BloggerCon: Discussion Notes for, "What is Journalism? And What Can Weblogs Do About It?"
Grok Headline matches for BloggerCon: Discussion Notes for, "What is Journalism? And What Can Weblogs Do About It?"
Brain Food for BloggerCon: Journalism
and Webl0gging in Their Corrected
Fullness
Brain Food for BloggerCon: Journalism
and Webl0gging in Their Corrected
Fullness
04/16/2004 10:22 AMHere's my Introduction, take two, for the Saturday morning session at
BloggerCon. Let's start by separating two things. Blogging is not
journalism. But if each imagined itself as the other, some good might
come of that.
PressThink: Brain Food for BloggerCon:
Journalism and Webl0gging in Their
Corrected Fullness
PressThink: Brain Food for BloggerCon:
Journalism and Webl0gging in Their
Corrected Fullness
04/16/2004 10:22 PMBrain Food for BloggerCon: Journalism and Weblogging in Their
Corrected Fullness .. takes on a question ..
Rosen
journalism.nyu.edu/pubzone/weblogs/pressthink/2004/04/16/con_p
relude.html
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"Webl0gs in Journalism"
"Webl0gs in Journalism"
01/26/2004 09:50 PMETech Adjunct: Webl0gs and Journalism...
ETech Adjunct: Webl0gs and Journalism...
02/10/2004 02:46 AMI'm watching the panel on the role of journalism as part of the
Digital Democracy and it's the first teach-in of the day that
feels like a teach-in. Nonetheless, I'm not sure that I'm
finding it terribly useful - probably because I've thinking about the
issues from a slightly different perspective at the moment. Which
reminded me that a few weeks ago I got an e-mail from Kabir Chhibber
asking about my views of journalism and weblogs generally, which I
responded to with a whole range of thoughts. I was thinking about
neatening it up and presenting it online in a more clearly
worked-through form, but perhaps this is as good a time as any... So
what follows is a rather rough and badly-written assemblage of replies
to a series of question. Take from it what you will:
First of all, could you reflect on the following two quotes by
Salam Pax? Do you think they are acurate? How do have any experiences
which demonstrate or contradict his statements?
“I think that I can tell after this experience what,
for me, is the difference between a journalist and a blogger is. A
journalist has to actively run after things, a blogger just watches
(and lives his life) and takes things as they come.”
Salam Pax is an insightful and courageous writer, but I think (as
he says himself) he’s talking more about his own experience of being a
weblogger rather than anything intrinsic to weblogging in general.
Certainly it’s my belief that the vast majority of weblogs are a
representation of a person’s voice and that – as such – what they
write about will be about their opinions, experiences and the events
that occur around them, but I don’t agree that it’s necessarily quite
such a passive experience. There are webloggers – many webloggers –
who at one or more points in their online lives have decided to
investigate something in more depth and have become for a short period
of time amateur (by which I mean ‘for the love’) journalists – seeking
out information, researching material and running after things. In a
sense, then, some are born journalists (Dan Gilmore, perhaps), some
achieve the status of journalists, and many others have journalism
thrust upon them.
"The point about blogging is that it has to be very
personal. Bloggers, you always have to remember when you are reading
them, do not act like journalists. You're just talking about your life
and your opinions. You're not writing something for a big newspaper
where someone is going to take it as fact. Always be
suspicious."
Again I can see what he means – and it’s representative of the vast
majority of weblogs out there – but I don’t think it tells the whole
story. Again I think it comes down to weblogs being representations of
people. If you met someone in the street for the first time, you
wouldn’t believe their opinions. But if you had built up a
relationship with someone over time, you would evaluate how
trustworthy they were, how much you believed them, what you thought of
their opinions generally. It’s almost exactly the same thing that
happens with the press – journalists get themselves associated with
brands that say “we fact-check” and “we have a reputation to protect”
because individuals have come to have a relationship with those brands
–they have come to trust them over time. And yet how many of us would
still take the word of a close friend who had seen the events first
hand over the reportage in a newspaper?
I think it’s clear that there are differences between journalists
and webloggers. The first main difference is that webloggers aren’t
associated with a brand and with a support structure that is designed
to communicate the idea that facts have been checked, that the
journalist is trustworthy and that the news they are reporting is of
legitimate interest. That’s the first function of professional
organisation and it’s based on the fact that we can’t know the
reputation, skill-set or expertise of every journalist that we might
encounter in the world. To an extent of course, this is changing –
knowing webloggers means that you can start to evaluate their
expertise – but I think it’s unlikely that there’s any real threat of
all professional journalists being deposed from their positions of
authority by this tendency alone.
