journalism

Crowdsourcing in the Street, circa 1999

Jay Rosen's picture
Jay Rosen

How IndyMedia paved the way for the future of crowdsourced journalism

Jay Rosen interviews Christopher Anderson of the New York City Indypendent

Christopher Anderson fits the category of participant-observer. He's worked as an organizer, reporter, and editor for the New York City Independent Media Center and the New York City Indypendent since 2001. He is currently completing his PhD at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, where he studies journalistic authority, media history, and new media technologies. His dissertation will be on citizen journalism in an era of technological change, and it will include the story of IndyMedia. In an earlier life, Anderson was a regional director with ACORN Housing Corporation, a non-profit community organizing group working to assist low-income first time home buyers.

Assignment Zero executive editor Jay Rosen interviewed him as a good source on the rise of the IndyMedia movement, and the Independent Media Center (IMC) that sprung up after 1999, when protests at the World Trade Organization meeting in Seattle shocked everyone in Big Media, while at the Indy sites "...thousands of posts about the WTO protests, and the sum total of coverage ran rings around what the mainstream media had been trying to do."

Anderson says it was the original act of crowdsourcing, "in a way."

Jay Rosen: How did you come to be such a close student of IndyMedia?

Christopher Anderson: Well, I was actually involved with Indymedia in New York before I went back to grad school. In fact, you could say that my involvement with Indymedia (and I still help them out a bit) helped send me back to school, rather than the other way around. I started helping out with the IMC shortly after the September 11 attacks in NYC. I thought that it sorta looked like the world was going to hell and figured I'd better do something fast.

5/23/07

The Semantic Web, Crowdsourcing and the Future of Open Discourse

nfolson's picture
nfolson

A programmers role in harnessing the wisdom of crowds

Nate Olson interviews Yaron Koren via email May 12-14, 2007


Yaron Koren is a freelance Web programmer based in Brooklyn. Two of his creations that work in tandem are Discourse DB and the Semantic Forms extension for MediaWiki, the same software that powers Wikipedia. Discourse DB is a wiki that organizes "the opinions of the world's journalists and commentators about ongoing political events and issues." It has a complex structure under the hood to map the "semantic" relationships of the data that users enter, but the most innovative feature of the site, the Semantic Forms extension, allows for a more intuitive user interface than most similar applications. Anyone can download it to use with a MediaWiki-based wiki.

Nate Olson: Do you consider "crowdsourcing" to be a distinct phenomenon? If so, how do you see it evolving over the next 1-2 years?

Yaron Koren: It's certainly not a new concept--there's been a lot of companies that have run contests to come up with advertising slogans and the like for a long time, for instance. But the Internet has obviously made it easier to do it. I don't personally see much change in the concept over the short term. Companies will try to tap more into crowdsourcing, but they'll discover--if they don't know it already, that is--that it's very hard to control your message if you're not working directly with the people making the content. On the other hand, the Threadless/Cafe Press model, where it's the crowd making the products themselves, seems to be doing quite well.

5/23/07

A new Photo Business Rises from the Crowd

greggo
Reporting page:

Scoopt, stakes out a spot where the market and the masses meet

Gregg Osofsky interviews Kyle MacRae, cofounder of Scoopt

Kyle MacRae founded Scoopt in 2005 with his wife using startup money from the sale of their home. Two years later, after pioneering the commercial licensing of citizen journalism, Scoopt is owned by Getty Images and distributing content to global media buyers. Kyle still runs the company with his wife out of Glasgow, Scotland. He sees citizen journalism as a proven commodity whose effect on the marketplace of ideas is only just beginning to take shape.

Gregg Osofsky: Where did the idea for Scoopt come from?

Kyle MacRae: If you remember the Asian tsunami, Boxing Day 2004, that was the event. I was living in France at the time. The only English language channel was CNN. I was watching this event unfold and I was fascinated by the fact that everything I saw taken was by people who were just there at the time. This wasn’t professional footage. Professional journalists hadn’t gotten there in time. And it just raised the question, the potential is there, people have the cameras, the camcorders, the camera phones, they have the technology in their pockets to capture an event like this. The mainstream media clearly wanted to use that content, and needs to use it, so how are they getting it? And it was really an old-fashioned model of air-dropping in journalists with envelopes stuffed full of dollars and buying people’s cameras from them, extracting the footage and feeding it up over a sat (satellite) link, and all of this kind of struck me as nonsense. You can get rid of the middle man here and connect on the ground directly with media organizations. The big question mark was how do you do that? Who wanted to represent these people? And that was the opportunity here.

