40 posts categorized "journalism"

July 17, 2008

Dugg: PressThink: Migration Point for the Press Tribe | Jay Rosen

Jay Rosen explained on June 26, 2008, why he believes that in the new territory across the digital divide, hybrid forms of journalism, which combine properties of open (amateur) as well as closed (professional) editorial systems, will be the strongest.

(Apology: while I hope this doesn't constitute a breach of "fair use", I struggle to paraphrase Jay's essay in a more compact fashion).

"(...) The First Amendment says to all Americans: you have a right to publish what you know, to say what you think. That right used to be abstractly held. Now it is concretely held because the power to publish has been distributed to the population at large.

(...) The land that newsroom people have been living on—also called their business model—no long supports their best work. So they have come to a reluctant point of realization: that to continue on, to keep the professional press going, the news tribe will have to migrate across the digital divide and re-settle itself on terra nova, new ground. Or as we sometimes call it, a new platform.

(...) And like reluctant migrants everywhere, the people in the news tribe have to decide what to take with them, when to leave, where to land. They have to figure out what is essential to their way of life, and which parts were well adapted to the old world but may be unnecessary or a handicap in the new. (...) This creates an immediate crisis for the elders of the tribe, who have always known how to live.

(...) Today, the press is shared territory. It has pro and amateur zones. (...) Part of it is a closed system—and closed systems are good at enforcing editorial controls—the other part is an open system.

(...) Open systems are good at participation, community formation, and locating intelligence anywhere in the network. They are good at sharing, and getting good at surfacing the good stuff. The two editorial systems don’t work the same way. One does not replace the other. They are not enemies, either. We need to understand a lot better how they can work together.

(...) And that is where the idea of pro-am journalism comes from. I think the hybrid forms will be the strongest—openness with some controls, amateurs with some pros—but that means we have to figure out how these hybrid forms work. (...)"

read more | digg story

July 09, 2008

Dugg: PressThink: Filter the Best Stuff to the Front Page: A Demo | Jay Rosen

Jay Rosen wrote on June 16, 2008:

"(...) OffTheBus and NewsTrust.Net ran a little test two weeks ago. It's a crowdsourced week in review feature for high quality John McCain coverage, June 2 to 9. Here's the background and results. (...)"

What I find more interesting about this blog post than the content of the experiment or indeed the ensuing US-centric political flame war in the comments is the concept of the experiment, as well as Jay's reference to Dave Winer's rivers of news, and the concern that filtering may not keep pace.

(...) The mission of NewsTrust—it’s nonprofit and non-partisan—is to be a “guide to good journalism.” The site offers a “range of tools to help you find and share” the best work.

(...) Sites like NewsTrust take it for granted that expansion in media space is a good thing. But filtering and forwarding systems must keep pace.

(...) In this connection, I point you to NewsJunk.Com, a new site. Dave Winer, with some co-conspirators, created a river of news intended for serious users of political coverage. It’s designed to be radically inclusive and selective. (And fast.)

(...) Ethan Zuckerman, co-founder of Global Voices Online—a “find new voices” project that’s working—said he was concerned that tools to organize the flow and make it practical for people to use were not keeping pace with expanded opportunities to publish.

(...) For a more intelligent and flexible filter we can trust in pro editors to adapt to the Web. We can turn to bloggers (they edit the Web for us and always have.) Or we can try the participation route, also called social media. (...)"

read more | digg story

June 16, 2008

Dugg: PressThink: Introducing NewAssignment.Net | Jay Rosen

Jay Rosen wrote on July 25, 2006 about his idea for NewAssignment.Net ("an experiment in open-source reporting"):

"(...) Assignments are open sourced. They begin online. Reporters working with smart users and blogging editors get the story the pack wouldn't, couldn't or didn't. (...) There's $10,000 to test it, courtesy of Craig Newmark.

(...) The site uses open source methods to develop good assignments and help bring them to completion; (...)"

read more | digg story

Dugg: Craigslist's unorthodox path | The Boston Globe

The Boston Globe ran a background piece about Craig Newmark of Craigslist' fame (Wikipedia: Craigslist).

