Thursday, June 29, 2006
Wednesday, June 21, 2006
Yahoo! to launch citizen video-journalist news service?
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Guardian Puts Web First: Or Do They?
But there's a good analysis at Poynter, which picks up on the line saying that some stories will be held back for print publication.
"It remains to be seen how many Guardian articles will be treated as exclusive,
and thereby go "paper first." ... the really interesting shift will come when
exclusive stories -- and I mean the prestigious exclusive stories -- are
launched first on the site."
The writer identifies "four distinct archetype models of publishing for exclusive stories:
- Value Model: Exclusive stories are published first wherever the audience is most valuable.
- Story Model: The exclusive story breaks in whichever channel is best suited according to that channel's strengths and weaknesses.
- Speed Model: Any story breaks in the fastest channel.
- Channel Model: A story follows the channel where it arose. (The good old nothing-has-changed model.)"
Monday, June 12, 2006
How to report a news story online
This really forces you to re-think some of the fundamental work processes of journalism. Open Source Reporting, for instance, involves you announcing the topic you wish to investigate, and inviting readers to "submit leads, tips, sources and ideas", with the potential benefits outweighing the potential loss of a scoop.
Friday, June 09, 2006
The four critiques of 'citizen journalism'
He sums up the objections in four areas:
- Protectionist ("they're not real journalists, but we are")
- Overbroad ("most of it's not intended to be journalism")
- Narrow ("Why only images and video?")
- Redundancy ("Journalists are citizens too")
It seems to me that the debate around the terminology (including the NUJ's much-ridiculed decision to prefer the term "witness contributors") is a moot one. Clearly the term has gained currency, however meaningless its constituent parts (yes, we're all citizens, so that part is redundant; and yes, much of the journalism was never intended to be so).
We could come up with alternative suggestions for years to come, but the essential point is this: people (generally) understand what you mean by 'citizen journalism', and it's nothing to do with its constituent parts - the phrase has taken on a life of its own, and it's too late to stop it.
Citizen journalism means articles, images, video, audio and interactive media produced by those not employed directly by news organisations to do so. That includes people lucky (or unlucky) enough to be able to take pictures or footage of a major event; it includes bloggers/podcasters/vodcasters writing/broadcasting about their areas of expertise (or not); it includes those writing for citizen journalism projects such as Ohmynews and Bayosphere, whether they publish journalism elsewhere or not; it includes alternative media projects such as IndyMedia; it even, if you want to go this far, includes people writing in to your letters page.
Now let's get onto the more important question: where's the good stuff?
Thursday, June 08, 2006
Why Blog Post Frequency Does Not Matter Anymore
For citizen journalists, however, the following points he make are particularly worth considering:
"#6: Frequent posting drives poor content quality – The pressure of daily posting drives many bloggers to re-purpose other bloggers’ content or give quick un-insightful comments on the news. Few bloggers have enough time (or expertise) to write daily thought leadership pieces, thus adding to the clutter. Some of the most insightful –and most quoted- marketing thought blogging leaders are actually infrequent posters, from Sam Decker to Charlene Li or Randi Baseler."#7: Frequent posting threatens the credibility of the blogosphere – as many bloggers re-purpose existing content under the pressure of daily posting, they do not take the time to do any sort of due diligence and conduct effective research. Errors snowball in the blogosphere as they spread from one blogger to the other. The collective wisdom of user generated content was supposed to provide an alternative to biased traditional media content – it is instead echoing the thoughts and biases of a few.
"#8 - Frequent posting will push corporate bloggers into the hands of PR agencies – As they struggle with bandwidth constraints as well as peer pressure to join the blogosphere, more and more companies will resort to partnering with their PR agencies to create blogs. The blogosphere will in turn lose some of its effectiveness and value."
Bradford newspaper starts online video bulletin
"The T&A TV News service is being updated with a new video news story every day and has already broken one big exclusive – the first interview of any kind with Ayaz Ali, the Bradford charity worker freed after 20 days in an Israeli prison following his arrest over alleged connections with terrorist organisations."
Wednesday, June 07, 2006
The Times joins the rush to newspaper TV
"Research shows a doubling of brand commitment when newspapers are added to a TV schedule. And that the brands most often recommended to a friend, or searched for online, or asked for at retailers, are those that are most heavily advertised. Anywhere."You can also read more on the Times itself, which expands:
"The service, called Times TV, will initially consist of news clips from third-party providers, but the newspaper plans to expand the service by encouraging its readers to contribute their own material — so long as it is newsworthy."
Monday, June 05, 2006
Bloggers - sell your wares
The article reports that bloggers will be able to "place a button on their website indicating an article is available for re-publication. Publishers then use the service to make a transaction earning them syndication rights to re-print the post. ... [The service is] working with contributors to bloggers network Nightcap Syndication, many of whom are already published journalists seeking commissions. The service will "actively push" members' work to newsdesks."
The article goes on to neatly summarise:
"The move is the latest in a wave of collaborations that illustrate the increasing value of blogs to printed media. The relaunched Guardian carries a daily blog opinion round-up inside its front page, BlogBurst provides pre-approved weblog articles to US newspaper websites, Associated Press last week began showing bloggers' commentary next to stories syndicated to its customers and the International Herald Tribune is to carry stories written by contributors to Korean citizen
journalism network OhmyNews."
Friday, June 02, 2006
Reporter's Guide to Online News Delivery
- A history of British online journalism (that refreshingly goes much earlier than 1994's Electronic Telegraph)
- How newspapers should make use of new media (by one of the best writers in the area, The Guardian's Simon Waldman)
- How journalists should adapt to new media
As if that wasn't enough, there are also interviews with OhMyNews' Oh Yeonho, Craigslist's Jim Buckmaster, and Google News' Krishna Bharat (PS: nice move to optimise the URLs for search engine rankings).
Online journalism junkies will also want to sign up for the Press Gazette journalism discussion website at http://discuss.aol.co.uk/journalism/home.asp and have their say when it goes live.
Thursday, June 01, 2006
Bylines for citizen journalists in IHT
and http://www.redherring.com/Article.aspx?a=17042&hed=Writing+Your+Own+News