5/22/07

Business Expert Envisions Content Collaboration as Media Future

CharlesWarner's picture
CharlesWarner

The Wikinomics of media

Charles Warner interviews Don Tapscott over email May 14th-18th

Don Tapscott, one of the world's leading authorities on business strategy, is Chief Executive of international think tank New Paradigm, which produces research focused on the role of technology in productivity and business design, effectiveness, and competitiveness. He is the author of 11 widely-read books about information technology in business and society, including Paradigm Shift, Growing Up Digital and The Naked Corporation. His new book (January 2007), co-authored with Anthony Williams, is Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything. In this interview, he talks about how this mass collaboration fits into the world of journalism. Tapscott is also adjunct professor of management at the Joseph L. Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto.

Charles Warner: In your and Anthony Williams' book Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything, you wrote "…as a growing number of firms see the benefits of mass collaboration, this new way of organizing will eventually displace the traditional corporate structures as the economy's primary engine of wealth creation. Already this new economic model extends beyond software, music, publishing, pharmaceuticals, and other bellwethers to virtually every part of the global economy." Do you believe mass collaboration can work for journalism?

Don Tapscott: It already works for a wide range of publishing and content-creation activities, including journalism. In print media, the Wikipedia model is being extended to textbooks, as in the case of the California open source school book initiative. Expect the 'Wikipedia Guide to Rock and Roll' and many any other tomes from Jimmy Wales and his colleagues.

When it comes to broadcast media, there are initial examples where people outside the formal media structures can create content. Take Al Gore's Current TV, where anyone can create a news clip; and if it's received well on the Web, it will be broadcast on the Current TV network.

5/18/07

The Prince of Wiki

mcrockett's picture
mcrockett

Jimmy Wales, the man behind Wikipedia, offers lessons of collaboration

Marla Crockett interviews Jimmy Wales via telephone.

Where would we be without Wikipedia? When Jimmy Wales launched the free content encyclopedia in 2001, the Internet entrepreneur gave birth to the most influential experiment in collaboratively created content. Wales added the Wikimedia Foundation in 2003 to support the concept, and a year later, he founded Wikia Inc. to take the community approach into the for-profit realm.

Though not a fan of the term “crowdsourcing,” Wales remains a strong advocate of the principles behind it, and he
endorses the online pairing of amateurs and experts. He spoke with Assignment Zero about his philosophy and where it's taking him — and the rest of us.

Martha Crockett: Do you consider yourself a social architect?

A: Yes, to some extent, although I like to avoid terms such as “social engineering” and “social architecture” because they’re very different kinds of things, engineering and architecture. In fact, I think one of the problems that we’ve had in the past is that those kind of analogies — coming from the kind of people who are really programmers and not social people — have inhibited our understanding. So, other than that, I definitely say social design is a really important topic for the future.

Q: What’s your sense now of what works and what doesn’t in bringing people together to work collaboratively?

A: One of the things that is really important to enable people to collaborate is that they have a shared vision of what it is they’re trying to accomplish. In the early days of Wikipedia, I thought that neutrality was an absolutely indispensable principle for getting lots of different people working together. But after seeing many other projects become successful, I realized that it isn’t so much neutrality as having the same idea of what it is that we’re here to do.

Q: What have you rejected at this point?

A: What really doesn’t work is the opposite of that, right? If you’re trying to bring a group of people together, and maybe they’re eager to help out in some way but they don’t understand what their specific mission is or what they’re trying to do, things tend to get very scattered and people break into endless arguments about what is going on without actually getting very much accomplished. So the successful collaborative projects I’ve seen are those that have a core purpose, and those that I’ve seen fail are a little vague about what it is they’re trying to do.

Q: Anything else about what works?

A: Communities that are really combative may be entertaining places to go for combat, but in terms of building something, I think kindness and love are indispensable.

Q: What are you working on right now in terms of social design?

A: At Wikia, I have this new search engine project. Basically I’m spending a lot of time right now thinking about and designing the social interaction aspects of that, thinking about what the rules should be. It’s an interesting challenge that’s similar in some ways to the Wikipedia challenge, but different in some really important ways.

The whole point of a search engine is to link to things and to try to traffic in things. You have a much stronger and much more direct problem of people who may be editing from a particular biased point of view to promote themselves or their standing Web sites or whatever, and so that’s a challenge. There’s always going to be a huge direct incentive for people to get involved for those reasons, and that’s a tricky thing to think about — how do you give the community the kind of control they need to make sure that doesn’t become dominant while at the same time being open and flexible?