The second difference is a nice easy one. Organisations with money
that can support a number of journalists can afford to provide access
to a variety of different research tools that individuals don’t have
at their disposal. At the moment of course individuals have more
access to more information than ever before (via the internet) but
there remain feeds of data that are simply outside the scope of
individuals to get access to. This includes photo libraries, research
databases and detailed archives. This may change in time too.
The third function of professional journalism that can’t be met by
the weblogsphere is that it’s designed to deal with a massive scale
differential between the number of SUBJECTS of news (small) and the
number of people who could possibly want to ask them questions
(enormous). By this I mean that not every journalist or weblogger in
the land can go to a preview screening of a film, or be in the White
House press room or talk to the police at a crime scene or be invited
to product launches. These things have limited space available – they
are journalistic bottlenecks. And these bottlenecks are resolved by
selection – the most established and trustworthy journalists are
invited to participate in these events because they can communicate to
the largest amount of people. And that’s never going to change. We
might see a few webloggers transition into celebrity – there’s no
doubt that if this happens then they’ll end up invited into these
kinds of gathering, but for the most part there’s always going to be a
distinction between the masses and the few when it comes to one-on-one
access to certain primary sources.
Your blog started off quite personal and has become more
political as it (and you) developed. I have seen this in other blogs
too. Why do you think this is?
Basically I think it’s a question of scale. Things you feel
comfortable talking about to a small number of people feel more and
more awkward when more people start reading your site – particularly
when they start being people you know in a professional context. At a
certain point you end up moving from writing about personal stuff into
writing about things you care about. In my case that’s ended up being
a mix of films, politics, social software and technology stuff. It’s
still my voice, it’s just not talking about who I have or haven’t been
dating.
What do you think about the current high-profile of weblogs?
What kind of quality is out there - do you think it matches the NY
Times or The Guardian?
I love the fact that weblogs have been getting such a lot of
attention – and more particularly I like the fact that the bubble
hasn’t burst yet despite frequent assurances by some nay-sayers that
it would at any minute. People genuinely enjoy the ability to make
their voice heard whatever the medium and even if they’re only talking
to a few people with similar interests or aspirations.
I’m slightly nervous of the way the press treats weblogging,
though. When journalists write pieces – particularly feature pieces -
they’re not only trying to write something honest, they’re also trying
to write something that people and editors will think is interesting.
It’s a necessary flaw in mainstream journalism that means that writers
are continually looking for the next big thing, or something enormous
and surprising and transformative that they can present to their
editors. And when they write the pieces they have to justify all that
initial enthusiasm by producing a piece that explains why the thing
they’re talking about is so very terribly interesting and important. I
think weblogs have suffered from this a bit, as those journalists who
like weblogs have written inflated and melodramatic pieces that then
other journalists have then spent 400 words dismissing as rubbish. In
the background – of course – webloggers just get on with it like
normal, neither directly saving the world nor destroying it
When you have discussed big issues, like gay marriage and war
with Iraq, what kind of responses have you gotten?
Very very mixed ones. Both of those have generally received
responses that are measured and intelligent – whether they directly
agreed with me or not. But a whole range of other people have
responded very differently. When I said that a proportion of
warbloggers seemed almost blood-thirsty in their need for war, dozens
and dozens of sites started a competition called the Tom Coates Most
Blood-Thirsty Warblogger Award in which they’d compete for the right
to be the most vicious, and writing large tracts about what an
‘idiotarian’ I was and how stupid and weak my views and opinions were.
It got down to the level of shouting abuse from them to the extent
that I started to not write about politics at all. Considering that
all the way through the Iraq war my main objective was to talk about
the complexities of the issues rather than to back any side, I found
that quite difficult to deal with. Some people take to that like a
duck to water and find value in it, but just as often these little
self-reinforcing circles of fury get completely out of hand.
Do you feel any need to be a journalist when talking about these
things - be fair or objective? Or to discover the truth?