"(...) Newmark, who is customer service representative and founder of Craigslist Inc., didn't start the website as a business, but it has grown into an utterly unusual one. (...)"

"(...) Peter Zollman, founding principal of Classified Intelligence (...) says Craigslist is a for-profit business "run like a nonprofit."

(...) "There's nothing noble or altruistic or pious about what we're doing," [Craig] says. "Once you make enough money and provide for your future, it's more satisfying to change the world a little bit." (...)"

On journalism:

"(...) "Has Craigslist caused newspapers pain? Yes. It's called capitalism," Zollman says. "They came along with a better mousetrap, and people started using it."

Newmark is personally interested in exploring the potential for the Internet to support new kinds of journalism, whether produced by professional investigative reporters or amateurs. "We need investigative reporters to ask tough questions," he says.

Among the organizations he supplies with moral or financial support are the Sunlight Foundation, which aims to improve access to congressional information; NewAssignment.net, which promotes "open source" reporting; and ProPublica, which is building a team of investigative journalists. (...)"

(Via David Weinberger)

read more | digg story

June 09, 2008

Dugg: PressThink: When Mayhill Fowler Met Bill Clinton at the Rope Line | Jay Rosen

Jay Rosen writes:

"(...) "Trust me because I mask my true feelings about the matter" is not an inherently better way to journalize or gain cred. "Trust me because I show you what my true feelings on the matter are..." can also work." And if it has pro and amateur wings maybe the press can fly again. (...)"

Interesting tale about identification in (citizen?) journalism. While surely unintended, what springs to mind is Günther Wallraff's undercover journalism. (see Wallraff's entry on the Wikipedia)

But also, the debate about "being transparent about your biases" is interesting in this context. In the old school, the point is to be as informative as possible about the interviewee and their biases, not about the journalist. It's altogether not that straightforward...

read more | digg story

May 29, 2008

Dugg: Video-interview of Rupert Murdoch | Walt Mossberg, Kara Swisher / D6

"(...) video highlights from the first part of the D6 interview of Rupert Murdoch, Chairman and CEO, News Corporation, conducted by conference co-hosts Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher. (...)"



(part 1 - 07:00 minutes)

Asked by Mossberg if newspapers have much of a future left, Murdoch says:
"(...) Over the last 10 or 15 years they've made every economy possible in production, with computers and so on, but not in journalism. Now they have to turn to journalism.
(...) Every story in the (...) [Wall Street] Journal currently is, on average, touched or edited by eight different people. That is ridiculous. (...)"
(part 2 - 6:15 minutes)

read more | digg story

May 20, 2008

Dugg: Dan Gillmor: Principles of a New Media Literacy | Publius Project

"(...) In this emergent global conversation, which has created a tsunami of information, what can we trust?

How we govern ourselves on the Web depends in significant ways on the answers. To get this right, we’ll have to re-think, or at least re-apply, some older cultural norms in distinctly modern ways.

It comes down, in significant ways, to some principles, both for media consumers and creators. They add up to a 21st Century notion of what we once called “media literacy.” But media literacy has generally lacked the kind of participatory piece that is so essentially a part of digital media. (...)

  • Be skeptical of absolutely everything.
  • But don’t be equally skeptical of everything.
  • Understand and learn media techniques.
  • Ask more questions.

(...)"

read more | digg story

Continue reading "Dugg: Dan Gillmor: Principles of a New Media Literacy | Publius Project" »

April 17, 2008

Dugg: Reuters' "mojo" experiments with Nokia | Jemima Kiss

"(...) Reuters' journalists are experimenting with the potential of mobile journalism through a project with Nokia's research centre. (...)"

read more | digg story

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March 08, 2008

Dugg: Blogging as a Form of Journalism | J.D. Lasica / OJR

"(...) Weblogs offer a vital, creative outlet for alternative voices (...)"

When cleaning up my paper (sic!) archive the other day, I came across a printed article in two parts, by J.D. Lasica for the Online Journalism Review (OJR), published on May 24 and 31, 2001. Just before I'm throwing this away for the benefit of the paperless office, I'll quote what I highlighted back then:

From: 'Blogging as a Form of Journalism', May 24, 2001:

Continue reading "Dugg: Blogging as a Form of Journalism | J.D. Lasica / OJR" »

March 04, 2008

'Channels' does not sufficiently describe the dynamics of distributed online conversations

Interesting conversation about "channels" developing here with Bill French.

