Bill Mitchell of Poynter Online provides a breakdown of the proposed government intervention in preserving journalism, and adds his checklist of qualifications for any bureaucratic interference. He writes that any proposal, from tax breaks to relaxed antitrust regulations, must preserve editorial independence, promote innovation, and encourage news consumption. He emphasizes that the goal has to be to preserve journalism, not the media companies. You can read Mitchell's article on Poytner here…….Continue Reading A primer on proposals to help media
Category: News
FT turns to its readers for editorial content
This week, the Financial Times began asking its readers to contribute to online editoral content. Readers will contribute to the Arena blog, which launches today. The first topic centers on higher taxes. This development is the latest in a trend of crowdsourcing. Earlier this week, the New York Times put out a similar call for contribution from its readers. You can read the article in UK's The Guardian here…….Continue Reading FT turns to its readers for editorial content
Canadian newspapers fare better
The Windsor Star explains some of the reasons that Canada's newspaper industry is performing better than its counterpart in the U.S. Among the reasons are higher readership, less competition for ad revenue and a less devastating economic downturn. This is not to say that Canadian newspapers are not struggling. You read the article in Canada's Windsor Star here…….Continue Reading Canadian newspapers fare better
Questioning the value of comments
The Internet has been praised for increasing the level of interaction between the producers of news and its consumers. Yet Virginia Heffernan of the New York Times questions just how valuable the online "Comments" section of articles really is. Using Slate/Washington Post columnist Ann Applebaum as an example, Heffernan notes that this journalist, who has been called one of the "world's most sophisticated thinkers," reguarly receives anti-Semitist, angry, superficial, and just plain irrelevant comments for her pieces. You can read the piece in the New York Times here…….Continue Reading Questioning the value of comments
An attempt to get aggregators to pay
The Attributor Corp has joined with a group of online publishers to form the Fair Syndication Consortium (FSC), a venture that hopes to gain advertising revenue from sites that reproduce their content. Attributor already works with the AP and the Financial Times to track their content, so that those organizations can request that their work be taken down if used inappropriately. Now, however, the FSC hopes to use that same technology to track the use of their content and persuade the reproducers to share in the advertising revenue. You can read the announcement on the Editors' Weblog here. UPDATE: The……Continue Reading An attempt to get aggregators to pay
Local news adds to its newscast
Even as their newsrooms contract, local TV news stations are adding time to their broadcasts, totaling on average half an hour per day. In these tough economic times, the local news stations hope that by increasing their news hours, they will remain competitive and vibrant operations. Yet local news remains less profitable than in the past, and the vast majority of stations have had to consolidate and lay off workers. Read the Huffington Post story — April 27, 2009…….Continue Reading Local news adds to its newscast
Google to offer more targeted news
Google CEO Eric Schmidt has a plan that he believes may help newspapers generate more revenue for their content. Google's algorthims will start bringing users the news, adapted to their preferences, without the users even looking for it. Because the news will be personalized and highly targeted, the site can charge for premium ads alongside the stories. Problematically, the content producers will not receive a cut from this additional revenue, but Google says that this will still help the newspapers as they will receive more hits on their sites. You can read the Editors' Weblog Post here…….Continue Reading Google to offer more targeted news
New York Times turns to crowdsourcing
In an experiment aimed at increasing reader interaction, the New York Times has turned to crowdsourcing — using its readers as the sources for news. The paper has published over 650 pages of Timothy Geithner's schedule as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and asked that its readers supply their thoughts on what is worth noting in the document. The NYT has already published some of its own insights and perspective, but is offering the masses a greater chance to weigh in. You can read the blog post in The Independent here…….Continue Reading New York Times turns to crowdsourcing
Fellows Selected for Inaugural News Entrepreneur Boot Camp
Fifteen digital journalists from 10 states have been selected for the inaugural class of the Knight Digital Media Center's News Entrepreneur Boot Camp. Through an intense week of training in audience development, market research, business practices and management, legal issues, and entrepreneurial decision-making, the program will prepare journalists to develop and launch new and sustainable news and information services in the public's interest. The News Entrepreneur Boot Camp will be in Los Angeles in May 2009 and is presented in partnership with the Lloyd Greif Center for Entrepreneurial Studies at USC's Marshall School of Business, the Center on Communication Leadership……Continue Reading Fellows Selected for Inaugural News Entrepreneur Boot Camp
Alex Jones: Endow ‘NewsHour’ with $2 billion
Alex Jones has led one of the nation's most successful nonprofits on politics and the press for nearly nine years. Like many people, though, he doesn't think the fundamental answer to the news media's precipitous slide will be found in the largess of philanthropists and foundations. "The solution to what's happening to news media these days is going to be a commercial one," said Jones, director of the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy. There are two exceptions, though, and one of them is a big one.Jones wants one or more of the world's richest people……Continue Reading Alex Jones: Endow ‘NewsHour’ with $2 billion