Q: How do you think this participatory online culture is changing American culture?

A: I think there are a lot of interesting things going on. This may not be what you’re driving at exactly, but one of the intersections between the Internet and technology and pop culture is the advent of the new genre of television that I call the really complicated TV series. Things such as "Lost" and "24" are, in part, successful genres because the fan culture around them has an expression on the Internet. If you sit down and start watching "Lost," you’re liable to get lost yourself, but you can go on a wiki like at lost.wikia.com and really figure out what’s going on and really have a full documentation of all the complex relationships of the characters.

I think that’s an interesting symbiotic relationship between technology and culture, and it isn’t just the Internet technology. It’s even the existence of TiVo and the ability to pause the show and discuss what happened. Because it’s like, who is that guy again? Oh yeah, we saw him six episodes ago lurking around the corner, and now we know who he is. That kind of stuff is hard to do on live television when it’s just going by and you can’t stop it while you’re watching it. It makes it really hard to be very intellectual with the complexities of plot. Now the way we watch television is changing, in part, because of technology, so for me that’s one of the interesting things that’s happening.

Q: You were talking about the need to change and corral this Internet culture. Do you think wiki users and followers and people online are ready for that development?

A: Definitely. I see a pretty strong personality difference between bloggers and wiki people, in the sense that blogging is all about stating your own unique perspective on the world. It’s very much a discussion or debate culture, whereas wiki is a lot more about collaborating and working together with people who maybe you disagree with, but you’re trying to build something together. So the incentives are all different and the kind of personalities end up being different as well.

If you’re somebody who has a really strong political ax to grind and your purpose is to basically convert people to seeing things the way you see them, you don’t find a wiki a very comfortable place to work. And I’m not being negative about that kind of person at all. I think we need people who are passionate advocates for the truth as they see it, and that’s an important role in society. But there’s also a role for a different kind of person who says, "Yeah, I don’t have a strong opinion on that subject, but I’m willing to pitch in and flesh out all sides of the debate in a useful way."

I’m here as a person who likes to mediate conflict, not to engage in conflict, and those personality types tend to be drawn into wiki more. So I think certainly within the wiki community, this idea of an increasingly friendly place — and also a place where the tools are given to the community to help deal with the bad characters — is very popular.

Q: Where are you in developing your code of conduct for the blogosphere?

A: Right now, it’s basically at blogging.wikia.com. There’s a discussion going on there. I feel it’s not up to me to determine the code of conduct, because for a code of conduct that really works, it has to be hammered out by people who disagree strongly about what it should be about.

For that to happen, they need to come into the wiki. They need to figure out what is their common ground, how can we state the shared social mores in a way that’s clear and very, very broadly acceptable. And that has to come from the people that are very actively involved with that.

Q: I understand you also want to develop wiki journalism.

A: At Wikia, we have a whole new category of sites we call “magazine-style” sites. It’s a complete revamp of the look and feel of the wiki software, but it’s still wiki underneath. That’s an idea thing. Let’s figure out the tools people would need that are different to create. The tools you need to create a Web site that’s an encyclopedia are different from the tools you’d need to create a magazine. So, how do we do that? That’s something I’m very invested in exploring.

Q: Does everybody really understand what it takes to make a good news story? And does that frame of reference have to be there, or is it all about the software?

A: It’s almost nothing about the software. The software can be an impediment. The software changes you need have to do with the social matters.

Yes, absolutely, one of the reasons wiki-style journalism can work is that people have a very clear and strong understanding of what a good news story is, and that is not something that is reserved for the high priests of journalism.

Lots and lots of people read the newspaper and know the difference between a good news story and a poor news story and what it takes to make that. Now, how they can do that collaboratively and socially and what is the incentive structure, I don’t think we’ve worked out. I don’t mean we as in me, but as a whole citizen-journalism movement. I don’t think we’ve worked that out in a positive way, although there are many interesting experiments going on, Assignment Zero being one of them, where people are coming together and saying let’s try to do journalism in some different ways and let’s see what works or not.

It’ll be interesting to look back at some of these things like Oh My News or Assignment Zero or Wilki News or the Wikia magazine site, and come back in two or three years and see which ones have been successful and which ones haven’t and to learn from that and say, "Ah, nobody realized it, but one of the big obstacles to doing a good news story is X, and funny we didn’t notice that because now it seems obvious." But that’s the way these things go usually.

