Monday, March 26, 2007

Is parkridge47 a Credible Source?

Cheskin's blog is talking as well about crowdsourcing. I particularly like the final conclusion:

"I think the challenge of journalism will become more a matter of editing and selecting the information to present from a wide range of sources, reporters being only one of them. What readers want from a newspaper or information site is intelligently presented sifting of the masses of information out there, coming from an identified point of view."

So anyone can write anything and it's up to the newspapers to bring order to the chaos? That's no small task. In a way, that's what (good) reporters have been doing all along. Their traditional sources, however, where clearly labeled as topical experts, spokespeople, and individuals with a clear involvement with the story in question (eye witnesses, neighbors, etc.). This labeling system is going away if people like parkridge47 are instrumental to a story. I guess we all --not just reporters -- will have to learn to deal with this development.

Friday, March 23, 2007

Open source journalism

I just wanted to let you know about my conversation with David Cohn last night about crowdsourcing. It’s a new word for a phenomenon that has brought you things like open source software development.

The idea is to bring a wide variety of people together to collaborate on a project. What everyone does, to what degree everyone gets involved is up to the individual. Usually, there is some kind of oversight that governs efforts. Without going into further detail, that kind of self-directed structure has revolutionized the way software is being developed today.

Many speculated what could be another area where this model might take roots. How about open source journalism? Wired Magazine and Jay Rosen, a professor at NYU, are now trying to write a news story that way. The topic is crowdsourcing itself and the clever idea is to use the means of crowdsourcing to create an article about crowdsourcing. The web site where this is happening is http://zero.newassignment.net/ Anyone can go there, read up on what has been said and contribute either by as little as dropping a line or if inclined by taking on a bigger assignment. All these attempts are managed by a few editors from wired.com who bring their professional expertise to an all out effort to write this article that is slanted to be published in Wired Magazine later this spring.

David Cohn is a graduate student at Columbia’s School of Journalism who is working on this project as an associate editor. He was in town to catch up with Wired Magazine and posted a message that he’ll be hanging out at a bar along with a few editors from Wired Magazine. It shouldn't come as a surprise, that he is very enthusiastic about the whole idea of getting people to collaborate on a specific project just because they want to instead of that they have to. It should be interesting to watch whether this kind of open source journalism really catches on and if so, what it does to traditional journalism, blogging, and last but not least the PR profession.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

How will newspapers survive online?

Great column by Lazarus in the SF Chronicle that takes a different position from the prevailing idea that everything newspapers do online should be free.
No surprise that a lot of bloggers took the challenge and fought back.

Lazarus, in his usual combative style had a few good answers. He points out that a lot of newspapers do investigative journalism (the Chronicle's articles on Barry Bond's steroid use come to mind) and can do that primarily because people take the time to talk with people that 'represent a fairly well-known newspaper'.

Still, the only papers that charge successfully for content are the Wall Street Journal and to a lesser extend the NY Times. So, are these odd balls or trend setters?