Totallly agree that people create channels in efforts to create order from chaos. The way I used "channels" in my post on 'The End of Channels?' was with the traditional notion of, if you will, media titles, in mind: TV/radio channels or shows, zines, newspapers, websites, blogs, forums...

I suppose what they have in common is that they all have a name, an address, and usually a more or less defined scope. They are often furnished with editorial policies and they may be designed to further particular political or commercial interests. Also, most often they have a brand identity.

But if we look passed the keeper of the gate and over the garden wall, I am willing to accept that channels - as in "meta-handlers" - are not necessarily disappearing, but rather evolving into new forms, such as distributed conversations connected by tags.

The point I am trying to make is that old-style channels are designed to contain conversations within them. Sure, they are helpful as meta-handlers in creating order. And, agreed, the new meta-handlers are facilitated by social media, e.g. through tags. However, I hesitate to go as far as to call those tag-connected (micro-content contributions to) conversations, ehm, "channels".

In Dutch, we use the same word for channel and canal: "kanaal". So it won't surprise you that I quite strongly associate the word channel with a human-made, one-directional, controlled flow.

Bill writes:

"(...) People tend to prefer the benefits that channels provide - they create the notion of a "meta-handle" that makes it easier for them to understand, know about, and share. (...)"

Well, I won't deny that people find channels convenient. Still, to me, even "virtual channel" or "conversation channel" doesn't quite sufficiently express the dynamic nature of distributed online conversations. These conversations do not have ONE name, ONE address or even a defined scope.

Tags are useful in searching and navigating these conversations, - in particular because they add social filtering to the mix - and "tag cloud" is a metaphor that helps people venture into the Web 2.0 era.

And yet, even tag clouds cannot contain or accurately scope conversations. The Web, and in particular the social media web, makes our culture and economy more "probabilistic", as Chris Anderson puts it in The Long Tail.

So, why not liberate the conversations from their channels and simply call them "conversations"?

(See also: 'www.josschuurmans.com: 'The concept of "conversation" as in the Long Tail of Conversations')

Continue reading "'Channels' does not sufficiently describe the dynamics of distributed online conversations" »

February 22, 2008

Dugg: Social Media Will Change Your Business | BusinessWeek

BusinessWeek's Stephen Baker and Heather Green have updated their article 'Blogs Will Change Your Business' from May, 2005, (which I dissected here) to include observations of social media over the past three years.

It's a nine-pager, so I'll read it on my commute one of these days before drawing any conclusions. However, I already know that one of my posts that I will compare this against, is: 'The End of Channels?', which has this summary:

The three aspects of social media that I'd like to view as qualitative departures from the past are: (1) 'The Dilution of Channels' in that online conversations happen all over the place; (2) 'The Wisdom of the Crowd', social software helping people navigate their way through online conversations; and (3) the participatory and co-creational nature of social media.

read more | digg story

Continue reading "Dugg: Social Media Will Change Your Business | BusinessWeek" »

February 08, 2008

Dugg: Andrew Keen is the Anti-Chris

In this podcast Moira Gunn speaks with author Andrew Keen, who claims that today's Internet is killing our culture. With descriptions like "dystopia", "Orwellian nightmare", and "tyranny of the amateurs", Keen explicitly disagrees with Chris Anderson on the virtues of the Long Tail and the abundance of free content.

Anderson's more optimistic views on emerging economies of abundance and the business of "free" are well captured in another podcast on IT Conversations from June 2007, as well as in his keynote at the Nokia World event in Amsterdam, in December 2007 (which I blogged about earlier today).

Keen describes Web 2.0 as a stage in the development of the Internet in which businesses attempt to build revenue models around user-generated content, whereas during Web 1.0 businesses explored the Internet as a new distribution channel for their existing, professionally produced content.

read more | digg story

Continue reading "Dugg: Andrew Keen is the Anti-Chris" »

February 06, 2008

My top-8 podcasts of all times

Admittedly, I'm hooked on the Conversations Network :-)

In fact, surprised myself by having such a strong focus on technology in the top-3. But the truth is, these topics will have a huge impact on our future.

