James Ball – currently data journalist at the Guardian – has been appointed as data editor.

He replaces Simon Rogers who, after 15 years at the Guardian, is moving to the US to join Twitter as its first ever data editor.

James, who joined the Guardian in 2011, is one of the UK’s leading data journalists. He has worked on a number of high-profile stories at the Guardian, including the Guantanamo Files, Reading the Riots – which picked up multiple awards – Offshore Secrets, and the campaign against the extradition of Richard O'Dwyer.

Prior to joining the Guardian he was at the Bureau of Investigative Journalism where he was one of the team behind iraqwarlogs.com, which won the Amnesty International digital journalism award in 2011.

In his new role, James will run the Datastore site – one of the Guardian’s most popular resources. He will also be charged with embedding data journalism in the Guardian newsroom more widely, and will continue to work on investigative projects.

Alan Rusbridger, editor-in-chief, Guardian News & Media, said: ‘We're terrifically excited that James is taking over as data editor. He is a brilliant journalist who has already been centrally involved in some of the biggest data stories, both at the Guardian and before that at WikiLeaks and the Bureau of Investigative Journalism. I'm confident that he will keep the Guardian at the cutting edge of data journalism and put it at the centre of what we do.

“Simon has done an amazing job over the last decade helping to build the Guardian's reputation as a world leader in data journalism and it will be fascinating to see what he can do with the vast trove of data that he will have access to at Twitter.”

James Ball said: “The Guardian has built an amazing reputation for being at the vanguard of data journalism. I'm hugely excited to be taking that challenge forwards now, and looking at how we use data to both explain what's going on and to drive stories forwards."

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