Tuesday, 22 January 2008, 09:24
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Scientific American made conjoined twins out of [Journalism 2.0 and Science 2.0.] last week with its latest experiment in networked journalism: an article about networked science.
Tuesday, 30 October 2007, 17:25
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"Now the debate’s moved on to more rational ground, and we’re talking about ‘networked journalism’ where professionals use the network - yes, of amateurs - to contribute to a huge piece of work."
Thursday, 18 October 2007, 09:44
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Charlie Beckett on the Networked Journalism Summit.
Wednesday, 17 October 2007, 17:25
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"Trinity Mirror Regionals is to launch a crowd-sourcing pilot project at [the Liverpool Daily Post]" … inspired by Assignment Zero.
On the (Citizen) Media
Saturday, 13 October 2007, 08:48
NPR’s On the Media has an excellent summary of the state of the art in networked journalism in the form of its report from last week’s Networked Journalism summit in New York.
There’s nothing terribly new here, but the nine-minute package is a great introduction to the topic for the uninitiated. Have a listen:
The crowdsourced story in Ft Myers comes up, plus more about the concept of “crowdsourcing” from Wired’s Jeff Howe, who coined the term.
Robin Hamman talks about the flood of material that the BBC receives and how it needs to be careful to specify that it does not want people send in pictures of fluffy kittens.
Also mentioned are local news aggregator, Topix, Jay Rosen on AssignmentZero and why it didn’t work as expected, Mark Potts on why Backfence failed, a discussion of Talking Points Memo’s crowdsourcing of the US attorney documents as an example of a rare networked journalism project not linked in some way with a large news organisation, and and Jeff Jarvis on why experimenting with innovative collaboration between amateurs and professionals is the way forward — and essential for the latter.
Update: On Jeff Jarvis’s Buzzmachine blog and elsewhere, Jay Rosen responds at great length to the reference to AssignmentZero in the OTM package. OTM’s Bob Garfield has replied to Rosen’s criticisms.
Thursday, 11 October 2007, 08:31
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Jay Rosen: "As some of us conference at CUNY around networked journalism, here are my coordinates for the territory we need to be searching. I got them from doing a distributed trend story with Wired.com and thinking through the results."
More essential reading: data and interactivity in online journalism
Monday, 13 August 2007, 08:31
A post published last week on the Newspaper Next blog is going straight to the list of essential online journalism blog posts.
Steve Buttry looks at how presenting local information databases online can help newspapers “become the source for answers”. There are loads of great examples of how US newspapers presenting public records in an easily-accessible form for their readers.
Making existing databases available and useful to readers is just one side of the data coin, though. What about the opposite possibility: enlisting readers’ help to generate the data that will form the basis of new reporting?
Jeff Jarvis has a suggestion for a networked journalism project about local infrastructure. Jarvis suggests how things like the Bakersfield Californian’s pothole map or MySociety’s FixmyStreet to the next level.
Once readers have identified potential trouble spots, Jarvis says, “do what you do best: add journalism.”
Someone has already acted on the suggestion.
Incidentally, these issues are good example of some of the other items of the essential reading list. The Newspaper Next post is a collection of data projects that turn the web into the canvas for computer-assisted reporting, as Derek Willis put it. They are also good examples of Ryan Sholin’s online journalism skills trinity — they are examples at the intersection of “data” and “interactivity”. Now if only we could find some way to add the third component, “multimedia”. Angela Grant has some contributions for that section of the reading list.
Tuesday, 29 May 2007, 15:36
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I, Reporter suggests another networked journalism project to identify a secret hold in the US Senate: Help Identify which Senator is secretly blocking an FOI admendment (they are trying to make it more open in the US, unlike our MPs). This has worked befo
Sunday, 15 April 2007, 09:25
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"How do you do journalism in a networked age? Set up shop … Outreach … working with participants … editing"