1. Pop!Tech 2004: Carolyn Porco, Cassini Science Imaging Team Leader: 'Explorer's Club'

"(...) Cassini Imaging Central Laboratory for Operations (CICLOPS) has been focused on Saturn since early 2004 as the Cassini spacecraft approached its orbit around the planet. (...) The icy moon Enceladus contains fissures that suggest tectonics, the south pole is especially warm and has signatures of organic material. (...) The other moon, Titan, is where the Huygens probe landed in January 2005. (...) the Titan moon may give us a significant glimpse of what the Earth was like before living organisms. (...) Lastly Carolyn shares some of her views on science and spirituality. (...)"

2. Pop!Tech 2004: Joel Garreau, Journalist, The Garreau Group: 'Human Nature'

"(...) "Are we fundamentally changing human nature in our lifetime?" Joel Garreau thinks that yes we will be...over the next twenty years. What's driving this? (...)" GRIN: genetics, robotics, Information and nanotech.

3. Tech Nation: Sandra Blakeslee, Contributor, NY Times

"(...) Dr. Moira Gunn speaks with NY Times contributor Sandra Blakeslee, about neuroscience, and how it is revealing how our brains map out our physical bodies. (...)"

4. Pop!Tech 2004: Ben Saunders, Solo Explorer

"(...) On his latest expedition in February 2004, Ben set out from Cape Arktichevsky in Northern Siberia in an attempt to be the first person in the world to make a complete crossing of the frozen Arctic Ocean in a 1,240-mile journey ending in Canada, solo and unsupported. (...) After experiencing first hand conditions described by NASA and Environment Canada as 'the worst on record', Ben has raised international awareness regarding the extent to which climate change is affecting the Arctic. He noticed conditions that were up to 15 degrees warmer than in 2000, and had to negotiate vast, unprecedented areas of thinning ice and open water. (...)"

5. Pop!Tech 2004: Doug Rushkoff: 'Renaissance Prospects'

"(...) Douglas Rushkoff analyzes, writes and speaks about the way people, cultures, and institutions create, share, and influence each other's values. He sees "media" as the landscape where this interaction takes place, and "literacy" as the ability to participate consciously in it. (...)"

6. O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference 2005:
Chris Anderson, Wired Magazine: 'Economics of the Long Tail'

"(...) he explores the economics of the long tail and shares his insight on the effects it might have on future business models. Chris discusses how distribution networks like Amazon, iTunes and Netflix have shown that the right side of the curve which forms millions of niches can be as big a market as the chart toppers. (...)"

7. O'Reilly Digital Democracy Teach-In:
Gatekeepers No More? The Grassroots Challenges the Journalistic Priesthood

"(...) Professional journalists have been the chief gatekeepers of news about political campaigns and governmental operations. That's changing, fast, as the Internet and other technical tools open up a variety of avenues for other participants in the information process. (...)" With Dan Gillmor, Jeff Jarvis and Jay Rosen.

8. Pop!Tech 2005: Sam Harris, Author, The End of Faith: 'The Future of Ideas'

"(...) Sam Harris debates many points relating to religion, particularly the dangers that can be brought about by religious extremists -- in any faith -- around the world (...)"

Runners-up:

Clayton Christensen, Professor, Harvard Business School: 'Capturing the Upside'

"(...) Through his recent research, Professor Christensen has developed a set of theories to help guide managers as they seek to answer seven critical questions when trying to build new growth businesses, again and again: (...)"

Web 2.0 Conference: Lawrence Lessig

"(...) By presenting media remixing as the "creative writing" of the future he highlights the dangers of moving from a free culture where discussion and free speech are taken for granted, to a permission culture where permission to reproduce media messages will depend on the use of that media. (...)"

SDForum: Lawrence Lessig: 'The Comedy of the Commons'

"(...) Lessig (...) charts a history of IP, which helps him highlight the difference between physical-property law, which can result in a tragedy of the commons, and intellectual-property law, which can result in a comedy of the commons. (...)"

