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Gaming news site CVG adopts adaptive design

Journalism.co.uk - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 12:04
CVG is the first of Future's titles to launch an adaptive site, which scales to fit the screen size the site is viewed on    
Categories: Extern nieuws

The Supreme Court Case Looming Over Angelina Jolie’s Breast-Cancer Column

Apache.be - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 11:58
De column van Jolie komt aan de vooravond van een ruling door het Amerikaans Hooggerechtshof over de patentering van genen, waaronder de met succes gepatenteerde genen BRCA1 en BRCA2, gelinkt met borstkanker.
Categories: Extern nieuws

Walking Fish. A Talk With Mathew Ingram

European Journalism Observatorium - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 11:38

“Teaching the fish how to walk: five things old media can learn from new media” is the title of the keynote speech given by Mathew Ingram, Canadian technology writer and the keynote speaker at the International Festival of Journalism held in Perugia on 26th April (for the full video click here).

Ingram sets out five key points through which he tells the story of our days and illustrates what the media, journalists and, above all, editors must and can do to maintain their readership. They are summed up as: 1) Be open. Practice collaborative, transparent journalism. 2) Give credit. Always refer to and credit sources. 3) Be human. Close the gap between reporter and reader .4)Accept news is a process, not a product.5) Be focused. Be more direct in guiding readers.

The European Journalism Observatory caught up with Ingram in Perugia after his talk.

Mathew, in your speech this morning you spoke about 5 main principles that should characterize on-line information. You say that one of these is “being human”: can you explain what you mean by this?

“I think that journalists have to reclaim their humanity and by this I mean several things. For example, one of these is that when they make a mistake they can admit to the fact that they are not perfect or one hundred percent precise at all times. Another implication is not to expect to be objective all the time. Jay Rosen spoke about what he has called “the view from nowhere”, the idea that journalists must always be scrupulously objective.”

(Rosen takes this definition from the title of a book by the philosopher Thomas Nagel published in 1989 which theorizes the need to transcend our particular viewpoints, imagining instead that we are in an objective place without personal viewpoints, that we are in “nowhere”).

“I think that in many cases journalists offer their readers a better service when they say “this is what I think, my point of view”. So, when they make a mistake they should be able to say “this is what I thought but some of the things I said are wrong (or right) but this is why I said them”. When a journalist relates to readers in a human way, a personal relationship is forged and this is a powerful bond and, in any case, what journalism should be.”

And this should be one of the main aspects of “open journalism” as you said this morning. But how can open journalism thrive in a situation where more and more editors are putting a paywall in place?

“Well, that’s a tough question. I had a long chat with Alan Rusbridger from The Guardian recently about his view of open journalism and his opinion is that there is a sort of tension/opposition between wanting to open up the newspaper to readers, asking them to contribute to its journalism, and having a paywall that prevents all this. You can try to reach the highest possible number of people willing to pay but this number will clearly always be smaller than the number that a free newspaper will attract. Therefore, if you want as large a readership as possible for your journalism and the highest level of involvement of your public then the best way is to be completely open without any type of payment like the BBC or the National Public Radio (public companies). But it is difficult for a for profit organization to involve its readers without having some sort of income… there is no hard and fast answer.”

One of the main problems that editors have been faced with in the transition from print to digital is that of not understanding or exploiting its potential. Are they ready and more flexible now? The idea of a paywall as a cure-all would be like taking a step backwards…

“I believe that there is more interest now in the digital media and this is because the business of the editors is in crisis, they are losing readers and income because the advertising market has disintegrated in the Internet era. Many companies are exploring new possibilities because otherwise they would close down: they have to reach new readers and convince them to support them in some way and find new sources through advertising. I like to think that the choice of many companies is not just that of hiding behind a paywall but that this can be part of a wider-ranging strategy: it is not enough to set up a paywall and then go back to working like we did before. While this may work for the New York Times, it doesn’t mean it will work for all. For this reason it is important to understand what else needs to be done: a paywall can add revenue but it cannot increase the number of readers as, instead, is necessary. Editors therefore have to become more creative in order to reach this goal.”

Answering your questions at Paidcontent live, Alan Rusbridger said that it was pointless to make readers pay when the information was freely available on BBC News, AOL or SkyNews…

“I believe that news providers such as the BBC, NPR and many others will always offer free access and so anyone who decides to provide news against payment will have to compete with these, offering better content. I think that this is the reason why The Guardian, The Daily Mail and others have decided not to make their readers pay: companies like the BBC are huge and have thousands of journalists with whom it is difficult to compete. Whoever decides to introduce a paywall must be certain that they can offer really unique content in order to win over large numbers of readers willing to pay even although there is free news available”.

Native advertising seems to be a possible important source of income for editors. What problems, including ethical ones, could this entail for journalism?