Q: Are all of these ventures based on your evolving knowledge of how the intelligent crowd works?

A: Definitely. I reject a lot of the rhetoric and a lot of the ideas around swarm intelligence or the wisdom of crowds. I think some of that stuff is pretty sketchy.

It comes down to a really passionate person with a good mind who is committed to doing good work — and doing that in collaboration with other people of similar minds. It remains an individual activity, even when we do it in a group. And I think there’s a lot of mystical talk about how there’s some high mind or cloud of intelligence out there. That’s confusing and sketchy rhetoric.

Q: I understand you take issue with the word “crowdsourcing.” Can you elaborate? Are we really just talking about the same thing, about individuals coming together, pooling their talents and their resources? Are we getting hung up on terms?

A: The term “crowdsourcing” is a direct take off on “outsourcing.” The whole idea of outsourcing is, you look around, there’s a company and you say, "Gee, we could actually go outside of our organization and look for a cheaper way of producing the same thing." Perfectly ethical activity for a company. There’s nothing wrong with that, but I think there’s something deeply flawed in it if you’re a company who’s thinking about building a Web site, and you think of what you’re doing as crowdsourcing. You’re fundamentally misunderstanding what it’s all about.

So, one of the analogies I’ll use is, suppose you are a bowling alley owner and you thought your business is the production of bowling and you think what you’re trying to do is produce high-quality bowling and you’re going to crowdsource it by somehow getting the public to produce more bowling. That’s a really weird way to think about what it is you’re doing as a company, and you’re going to make a lot of weird decisions based on that, as opposed to thinking of your job as a company running a bowling alley.

We’re not here to make bowling; we are here to provide a place for people who want to come in and bowl, and we want them to come in and enjoy whatever it is they’re doing. It’s not about trying to trick them into producing bowling cheaply, it’s about figuring out what they’re having fun doing and helping to facilitate that. It’s a very different attitude toward community. Instead of viewing your customers as customers, the crowdsourcing view views your customers as really badly paid employees. And I think that’s a huge mistake.

Q: What role do experts have in this concept? It seems as though the conversation in the past year or so has moved more toward the hybrid, the collaboration between amateurs and professionals. How you feel about that approach?

A: That’s my approach. My approach is really hard core on that point, that experts are absolutely indispensable. People who know what they’re talking about are at the core of moving society forward. And that passionate individual mind who has figured something out at great length is completely crucial. So the great irony of this is that I’m typically poised as being the anti-elitist, when I’m probably the most elitist person, as most people know, in terms of being a complete snob about people knowing what they’re talking about.

Q: One of your principles says: “Newcomers are always to be welcomed. There must be no cabal, there must be no elites, there must be no hierarchy or structure which gets in the way of this openness to newcomers.” Experts for decades have sort of said to the public, “Let us take care of it. Don’t worry your pretty little heads about it.”

A: I don’t think that’s true. I think that’s really a myth. The best experts have always been the ones who view their role in society as being about participating in a broad, open, public dialogue.

Certainly, the worst of the experts — the kind of person who would say, “I refuse to engage in a discussion with you because I have a Ph.D and you don’t” — those people tend to be idiots, and they’re not really that valuable.

The kind of expert I’m interested in is the person who always has an active, lively mind and is willing to engage in open, broad discussion in a democratic society.

So, for me, there is this sort of mistake when we imagine academics are really not interested in dealing with the general public and not interested in defending their ideas in the open marketplace of ideas, I think that’s just wrong. The best academics have always been very enthusiastic about this enlightenment view which says it’s not about having a guild of protected people, it’s about being right, knowing what you’re talking about. And defending your ideas, not based on a fallacious appeal to authority, but defending your ideas based on sound reasoning.

5/6/07

Opus 101 Just Add Music

oldfogey's picture

Opus 101 Just Add Music

The purpose of this article is to fulfill an obligation to AssignmentZero (AZ), to honor a request by Fabrice Florin to share my views of NewsTrust with AZ, to provide Newsvine with an in depth view of what I have been doing outside of my normal Newsvine routine and, last but not least, this document will be the basis on which I hope a modern community news organization will someday come into being.

All of us are interested in certain aspects of the burgeoning on line news phenomena that is occurring across the world. Each of us has a slightly different definition of certain terms being bandied about. I will define a few terms in my words as I understand them. You are entitled to understand them quite differently, my definitions are for this article only and I am ready to change them if someone teaches me better.