Eben Moglen, Director, Software Freedom Law Center: 'Freedom Businesses Protect Privacy'

"(...) Few, if any, presentations at conferences in the coming years will manage to combine the intellectual depth and delivery skills shown by Software Freedom Law Center director Eben Moglen in this penetrating analysis of privacy and technology. (...)"

Tech Nation: Dr. Steven Miles, Author & Professor, University of Minnesota

"(...) Dr. Moira Gunn talks to Dr. Steven Miles, the Minnesota MD who studied tens of thousands of documents released by the Department of Defense about US military prisons in Iraq. Included were those from the notorious Abu Ghurayb prison near Baghdad. What Dr. Miles found was extremely disturbing. (...)"

MeshForum 2005: Jamais Cascio: 'Participatory Panopticon'

Jamais Cascio's 'Participatory Panopticon', a presentation at the MeshForum 2005 Event held in Chicago, Il, May 1-4, 2005 and podcast via IT Conversations, takes the "memory prosthesis" concept of Nokia Lifeblog a few steps further.

"(...) [S]elf-proclaimed freelance world-builder, [Jamais] has a bold vision for the future. He calls it the Participatory Panopticon, and it spells the end of privacy and the end of secrecy. While personal privacy is eroding, the ability of those in power to lie, cheat, and steal is also becoming increasingly impaired. (...)"

Tech Nation: Greenfield v. Kurzweil: 'Biotech: Will it Save Us or Hurt Us?'

"(...) Baroness Susan Greenfield, Director of the Royal Institution of Great Britain, debates Ray Kurzweil, one of America’s most prolific inventors and a futuristic thinker in his own right. Will biotechnology save us? Or hurt us? (...)"

Pop!Tech 2005: Susan Blackmore, Author and lecturer: 'Memes'

"(...) Memetics is an intellectually rich but controversial field which seeks to explain how our minds and cultures are designed by natural selection acting on replicating information, just as organisms evolve by natural selection acting on genes. (...)"

Continue reading "My top-8 podcasts of all times" »

September 10, 2007

The End of Channels?

Summary: The two aspects of social media that I'd like to view as qualitative departures from the past are: (1) 'The Dilution of Channels' in that online conversations happen all over the place; and (2) 'The Wisdom of the Crowd', social software helping people navigate their way through online conversations.

[ADDITION, October 26, 2007: I've added one more charasteristic to the social media mix: (3) 'Participation'. See also the addition towards the end of this post]

My local professional communicators' association wishes to pick my brain on "social media". So it's about time I captured the concept in writing.

The media have, of course, always been "social". Any form of human communication (where there are messages sent by senders and processed by receivers) is social. The Internet is a disruptive technology that accelerates certain properties of everything social, in particular human communication, including what we call "the media". In other words, to some extent "social media" is a pleonasm.

Also the Internet has always been a social space.

For homework I Googled the term. The Wikipedia entry, Robert Scoble's entry, and some other references I found seem to position "social media" mainly as something that has more "capacity" than "traditional media": online means faster and more immediate, easier to interact with, easy to copy and share, unlimited space...

Quantitative or qualitative?

Are we really talking about quantitative differences only? Or should we make some qualitative distinctions as well?

Continue reading "The End of Channels?" »

July 25, 2007

The Cluetrain Manifesto on the rebirth of conversations

IMHO, the Cluetrain Manifesto is still the most visionary book, indeed a feast of recognition, of how the Internet is accelerating the shift from broadcast to search, from push to pull, from controlled messaging to open conversation.

From where I stand, the three most relevant themes in the Cluetrain are:

  1. The significance of conversations, and how the Internet is bringing them back.
  2. Why and how businesses need to change as a result.
  3. The power of storytelling.

Below is my collection of references from the book, with an emphasis on the first theme, the rebirth of conversations.

[UPDATE, July 29, 2007: Doc Searls refers to my excerpts from the cluetrain on The Doc Searls Weblog:  Saturday, July 28, 2007. In response, I submit that we should combine the teachings of the Cluetrain and the Long Tail theory to be able to engage in the conversations that matter most to us.]