“I think that for native advertising to work effectively or to be ethically correct there must be full transparency when proposing it. It is a question that involves the readers’ and public’s trust in your newspaper. If you try to pass off advertising as editorial content the readers will see this and they will lose their trust in the newspaper. Readers want to know what is advertising and what is content. And this is more than a question of ethics, it is a problem that regards the relationship between the editor and the reader. If readers lose their faith they will not come back, whether the content is free or not. For this reason, as I said, it is important to be clear and transparent about what is advertising and what is not. I believe there is a huge potential in informative content that can come from advertising and when this is useful for the readers there is no harm in it as long as it is clearly indicated when the content is provided or sponsored by a company.”

How do you see the development of European media: are they changing with the times or are they lagging behind?

“To tell you the truth, I haven’t really studied the situation in Europe but my impression is that they are lagging behind. Let me explain why. Not long ago, some people said that in Germany all the newspapers were doing well but things are different now. I think that in many countries like Germany, because of the language barrier, there has been an isolation, a bulwark against the global market and there were also fewer newspapers compared, for example, to the United States where newspapers have to compete with any source in the English language from any part of the world. From a certain point of view, language barriers have protected them in the short-term from this competition but the long-term situation is different. Now that competition is impacting newspapers in all countries of the world, those that didn’t start changing five years ago are in trouble, they are behind time”.

Mathew Ingram at the Perugia International Journalism Festival

Article translated from the original Italian ‘Insegnare al pesce come camminare’ by Anne Jamieson.

Photo courtesy of Alessio Jacona

Categories: Extern nieuws

IFJ Condemns U.S. Justice Dept for Secretly Gathering Associated Press Records

IFJ.org - IFJ Global - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 11:27
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has today joined its affiliate, the Newspaper Guild-CWA, in condemning the U.S. Justice Department for secretly gathering the phone records of Associated Press Journalists and called on the department to promptly return them. On Monday, 13 May, Associated Press (AP) revealed that the Department of Justice (DOJ) had "secretly obtained two months of telephone records of (its) reporters and editors," saying it was a "massive and unprecedented intrusion." Following this, on Tuesday, 14 May, AP's President, Gary Pruitt, sent a letter to Attorney General, Eric Holder, which detailed that the phone records cover more than 20 telephone lines used by AP journalists, including their homes, offices and mobile phones. He said the phones for which the DOJ obtained records also include ones at the AP bureaus in New York City, Washington DC, Hartford, and at the House of Representatives.
Categories: Extern nieuws

The Anonymous Tip Box: Why Do We Bother?

10000 words - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 11:00

Yesterday, the New Yorker launched an anonymous tip box. Excuse my skepticism, but I’m not sure why any newsroom wastes their resources on those things. (Sorry, boss!)

Instead of being a useful, secure tool for the public to use as a means of contacting an organization, tip boxes are in reality just a kitschy, spammy, and not particularly secure design element. I get why we have them — to make a show of transparency — but how many leads have you ever gotten from the tip box?

Every time I glimpse one of the notifications from ours in my inbox, I half expect the Syrian Electronic Army to pop out. But it’s usually an insult, jibberish, or a well meaning publicist with a request to cover an event entirely unrelated to the theme of our blog.

The key element here is safety. No one in their right mind– or at least the kind if people you’d want to be conversing with concerning a potential story– is going to try to contact you via the tip box. It’s like calling someone on a landline: intrusive and unlikely to result in a timely connection. It’s called email, or at this point, even a Twitter DM. 

If it weren’t for the disturbing news this week about the Justice Department’s seizure of AP’s phone records, maybe I could find room in my heart for the tip box. But if phone records aren’t safe from our own government, why would anyone leak something through an online tool such as the tip box? Perhaps I’m still just in shock and feeling vicariously betrayed, but the digital anonymous tip box is akin to the charming little crinkly noise my Kindle makes on my iPad. It’s a cute reminder of the more idealistic days of yore — the ones we like to think existed or hope for. But it’s all sort of a farce, isn’t it? 

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Categories: Extern nieuws

From gift to briefcase: how perverse incentives thwart participatory politics on social media networks in Africa

