Tracking the tools that decentralize the media. tools process ideas resources eventsav

unmediated

 

May 22, 2005

MIT Technology Review has a great overview of this emerging, online, collaborative way of creating and disseminating news.

In some cases, such as the Korean site OhMyNews, CCJ [Collaborative Citizen Journalism] stories are reported by a team of volunteer journalists; in others, such as Wiki News, a group does serial fact-checking and vetting on an existing piece, calling attention to errors or omissions.

"Collaborative citizen journalism is a very, very nuanced thing, and it's different than just one citizen blogging," says Jason Calacanis, founder of Weblogs, Inc., a large blog publisher, in an email. "But CCJ is the best method for getting to the truth since you have many people and their perspectives involved in the process. Of course, CCJ it is harder to produce (at least right now since it is so new)."

One of the newest members of the CCJ scene is also one of the most intriguing.

This week saw the very-soft launch of Bayosphere, created by veteran technology journalist Dan Gillmor, who left the San Jose Mercury News last year and wrote a book We The Media, in which he espoused many of the tenets of this new form. Bayosphere joins a small community of sites, such as Wiki News, Backyard, and Newstrust, dedicated to getting people to work together to chase their own stories, comment on stories from the mainstream media, and track which news they think warrants their attention.
continues on to talk about how Collaborative Citizen Journalism generally falls under three different approaches: Localized/regional (like Bayosphere, local indymedias, etc), broad approaches (like wikinews and ohmynews), and collaborative media-watchdog approaches (like Newstrust).

The last approach (media vetting) is very ripe for development of collabrative applications and efforts. Media analysis was once largely the domain of email lists, and politics-oriented websites. This online media vetting has rarely been collaborative (besides the email lists) and has usually been polarized towards one "side" of a political issue. So, given that climate, creators of these collaboration schemes will need to take steps to avoid allowing these spaces to disintigrate into yet another battle ground.

Via Smart Mobs


Originally from Smart Mobs, remediated by yatta on May 22, 2005 at 09:31 AM