Continue reading "The Cluetrain Manifesto on the rebirth of conversations" »

February 23, 2006

Jay Rosen: blogs reverse the rational-emotional news paradigm

As kentbye reported on the Echo Chamber Project site, in a session on journalism at the BloggerCon III conference back in November, 2004, which was podcast by ITconsersations, Jay Rosen talked about how people start with the emotional passion of opinions and then go and research the facts -- as opposed to the traditional paradigm of facts -> analysis -> opinion.

Indeed an interesting observation when comparing blogging and traditional news reporting. It's worth capturing Jay's quote as recorded by kentbye:

"(...)JAY ROSEN: I want to put one idea in people's heads. The great thing about blogs for journalists is that it is "denaturalizing" their world. It's making their assumptions clear for the first time.

So in the mainstream journalism world, it is natural -- it is obvious -- that the first thing you need is reliable information -- news. And from that we can have analysis. And then further down in the transaction, there's opinion.

And so a well-rounded information diet begins with facts and news, moves to analysis, and later on opinion -- which is also the stages a journalist goes through in their career. You start off being a reporter. Maybe we'll let you do some analysis pieces later on. And eventually you become a columnist.

What blogging is doing is showing that that's just a convention. It's just a convenient way of dividing up the world. And while it may be true that people get their facts first, and then they kind of want some analysis, and then they move onto opinion. It also works in the reverse.

Lots of people get engaged first through argument. And it's argument that causes them to look for information. And to me this is one of the most valuable things about blogging. It's denaturalizing the journalist's view of how the world works. Because a lot of people want to enter into the public world through the eyes and the arguments and the ideas of bloggers. And it's from there that they go in search of news stories and information.

And not only is that just as good a way of getting the news, but it even might be more natural. (...)"

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February 13, 2006

Dan Gillmor speaks at Harvard

Dan Gillmor speaks at Harvard University this evening. In summary:

"(...) As technology collides with journalism, democratizing the tools of media creation and distribution, news is evolving from a lecture into a conversation. As individuals become more engaged with the news and its creation, they will be taking steps beyond simply being better informed -- a journey toward enhanced civic activism as well. This talk, the first in a series of four, explains recent developments in grassroots media and why they are so important to the notion of an informed citizenry. (...)"

Since this is so spot-on, Dan, can we please hear it as a podcast?

Somewhat related on www.josschuurmans.com:

Continue reading "Dan Gillmor speaks at Harvard" »

December 21, 2005

Editorial codes from Wikipedia

Wikipedia's entry on Journalism ethics and standards is an excellent starting point in collecting the building blocks of a professional code for an editorial team that runs intra-organizational, online news and information channels.

A corporate communications team does not serve the general public. It does not represent the Fourth Estate, journalism as a pillar of democracy. Instead, its success is measured by how well it manages to bring across relevant news and information to employees, how well it facilitates engagement and dialogue, how well it stimulates online discourse, information sharing and collaboration. Ultimately, it reports to top management, who in turn are accountable to owners and investors.

Independent public media focus on what their readers, viewers and listeners expect and appreciate. They publish with the interests of the audience in mind, rather than the interests of their sources. Wich is not to say that public media wouldn't need to treat their sources with respect.

Internal communications professionals constantly need to weigh the interests of their sources against those of their audience. Both sources and audience are their customers.

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December 19, 2005

Call for best-practice codes of internal communications

I'm planning to draft an editorial code for intra-organizational, online communications channels. While taking inspiration from journalism, I wonder if there are any examples of corporate editorial codes around that emphasize the importance of credibility through objectivity and transparency.

December 15, 2005

Thesis: Redactiestatuten van de Vlaamse Dagbladen

Zoals ik in een eerdere entry aangaf, ben ik op zoek naar inspirerende redactiestatuten (Zie ook: Gevraagd: best-practice redactiestuten voor interne bedrijfscommunicatie).

Een zoekaktie met Google levert onder andere de afdstudeer-thesis "Redactiestatuten van de Vlaamse Dagbladen" van Tom De Voeght op.

"(...) er bestaat in Vlaanderen nog wel een lijn tussen het dagblad als bedrijf en het dagblad als objectieve waarnemer. Maar die lijn is erg dun en lijkt sterk te eroderen (...)", concludeert Tom.