Reuters Institute - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 10:48
  • Abiye Megenta, Guardian Research Fellow, Nuffield College
  • ‘From gift to briefcase: how perverse incentives thwart participatory politics on social media networks in Africa’
  • RISJ seminar, Wednesday 24 April 2013
Ashu Nyenty writes:Abiye Megenta, an Ethiopian expert in social media networks (SMNs) in Africa, said the power of social media to weaken and help remove autocratic regimes in Africa could be subverted if the norms of authentic participation and cooperation were eroded by perverse incentives.  Megenta said his broadly optimistic views about the democratisation effect of SMNs in African authoritarian countries had been challenged by a number of cases in which such incentives negatively affected authentic cooperative systems.  But not all of his presentation was sceptical. He argued that the scale free nature of many SMNs, relatively quick replaceability of influential actors, disruptive properties of new platforms, and intrinsic growth have all made capture by repressive governments very difficult.   Megenta gave examples of the invisible hand of perverse incentives at work. He mentioned cases of astroturf SMNs-based movements in Ethiopia, Djibouti, Sudan, and Zimbabwe that gave the impression of solid organisation and large membership even to the most seasoned observes of those countries. These movements had endangered the lives of plenty of people by calling for protests without organisation.  He cited the curious case of an Ethiopian astroturf group that fooled western newspapers into believing that it was a strong group and the “day of rage” it called against the ruling regime would be attended by thousands of Ethiopians. The movement vanished without trace right after the anticipated protest failed to materialise.
Megenta explained the modus operandi of some popular social media network participants who use “extreme and obnoxious statements” as a way of “branding” themselves.  Branding is useful because it lands speaking gigs and conference invitations to the participants. Some bloggers had been invited to various conferences on African leadership around the world, even though it was not clear whom they represent, the extent of their following, and the degree of seriousness with which they should be taken.  He cautioned organisations that want democratic change in authoritarian African countries through technology to be more circumspect and to consult broadly before choosing SMNs participants that they want to work with. During the Q&A session, Megenta raised the unjustified expectations and unnecessary pressures on SMNs-based movements in repressive regimes after the Arab string.  He expressed regret that many people think the Arab spring demonstrations were spontaneous. It took years of organisation and preparation both on and offline to create successful uprisings.  People easily conflate organisation and mobilisation, he said. His conclusion was sombre:  having SMNs- based movements that try to bring people onto the streets in repressive countries without building organisational structure that withstands the initial government response is worse than not having such movements at all.

Categories: Extern nieuws

From gift to briefcase: how perverse incentives thwart participatory politics on social media networks in Africa

Reuters Institute - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 10:48
  • Abiye Megenta, Guardian Research fellow, Nuffield College
  • ‘From gift to briefcase: how perverse incentives thwart participatory politics on social media networks in Africa’
  • RISJ seminar, Wednesday 24 April 2013
Ashu Nyenty writes:Abiye Megenta, an Ethiopian expert in social media networks (SMNs) in Africa, said the power of social media to weaken and help remove autocratic regimes in Africa could be subverted if the norms of authentic participation and cooperation were eroded by perverse incentives.  Megenta said his broadly optimistic views about the democratisation effect of SMNs in African authoritarian countries had been challenged by a number of cases in which such incentives negatively affected authentic cooperative systems.  But not all of his presentation was sceptical. He argued that the scale free nature of many SMNs, relatively quick replaceability of influential actors, disruptive properties of new platforms, and intrinsic growth have all made capture by repressive governments very difficult.   Megenta gave examples of the invisible hand of perverse incentives at work. He mentioned cases of astroturf SMNs-based movements in Ethiopia, Djibouti, Sudan, and Zimbabwe that gave the impression of solid organisation and large membership even to the most seasoned observes of those countries. These movements had endangered the lives of plenty of people by calling for protests without organisation.  He cited the curious case of an Ethiopian astroturf group that fooled western newspapers into believing that it was a strong group and the “day of rage” it called against the ruling regime would be attended by thousands of Ethiopians. The movement vanished without trace right after the anticipated protest failed to materialise.
Megenta explained the modus operandi of some popular social media network participants who use “extreme and obnoxious statements” as a way of “branding” themselves.  Branding is useful because it lands speaking gigs and conference invitations to the participants. Some bloggers had been invited to various conferences on African leadership around the world, even though it was not clear whom they represent, the extent of their following, and the degree of seriousness with which they should be taken.  He cautioned organisations that want democratic change in authoritarian African countries through technology to be more circumspect and to consult broadly before choosing SMNs participants that they want to work with. During the Q&A session, Megenta raised the unjustified expectations and unnecessary pressures on SMNs-based movements in repressive regimes after the Arab string.  He expressed regret that many people think the Arab spring demonstrations were spontaneous. It took years of organisation and preparation both on and offline to create successful uprisings.  People easily conflate organisation and mobilisation, he said. His conclusion was sombre:  having SMNs- based movements that try to bring people onto the streets in repressive countries without building organisational structure that withstands the initial government response is worse than not having such movements at all.