Personally I feel a great deal of pressure not to lie and a certain
amount of responsibility to correct myself and apologise when I’ve
made a mistake. I’m not sure I think it’s necessarily the
responsibility of an individual weblogger to spend a lot of time
researching their statements – sometimes it’s best to get initial
impressions and throwaway thoughts – but I think that has to be left
to the individual conscience of the individual. Again – it’s about
establishing a relationship between weblogger and weblog-readers (who
may be other webloggers) – and as such, unlike journalism where often
the individual commentator is kind of effaced, it pays to put your
cards on the table and be as open as possible. Let people understand
where you’re coming from.
Do you write for an audience? As your audience grew, did you
begin to feel any obligation to take their interests into account?
I am certainly aware of the fact that there are eyeballs out there
that read what I write – sometimes it’s a lovely feeling, sometimes
it’s a terrible thing. At times I feel a pressure to ‘perform’ that
can be quite debilitating. And yes – I will scout around some issues
rather than talk about them because I’m not prepared to get engaged in
a long-term battle around them. But with regard to writing things
because people want to hear about them, no – not really. I avoid some
controversial areas that I don’t consider myself qualified to comment
upon or wish to take considerable heat for, but otherwise I say what I
want when I want. I don’t really think of them as an audience –
they’re more like peers. I imagine most of the people who read my site
have sites of their own, and that I’ll read many of theirs as
well.
What role do you see for bloggers and journalists in the future?
Will things like Insta-Pundit means journalists will be competing with
their own audiences...?
As I’ve said, I think there are a few major differences between
professional journalists and webloggers and what they’re able to
accomplish. Certainly it seems that hard news material is unlikely to
be replicable by the weblogging culture, and to be honest I’m more
comfortable with that material being generated by these established
organisations anyway. I see the role of webloggers being more of
second-order journalism – the journalism that results in newspapers
full of comment pieces and editorials, features and opinions. And
those places are likely to be either heavily cannibalised by
webloggery or to experience a renaissance of voices (because people
will expect more varied opinions to be represented). That’s the area
that webloggers excel in and where I think they act alongside news
journalism – contextualising, correcting, editorialising and adding
interpretation to it.
Read the comments
Notes and Tips: G5 Discussion
Notes and Tips: G5 Discussion
06/10/2004 09:59 AMReaders have several questions and comments about Apple's new G5
models.
Notes from JavaOne 2004 Open Source
panel discussion.
Notes from JavaOne 2004 Open Source
panel discussion.
07/06/2004 12:09 AMAnthony Green:
Notes from
JavaOne 2004 Open Source panel discussion. Brian Behlendorf
explains his position.
[bc] BloggerCon
[bc] BloggerCon
04/17/2004 06:04 PM I'm at the second BloggerCon, Dave Winer's do at Harvard. Dave begins
by sketching the shape of the conference. Then he leads us in a
sing-along of Take Me Out to the Ballgame and the US national anthem.
Really. Now it's on to Jay Rosen's session on blogging and journalism.
He's running it like a 100-person seminar, which is the format of
sessions here. Why is blogging moving towards journalism, Jay begins
by asking. There is, of course, a spread of opinion. Are blogs moving
towards journalism? Are they more like op-eds? Are they muckrakers?
Could blogs move towards...
BloggerCon 3.0
BloggerCon 3.0
08/16/2004 10:29 AMDave and friends are planning a
BloggerCon
conference this fall in Palo Alto. Count me in. Hope I can help.
BloggerCon:
BloggerCon:
04/19/2004 03:01 AMHow to do a BloggerCon
How to do a BloggerCon
04/19/2004 06:58 AM
In the last Fat Man Sings session (in which the fat man didn't
sing) it was suggested that I write a howto that explains how to do a
BloggerCon. At that moment, as I was about to complete the job, the
thought of doing more work for BC seemed pretty horrible. But the idea
stuck and I think it's a worthwhile thing to do, but not something to
do all in one shot, rather to do it over time and hope that someone
investigating this will use a search engine to find all the bits.
BloggerCon Bloggers
BloggerCon Bloggers
04/17/2004 08:46 AMJeff Jarvis is making
copious notes about the blogging/journalism session. He types faster
than I can.
BloggerCon Links
BloggerCon Links
04/18/2004 09:50 AMTara has an enormous list of
links to folks who wrote about one or more of the BloggerCon sessions.
One way she got it was using Feedster, an RSS search
engine that I find quite useful.
Bloggercon ahoy
Bloggercon ahoy
09/22/2004 02:23 PMI spoke at the first Bloggercon last year and enjoyed it. Missed the
second one last spring.