Hij haalt in zijn werk ook Het Nederlandse Model-Redactiestatuut aan:

"(...) Sinds 1977 legt de CAO voor dagbladjournalisten de verplichting tot een redactiestatuut op. Alle dagbladuitgeverijen kennen een statuut voor hoofdredactie en redactie, dat de doelstellingen en de identiteit van de krant omschrijft, en de onderlinge verhoudingen regelt tussen hoofdredactie, redacteuren en directie. Dit statuut maakt ook deel uit van de arbeidscontracten van alle journalisten in vaste dienst. (...)"

Maar zelfs een verplicht redactiestatuut biedt uiteindelijk ook in Nederland weinig garanties voor redactionele onafhankelijkheid:

Continue reading "Thesis: Redactiestatuten van de Vlaamse Dagbladen" »

December 13, 2005

Aanzet tot een best-practice redaktiestatuut voor interne communicatie

Ik ben op zoek naar voorbeelden van redaktiestatuten, die kunnen dienen als inspiratie voor een nieuwsredactie op een afdeling interne bedrijfscommunicatie. Zowel redaktiestatuten uit de journalistiek alsook redaktiestatuten uit de intra-organisatorische communicatie zijn interessant.

VillaMeida.nl, de website van de Nederlandse Vereniging van Journalisten, biedt een aantal voorbeelden van redactiestatuten.

De BBC heeft een Royal Charter. Dat is niet het meest praktische voorbeeld voor ons doel.

Hierbij een aanzet:

Continue reading "Aanzet tot een best-practice redaktiestatuut voor interne communicatie" »

December 06, 2005

Still looking for the Truth, anyone?

Journalism is facing big-time challenges these days. Since the end of the bi-polar world order, and with the advent of the new global economy, commercial interests seems to have caught up with political interests as the main source of pressure that journalists are struggling to resist.

I just hope Online Journalism Review is not only preaching to the converted when it states:

We believe that standards used in traditional media can and should be applied online. Journalism ethics, developed over centuries, help keep a line between commercial and editorial functions -- to help maintain a publication’s credibility and trustworthiness. An individual or organization that lacks veracity loses its role as a reliable truth teller, whether on the Web, in print or on the airwaves.

At the same time we also believe that traditional journalists can learn from online writers and publishers. Journalism must engage the communities it serves, soliciting information from readers while reporting it back to them. The Internet provides an unmatched forum to enable such interactivity and we welcome honest attempts to use it in the pursuit, and publication, of the truth.

(...)

We want to identify who is best serving the public on the Web and who, hiding in the cloak of journalism, belongs in different garb. We want to support the truth tellers, label the entertainers and expose those who would let excess commercial interests sway their judgment. We analyze new technology and assess how it affects journalism -- who is using it best, who is perverting its intent.

Addressing journalism ethics, as well as offering help in hands-on reporting practice, this site may prove a good source for established journalist, grassroots reporters and media consumers alike.

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November 30, 2005

Useful writing advice on Peg Boyle's 'Waking Up Writing'

Peg Boyle's blog, 'Waking Up Writing', offers useful references, reviews, insights, tips and tricks to do with writing for the web. Some of her entries are really stuff that matters.

For example:

Tools for writers (November 7, 2005)
Narrative voice: Tell a story (November 3, 2005)
Blog usability rules (October 27, 2005)
General guidelines for Web writers (June 7, 2005)
Create white space (May 23, 2005)

This all reminds me of Ann Wylie's workshops on "Storytelling" and "Writing for the Web" that I have had the privilege to attend. Ann sends around a catchy newsletter and her workshops are truly engaging.

However, it's very refreshing to see Peg offering virtually the same quality content, and more of it, on her blog. And it's free for all.

Continue reading "Useful writing advice on Peg Boyle's 'Waking Up Writing'" »

November 29, 2005

Steve Crescenzo's worst corporate BS headlines

Painful anecdotical evidence of corporate excrement of adult male cattle on Steve Crescenzo's 'Corporate Hallucinations' blog: 'The worst of the worst of the worst' (headlines).