Main Stream Media (MSM): This includes all print media, radio and television, and also those on line publications tied directly to MSM. The Coshocton Tribune, a Gannett publication for Coshocton County, Ohio has a blog. That blog is MSM. So, blogs and online news publications can be MSM or something entirely different. It is that something different I address in this essay.

Citizen Journalist (CJ): Though some think this is a misnomer which denigrates both citizens and journalists, for my purposes a CJ is a person who tries to do what MSM does but remains outside the traditional formats and organizations. A CJ may be publishing on line material for profit or may have some personal agenda for doing so.

Sourcing, Group Sourcing, Open Sourcing, Participating Media and similar terms all boil down to the same thing. How we go about producing the published end item. In short, Journalism. Open sourcing has traditionally pertained to software but seems to be extending into all forms of open documents and forums.

Although AssignmentZero, as well as the other sites named, is studying much broader applications of GroupSourcing, I will be addressing only its focus on Journalism or news gathering. AZ's attention on NewsTrust and Newsvine's participation at both sites is indicative of a joint interest in the future of Journalism. When you include little ole CJ, me, you wind up with possibilities for the publication of news on line that both serves the community and provides a profit for the publisher.

There are some of us who are studying Group Sourcing, AZ, with the purpose of better understanding how a disparate group of individuals can best publish a document. There are others, NewsTrust, who are studying the same thing but with an emphasis on producing a quality document and bringing about that quality through intense review and oversight. Still others are using all of the above plus the efforts of an online community to make their site attractive enough to draw large numbers of readers to their advertising. I, personally, fit into each situation but am primarily driven by a deep need to make an online publication turn a profit for CJs. Read fultonflyer.com.

I offer this note to AZ for the purpose of letting them know that I am progressing with my interview of Mary Lou Fulton. I currently have answers to questions I submitted via email and expect to speak with her by phone on Monday, 23 Apr. I will follow up asap with my interview writeup. I include this comment about MLF here because all of the entities receiving this report should make themselves aware of her and her expertise in Journalism, her interest in Participating Media, and the fact that she is embarked upon an online publication which is apprarently having some success. She also has influence within publishing and academic circles which tie her work and the results of her work directly to all concerned here.

As for NewsTrust, the site is perfect for those who are interested in the quality of news reporting. NewsTrust is into reviewing news from all sources and having members assess the many values which can attach to written news. The site is easy to navigate, is membered by individuals dedicated to the improvement of news writing. It also is reviewing sources and giving weight to the value of both stories and sources. I quote from its purpose and scope:
"In recent years, the consolidation of mainstream media, combined with the rise of opinion news and the explosion of new media outlets, have created a serious problem for democracy: many people feel they can no longer trust the news media to deliver the information they need as citizens.

To address this critical issue, NewsTrust is developing an online news rating service to help people identify quality journalism - or "news you can trust." Our members rate the news online, based on journalistic quality, not just popularity. Our beta website and news feed feature the best and the worst news of the day, picked from hundreds of alternative and mainstream news sources."
I have personally participated on NewsTrust and am delighted with the way they go about determining the quality of news articles. I also applaud their openess to all as reviewers as that allows a broad and varied testing of the quality of subject articles. I also am fascinated by the fact that any article from any source can be posted and subsequently rated. Kudos to NewsTrust for doing something that Newsviners need and AZ is studying.

Along comes Newsvine. Newsvine is the embodiment of what the end product of the efforts of all concerned can be. Newsvine is a for profit news organization which is reliant for its content on MSM in the use of Associated Press. Much other content in the form of seeding also comes from the MSM. Newsvine, however, continues on to publish a great amount of material posted by CJs. Newsvine has amassed a group of highly productive authors or writers who on their own part have provided Newsvine with a community within itself. The Newsvine community contains some of the tightest bonding found anywhere on the Internet.

What a grand alliance could be formed with the assets of AZ, NewsTrust and Newsvine aligned toward bringing news publishing into the possible modern world and bringing community along with it. That is the kind of alliance I see coming about. Jay Rosen, of AssignmentZero and Fabrice Florin of NewsTrust probably would like (maybe even insist) their efforts to be altruistic and educational rather than become a business or profit oriented organization. Still their efforts or something very much like them are needed for the transition from print to the computer screen. Mike Davidson and myself would, of course, pursue every and any avenue which leads to a better publication and one which will draw the readership necessary to make a profitable organization.