Dave
Winer asked me to moderate a discussion at the
next one, on Nov. 6 at Stanford,
and I was game. The topic is the next phase of the continuing dialogue
on blogging and journalism. The previous discussions led by
Ed Cone and
Jay
Rosen set high standards I'll aim to match.
I've been a pro journalist for 20 years but I've always been on one
fringe or another -- first, as a writer for an alternative weekly;
then, as a theater critic on the "wrong" coast, writing for the
underdog afternoon paper here in San Francisco; then, as a migrant
from the print world to the Web, here at Salon; most recently, as a
pro editor turned blogger. Since I started my publishing career in my
teens cranking out mimeographed Diplomacy and Dungeons & Dragons
magazines in my basement, the new world of self-publishing makes me
feel right at home.
I'll do my best to steer us out of the shallow familiar waters (is
blogging journalism? Of course! Much of the time, anyway) and toward
what I feel are the more challenging questions about journalists' and
bloggers' symbiotic relationship. I've tried to lay some of them out
here. Feel
free to join the discussion over on the Bloggercon site, or at the
event, or right here.
Presidential Blogs at BloggerCon
Presidential Blogs at BloggerCon
04/17/2004 08:46 AMI'm leading the discussion later this morning at the BloggerCon
gathering on presidential blogging. Two observations:
John Kerry campaign blog
postings are signed by Dick Bell, official blogger. The George Bush campaign blog postings are
signed in a corporate way, by the campaign.
On the other hand, Bush's blog seems to point outside more often
-- a more Web-like thing to do.
BloggerCon session announcements
BloggerCon session announcements
09/22/2004 08:31 AM
Session description: Bloggers and
Journalists -- Border Crossings.
The next BloggerCon is November 6 at Stanford Law School. Late
last week I started working with the discussion leaders, one-to-one,
talking about how BloggerCon sessions work, and to get started on the
session descriptions.
I like to present the sessions one at a time, on the BloggerCon
site, and here on Scripting News. Starting today we'll be introducing
sessions on a fairly regular basis until the grid is filled in, which
will probably be the day before the conference, if memory serves me.
";->"
Scott Rosenberg, managing editor of Salon, will lead a
discussion on journalism and blogging. He's an ideal person to lead
this discussion because he's a skilled reporter, and both a journalist
and a blogger. All three BC's have had sessions about journalism. The
first discussion was led by Ed Cone, the second by Jay Rosen, and now
we turn to Scott Rosenberg.
Ideas for Saturday's BloggerCon?
Ideas for Saturday's BloggerCon?
04/15/2004 02:24 PM
Due to the unavailability of a more qualified/desirable moderator I
have been drafted to lead a session at Saturday's BloggerCon.
Supposedly there will be nearly 100 people in a single room at Harvard
Law School from 1:30-2:45 pm and we're supposed to talk about the
concentration of readership among a tiny handful of blogs.
An article by Clay
Shirky is the original source for the session.
This assignment frightens me for a number of reasons. First
the original proposition does not seem sufficiently surprising.
We are all familiar with the fact that NBC has more viewers than the
local public access channel. Second I'm not sure what issue is
amenable to a free-form unanchored discussion among 100 people but
this one doesn't seem like it. That's one of my stock refrains
in the online community world, actually, is that the publisher needs
to frame the discussion with articles or the whole site loses focus
because nobody can figure out what the purpose is.
Anyone have an idea for breaking the participants up into groups of
10, having them do something for 10 minutes, and then report the
results to the whole crowd? I think many people there will have
laptops and Harvard Law School has wireless access (MIT does too but
visitors have to donate a kidney to the I/S department before they are
authorized to use it).
"just about every single BloggerCon
post"
"just about every single BloggerCon
post"
04/19/2004 03:01 AM
Liloia.com: Blogging BloggerCon
Liloia.com: Blogging BloggerCon
04/19/2004 12:12 AM
just about every single BloggerCon post .. links to Bloggercon
blogging .. linksliloia.com/archives/000729.php
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BloggerCon: Presidential Bloggers
BloggerCon: Presidential Bloggers
04/09/2004 04:00 PM
Four years ago, almost no one would have connected the words
"presidential" and "weblog" -- the very notion would have seemed
bizarre. No longer.