"In my C.R.A.P. (Corporate Rhetoric Awards Program) Column for Ragan’s Corporate Writer and Editor this month, I asked readers to vote for the worst corporate headline of all time," Steve writes. His blog visitors can now offload their own.

Continue reading "Steve Crescenzo's worst corporate BS headlines" »

November 23, 2005

8 steps to better researched blog entries

Summary: Here's a simple methodology for creating well-researched blog entries, following the eight steps of: (1) topic definition, (2) source selection, (3) research, (4) writing, (5) context, (6) publishing, (7) marketing, (8) learnings.

There is a body of opinion stating that "blogging is not journalism". Well, I'd go as far as to say that "not all blogging is journalism", but some of it is.

Equally, not all MSM (mainstream media) content is journalism, either. Even though some of it is labeled and presented as such. Yet, all blogging and all MSM content is publishing.

"Journalism" is rather a qualification to published content. Published content that is a result of "journalism" meets certain quality criteria. Certain functional, editorial and ethical standards. Wether it is packaged and distributed through newspapers, cable tv, blogs or podcasts is secundary.

One very practical issue I've had to be aware of is duplication. Conversations in the blogosphere move very fast and I've sometimes found myself starting to write a blog entry and finding out half-way that the topic I was addressing was being discussed already in the blogosphere in great detail. In other words, I hadn't done my homework.

So I figure it might be useful to establish a simple methodology for creating well-researched blog entries. Roughly, this method would consist of the following eight steps:

Continue reading "8 steps to better researched blog entries" »

October 25, 2005

PressThink: the ideas that journalists work within

Pressthink_150x70"I am a press critic, an observer of journalism's habits, and also a writer trying to make sense of the world," Jay Rosen, Associate Professor and former chairman (1999-2005) of New York University's Department of Journalism, writes in an introduction to his blog, PressThink.

"(...) I am interested in the ideas about journalism that journalists work within, and those they feel they can work without. I try to discover the consequences in the world that result from having the kind of press we do.
(...)
"The supremacy of the "one to many" media system has ended, and vastly different patterns are emerging.
(...)
"Today we say media instead of "the press." But I don't recommend it. I think it was a mistake when we began to do that-- call the people who were the press something else, more modern, abstract, inclusive, elastic, and of course more commercial, The Media. This is a habit we imported into our national language, but nations can get that kind of thing wrong.
(...)
"The institution dates from the age when printing was all there was of the "mass" media. Press comprehended all of media then, but that of course was centuries ago. Today, it echoes with "freedom of the press," which is connected to free speech, which is basic to free citizens.
(...)
"So the press is a backward glancing term. To me that's what's great about it. It points back to the history of struggle for press liberty, to the long rise of public opinion, and of course to the Constitution, a source from which The Media try to draw legitimacy. But the First Amendment actually speaks of the press. It doesn't mention media. Anyone could, but then almost no one does, uphold "freedom of the media" as a great right-- worth defending and even dying for. (...)"

PressThink seems as good a place as any to start listening to "the conversation" about journalism in the third millennium.

Somewhat related on www.josschuurmans.com:

October 06, 2005

The Finns, a nation of shoplifters

Today, Helsingin Sanomat (paper version, page A16) ran a remarkable little story which claimed that the Finns, together with the Brits, are the most "efficient" shoplifters in Europe.

It's a real pity that the term "efficient" was not further elaborated on.

Finns happen to view themselves generally as an honest and uncorruptable people, the latter being recently re-affirmed by the Word Economic Forum's Global Competitiveness Report (See previous entry: 'Finland again most competitive').

What could "efficient" possibly mean? Is it measured by the accumulated value of shoplifted bounty? Is it expressed by the number of shoplifters per capita? The average age at which a proud Finnish boy or girl starts getting serious about shoplifting? The failure ratio of shoplifting attempts?

According to the article, the most honest shoppers are the Swiss, while the Brits have shoplifted worth of 5.27 billion euros last year.

If this piece of "news" was to bear any substance, and the Finns would now be collectively "caught in the act", what a scoop that would be! And what an uproar it would cause.

No first-hand source mentioned; distributed via STT and Reuters.