I look forward to the day when Newsvine, or someone like them, sydicates itself so that national, regional, state and local publications can benefit from the Newsvine organization and software while Newsvine gains small community reporting and advertising through satellite of francised sites everywhere. It may be that what happens in the end is that MSM overlays itself upon the Internet and the CJ or smaller community comes out losing coverage as is presently happening with print newspapers. I have my doubts. The bloggers, the forums, the chat rooms and the CJs are just too large a factor and have the advantage of being in every nook and cranny around the world. If they ever get together, watch out!


News University - Learn Journalism Any Time, Anywhere

Michele McLellan's picture

I'm a big fan of News University (www.newsu.org) that my friend, Howard Finberg has developed at the Poynter Institute (www.poynter.org). The online classes offer great content in highly interactive formats. It's a great place to learn how to do journalism.

I asked NewsU's Casey Frechette, an interactive learning producer, if he could recommend a few NewsU classes that would give AZ contributors some of the basics. Here's Casey's list:

*The Be A Reporter Game - Step into the shoes of a reporter; learn to work with sources
*Math for Journalists - How to include relevant and accurate numbers in any story (includes statistics)
*The Interview - Skills every reporter needs to conduct effective interviews
*The Lead Lab - Reviews the kinds of leads and shows how to craft them
*News Sense: The Building Blocks of News - What is news? What is journalism, and why does it matter?

I've done the first four on his list and really liked them. News Sense is on my list for this week!

Michele


Transparency and the work ethic

John C Abell's picture

The purpose of transparency is to preempt the perception of bias. But any story whose points are properly attributed -- especially those which contain no anonymous sources -- pass this test. I may be motivated to write about abortion because of a strong interest borne of personal experiences, but my reporting should be self-sustaining. Still, my personal connection (if any) to the story should be revealed, including whether I am a lifetime member of NARAL. Remember also that some readers think they can detect bias where there isn't any, so it will never be possible to satisfy all of the people all of the time.

I think we accomplish our mission here if our reporters are free to tap into the trusted community we are trying to create, and if they are open to suggestions from other reporters and editors. It seems to me the underlying goal is to ensure that reporting isn't done in a vacuum, the better to exploit the unpredictable opportunities of cooperation among strangers.

But I could not encourage a writer to divulge any more than s/he regards as necessary to improve a work in progress. One reason is that journalism really isn't terribly effective when it is a democracy; reporters and editors on the story need to have special standing. The other is that the spontaneous replies of a subject tend to be more revealing and informative than those to prepared answers, which is why face-to-face real time interviews are preferable to submitting written questions. Even if a reporter isn't going for a "gotcha" moment, it doesn't make any sense to provide a subject with a roadmap, things other subjects have said, who else has been interviewed, etc. These facts can alter the outcome, and shouldn't.

(originally posted as a comment in "Jay Rosen on AZ transparency")


My Readers Know More Than I Do

Francine Hardaway's picture
Francine Hardaway

And How To Have The Time Of Your Life Knowing That Fact

Francine Hardaway interviews Dan Gillmor

Dan Gillmor is having the time of his life -- although he says he’s not making nearly as much money as he used to when he was a print journalist.

“It’s a joy for me to be able to work with the people I’m working with at Harvard and Berkeley. I’m surrounded all the time by people who are smarter than me, which is the best way to learn. We are in the early days of something important, and to be able to help it along—in, I hope, a good way--what more could I ask for?” says Gillmor.

Gillmor is working on the Center for Citizen Media, a non-profit organization affiliated with the graduate school of journalism at U.C. Berkeley and the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School. He’s working on several different projects, writing, advising people, and making personal investments. He flies back and forth from coast to coast often enough to be hard to get hold of.

His most recent projects were a report put out by Lisa Williams at Placeblogger, a company he is advising, and a set of online modules for the Knight Foundation on Citizen Media Law project, aimed at helping people in the citizen media field understand, and navigate the legal system. The founding director is an attorney who worked in the general counsel’s office of The Washington Post.

Q: Tell me the difference between citizen journalism and crowdsourced journalism.

Dan Gillmor: Citizen journalism can be anything from a random act like someone taking a timely photo in a newsworthy situation and posting it to Flickr. And it could also be someone creating a community site that talks about community views in a useful way.

4/6/07

Journalism Principles

Ruslan Kulski's picture

The Center for Citizen Media has a page outlining the basic principles that "detail the bedrock foundations of journalism to help citizen reporters grasp the fundamentals of the craft in a networked age."

The sections are divided into accuracy, thoroughness, fairness, transparency, independence and resources.


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