At next week's BloggerCon, I
propose to look at presidential weblogs from four perspectives:
Official campaign blogs. Should candidates do their own postings
(do they have time)? Are campaign blogs serving internal needs, or
informing the electorate, or both? What makes a campaign blog work, or
not?
Affiliated blogs. A new generation of political activists is
pushing voters and money toward the campaigns. How closely tied can
(or should) campaigns be to their supporters? Is central control a
given, or will the authority ultimately devolve to the edges as it
supposedly did in the Dean campaign, at least for a while? What are
the opportunities and risks? (Even linking seems to be in play these
days. Jay Rosen analyses the Daily Kos furor here.)
Commentator blogs. Political reporters are derelict if they don't
read, among others, Glenn
Reynolds and Josh
Marshall. What effect is the new-media commentariat having on the
political process?
Missing links. Do we need more bloggers who avoid commentary and
focus on facts? Maybe we need more issue-oriented blogs, going way
beyond the something-for-everyone position papers that candidates post
on websites. How about a health-care blog where someone tracks
everything the candidates say about this issue? In general, how can
the blogosphere improve the political process?
We're expecting several campaign bloggers (official and otherwise) to
join us in Cambridge next Saturday. Remember, the session is not about
what I think. It's about what we can come up with together. You can
help by posting some comments here or on the BloggerCon site, and by
suggesting new questions.
E:M | Brainstorming at Bloggercon -
International bl0gging
E:M | Brainstorming at Bloggercon -
International bl0gging
04/18/2004 04:23 AM
Editor: Myself (English) .. # 17 Apr 04 @ 02:06 PM .. Hoder's
commentshoder.com/weblog/archives/010481.shtml
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The BloggerCon 2003 Webl0g: Home Page
The BloggerCon 2003 Webl0g: Home Page
04/17/2004 08:53 AM
News in Blogging:This weekend's Blogger Con .. Harvard Blog Conference
.. The BloggerCon 2003 .. BloggerCon2003 ..
BloggerConblogs.law.harvard.edu/bloggerCon
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End of discussion
End of discussion
05/17/2004 10:22 AM
USA Today May 17 2004 2:07PM GMT
"the discussion about FeedBurner"
"the discussion about FeedBurner"
03/28/2005 11:58 PM
Fahrenheit 9/11 Discussion
Fahrenheit 9/11 Discussion
06/27/2004 09:37 AM
lengthy discussion
lengthy discussion
02/05/2005 09:55 PM
Eugene
Volokhvolokh.com/archives/archive_2005_02_00.shtml#1107524536
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Spammer discussion
Spammer discussion
01/12/2004 01:53 AM
Blog and guestbook spammers are discussing spam techniques in this
Usenet thread found by Andy
Baio.
It’s an interesting read. One of the main characters is a
moron who shows his ignorance at every turn. There are many claims
that what they are doing is Search Engine Optimization (SEO). There
are legitimate SEO companies, and there are guys like these. If you
are hiring a SEO company, make sure you know what techniques they are
using or you might end up with a site marketed in the same manner as
the porn and prescription drug schemes they are discussing.
They also linked to my AP News
article on spam. So they know we’re watching.
Discussion 33250
Discussion 33250
05/22/2004 12:51 PM
Box of
Snakes 'Linked to Death' Little Rock, Ark. Police are investigating a link between a mysterious box of
venomous
snakes and
the death of a business traveler whose body was found in a rental car
last week.
PHP Platform Discussion
PHP Platform Discussion
12/02/2002 01:17 PM
An interesting discussion has recently started on the PHP Developers'
mailing list. Ken Eqervari has posted a serious post questioning the
future of PHP, and asking the vital question: Who is leading PHP into
the future.
H-Net's Discussion Network
H-Net's Discussion Network
08/13/2004 05:05 AM
H-Net's Discussion Network
http://www.h-net.org/lists/
H-Net's Discussion Network over 100 email lists spanning
various fields of study. H-Net's e-mail lists function as electronic
networks, linking professors, teachers and students in an egalitarian
exchange of ideas and materials. Every aspect of academic
life--research, teaching, controversies new and old--is open for
discussion; decorum is maintained by H-Net's dedicated editors.
Subscribers and editors communicate through electronic mail messages
sent to the group. These messages can be saved, discarded, downloaded
to a local computer, copied, printed out, or relayed to someone else.
