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November 07, 2004

Citizen journalist at a murder scene

Ken Smith points us to the latest episode of citizens journalism -- yesterday's publication of a photo of a murdered Dutch filmmaker taken by a passer-by with a camera phone who arrived at the scene before the professional photographers. He had the only photo taken before the body was covered.

Reuters has an article about this episode on ZDNet UK.

Newspapers and other media are starting to tap into the rich vein of information that can be provided by a public increasingly armed with camera-equipped phones

Twice in one month the biggest Dutch newspaper has published front-page pictures shot by amateur photographers using their mobile phones, showing how advances in technology can assist traditional media in gathering news.

The De Telegraaf daily newspaper, with a circulation of close to 800,000 copies, on Wednesday published a picture of the dead filmmaker and columnist Theo van Gogh, whom police say was probably killed by an Islamic militant.

Passerby Aron Boskma took a picture with his mobile phone at the scene of the crime in Amsterdam. News photographers arrived only after the body had been covered, leaving Boskma's picture the only one showing knives plunged into van Gogh's body.

"This picture was the story. There was a discussion if we should use it, but everyone who would have had this picture would have published it," Telegraaf pictures editor Peter Schoonen said. ...

We'll be seeing many, many more examples of this in the years ahead, so much so that it will soon become routine and the act of citizen journalism no longer newsworthy.

If anyone spots a link to the actual photo, please post it [at NewMediaMusings].


Posted by yatta at 10:55 PM