Categories: Extern nieuws

Reactie op De val van Mart door Ximaar

Journalistiek via Blogoloog.be - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 10:14
Hoge bomen en Mart Smeets die (als het om het wielrennen ging) immer op de hoogste ladder plaatsnam, vangen nu ... Reacties voor robschimmert
Categories: Extern nieuws

Data als onuitputtelijke journalistieke grondstof - http://t.co/AB8wDuDbUP #DataJournalistiek #Journalistiek #DataHarvest13

Journalistiek via Blogoloog.be - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 10:07
Data als onuitputtelijke journalistieke grondstof - http://t.co/AB8wDuDbUP #DataJournalistiek #Journalistiek #DataHarvest13 Twitter / StampMedia
Categories: Extern nieuws

Onafhankelijk Syrisch persbureau opgericht

Villamedia Nieuws - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:57
Met hulp van 300.000 euro Nederlandse steun van het ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken is in Syrië een nieuw onafhankelijk persbureau opgericht: Syria Newsdesk. De Arabische site is al online en volgende maand…
Categories: Extern nieuws

“Plopsa wil Air Force One kopen”. http://t.co/nes8nRf9iq Hmm, nee. Toch moeilijk precies, journalistiek.

Journalistiek via Blogoloog.be - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:50
“Plopsa wil Air Force One kopen”. http://t.co/nes8nRf9iq Hmm, nee. Toch moeilijk precies, journalistiek. Twitter / Inferis
Categories: Extern nieuws

IFJ Condemns U.S. Justice Dept for Secretly Gathering Associated Press Records

IFJ.org - IFJ Global - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:37
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has today joined its affiliate, the Newspaper Guild-CWA, in condemning the U.S. Justice Department for secretly gathering the phone records of Associated Press Journalists and called on the department to promptly return them. On Monday, 13 May, Associated Press (AP) revealed that the Department of Justice (DOJ) had "secretly obtained two months of telephone records of (its) reporters and editors," saying it was a "massive and unprecedented intrusion." Following this, on Tuesday, 14 May, AP's President, Gary Pruitt, sent a letter to Attorney General, Eric Holder, which detailed that the phone records cover more than 20 telephone lines used by AP journalists, including their homes, offices and mobile phones. He said the phones for which the DOJ obtained records also include ones at the AP bureaus in New York City, Washington DC, Hartford, and at the House of Representatives.
Categories: Extern nieuws

‘Omroepen gooien belastinggeld weg’

Villamedia Nieuws - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:18
Regionale omroepen die via de rechter protesteren tegen opgelegde bezuinigingen, jagen de belastingbetaler ‘willens en wetens’ op kosten. Dat stelt de VVD Statenfractie in Zuid-Holland, nadat de provincie 86.000 euro aan juridische kosten…
Categories: Extern nieuws

‘Sociaal plan publieke omroep verlengd’

Villamedia Nieuws - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:16
De Nederlandse Publieke Omroep en de vakorganisaties NVJ, FNV KIEM en CNV Media hebben een principeakkoord gesloten over verlenging van het Sociaal Plan voor de landelijke publieke omroepen. De geldigheid van het bestaande plan wordt met één jaar…
Categories: Extern nieuws

Inhakers dagbladen waren succesvol

Villamedia Nieuws - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:13
In de aanloop naar 30 april stonden er diverse zogeheten inhakers in kranten - advertenties met een verwijzing naar actueel nieuws, zoals in dit geval de kroning. Cebuco, de marketingorganisatie van de dagbladen, heeft het effect van die inhakers nader…
Categories: Extern nieuws

Grote aandelentransactie James Murdoch

Villamedia Nieuws - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:11
James Murdoch, zoon van topman Rupert en adjunct-directeur van uitgeverij News Corporation, heeft voor ruim 25 miljoen dollar aan aandelen in het concern verkocht. De aandelen zonder stemrecht vertegenwoordigen een vijfde van zijn aandeel in het bedrijf.…
Categories: Extern nieuws

Flinke aandelentransactie James Murdoch

Villamedia Nieuws - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:11
James Murdoch, zoon van topman Rupert en adjunct-directeur van uitgeverij News Corporation, heeft voor ruim 25 miljoen dollar aan aandelen in het concern verkocht. De aandelen zonder stemrecht vertegenwoordigen een vijfde van zijn aandeel in het bedrijf.…
Categories: Extern nieuws

Lees Ook

Villamedia Nieuws - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:10
Zij Die Niet Weten Welke Vragen Ze Moeten Stellen NRC How…
Categories: Extern nieuws

Lees Ook

Villamedia Nieuws - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:10
How journalists can protect themselves from the US government Slate Google…
Categories: Extern nieuws

Elsevier wil maandblad maken

Villamedia Nieuws - Thu, 16/05/2013 - 09:06
Opinieweekblad Elsevier overweegt een maandblad op de markt te brengen. Dat bevestigt plaatsvervangend hoofdredacteur René van Rijckevorsel in de Volkskrant. ‘Veel mensen zien af van een vast abonnement omdat ze niet elke week aan Elsevier toekomen.…
Categories: Extern nieuws
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