Otherwise, the lists are all public, and can be quoted and cited with
proper attribution. The lists are connected to their own sites on the
World Wide Web, that store discussion threads, important documents,
and links to related sites on the web.
H-Net lists reach
over 100,000 subscribers in more than 90 countries. Subscriptions are
screened by the list's editors to promote a diverse readership
dedicated to friendly, productive, scholarly communications. Each list
publishes between 15 and 60 messages a week. Subscription applications
are solicited from scholars, teachers, professors, researchers,
graduate students, journalists, librarians and archivists. Each
network has its own "personality," is edited by a team of scholars,
and has a board of editors; most are cosponsored by a professional
society. The editors control the flow of messages, commission reviews,
and reject flames and items unsuitable for a scholarly discussion
group. The goals of H-Net lists are to enable scholars to easily
communicate current research and teaching interests; to discuss new
approaches, methods and tools of analysis; to share information on
electronic databases; and to test new ideas and share comments on the
literature in their fields. This will be added to Academic Resources
Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.
New Patching Discussion Resources
New Patching Discussion Resources
06/17/2004 06:16 PM
Lycos Discussion Search
Lycos Discussion Search
08/30/2004 06:51 AM
Lycos Discussion Search
http://discussion.lycos.com/
Lycos Discussion Search provides you the tools to search and
retrieve information from millions of discussion threads and
conversations taking place on the World Wide Web. These interactive
conversations may include listings from some of the more popular
community listings. If you have an interest or need some information
about a person, place or thing - find out what other folks are saying
and search for a discussion on your interested topic. Lycos is working
to provide you ONE place to find information about all your interests
and your friends, family and colleagues, both current and future. This
has been added to Finding
People Subject™ Tracer Information Blog. This also has been
added to Business Intelligence
Resources Subject Tracer™ Information Blog. This will be
added to the search engine section of all the Internet MiniGuides
2004-05.
the atom discussion heats up again
the atom discussion heats up again
12/30/2003 01:16 AM
I'm listening to Sunday Bloody Sunday Live at Slane 2001, and
there's Bono saying "Compromise: Another dirty word. Compromise."
Ok, enough with the hyperbole. Here it goes...
Threaded Discussion with ColdFusion
Threaded Discussion with ColdFusion
05/23/2002 10:39 PM
Google Algo Discussion
Google Algo Discussion
09/30/2002 12:17 AM
A fairly insightfull discussion on the current state of the Google
search algo.
UK's EU rebate under discussion
UK's EU rebate under discussion
07/14/2004 05:00 AM
The UK is defending its EU rebate as the European Commission discusses
plans which could end it.
ATi Filtering Discussion Chat Log
ATi Filtering Discussion Chat Log
05/19/2004 04:37 PM
Atom discussion minutes
Atom discussion minutes
05/18/2004 04:43 PM
The minutes from the Atom/W3C discussion in New York have been posted online.
Unfortunately the default formatting is pretty difficult to follow. I
found it a lot easier to figure out who was saying what after applying
the following CSS
(using the test styles
bookmarklet):
abbr {
display: block;
margin-top: 1em;
margin-bottom: 0.5em;
font-weight: bold;
}
abbr:after {
content: " - " attr(title);
}
Discussion with Media Leaders
Discussion with Media Leaders
01/22/2004 03:03 AM
I'm in a meeting with the WEF Media Leaders. Its a few dozen people
consisting of the editors-in-chief and CEOs of a variety of major
media organizations from around the world.
I'm going to talk about the role of blogs and how we might work
together. I'm going to talk about how blogs can address the issue of
getting people to care about about things by providing a voice to
people who don't have a voice and can provide additional resources,
which seems to be one of the issues that many of these media companies
have.
I will also try to talk to the big media companies about designing
their online presence to be more blogger friendly.
I'll try to post notes here. The rules for this meeting are "off
the record for background and not for attribution unless explicit
permission to quote is granted by each speaker concerned."
I've also gotten the opportunity to hear some of the concerns that
are facing these media leaders today and will summarize my notes
later.
School shooting discussion
School shooting discussion
03/22/2005 03:31 PM
Grok Description matches for BloggerCon: Discussion Notes for, "What is Journalism? And What Can Weblogs Do About It?"
GrokA matches for BloggerCon: Discussion Notes for, "What is Journalism? And What Can Weblogs Do About It?"
BloggerCon: Discussion Notes for, "What is Journalism? And What Can Weblogs Do About It?"