The question is no longer: “Typepad, Blogger or @WordPress?”

On New Year’s Eve, while having a sauna alone I got a couple of ideas for blogging.

I should really move to WordPress. The question is no longer: “Typepad, Blogger or WP?” But rather: “Posterous, Tumblr or WP?” While Posterous and Tumblr may be easier to use, the main reasons for going with WP are:

  • It’s free as in “speech”;
  • It’s free as in “beer”;
  • WP the company has recently transferred the WP brand name to WP the foundation;
  • I could host it myself if I wanted to (and I might);
  • It has a huge user and developer base;
  • I have seen reasonably nice layout templates lately.

Hesitations:

  • The effort involved in migrating my Typepad blog content to WP;
  • What will happen to the URLs? Will they all stay intact and work after domain mapping?
  • What will happen with the images and files that I’ve uploaded to Typepad? And to the URLs pointing to them? (BTW: this concern should prompt me not ever to upload images or other files to blog tools ever again. Instead use embed code, pointing to such objects on other services; just like with the videos)
  • Dave Winer made a good point after talking with WP’s Matt Mullenweg: There is something not-this-century about having a content management interface which looks different from the published content. Generations of people who’ve become familiar with the Web through services like Facebook don’t understand why all isn’t WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get).

Reasons why I would want to host it myself:

  • If something bad happened to WP the company, I would not only “own” but indeed have my own data;
  • I can probably arrange my domain mapping for a better price than at http://wordpress.com (maybe via Google);
  • Self-hosting allows for more flexibility in features and modules, compared to http://wordpress.org, where availability of features depends on approval by committee.

Amplification is the new circulation

When one quotes, forwards or retweets a reported fact (or opinion, for that matter), I believe it is considered good journalistic practice to try and reference a source as close as possible to the original event, observer or report.

David Weinberger‘s “transparency is the new objectivity” would support the suggestion that such practice is just as much required on the Net today than it has been in the press and public discourse traditionally.

(And BTW, Just like professor Weinberger does, I should really apologize for the cliché of “x is the new y.”)

Dan Gillmor appears to support this principle as well by recommending that we should be skeptical of everything (while not equally skeptical of everything) we read and always consider the trustworthiness of the source and the verifiability of its claim.

And while I agree that the transparency and verifiability of a story’s origin  is an important attribute of its credibility, I also observe a dilemma here:

With the proliferating practice of reblogging and retweeting, it often seems increasingly cumbersome to track down the original source.

Amplification is the new circulation.

As we move away from the lecture model to the conversation model, facts and opinion spread through the social graph as by “word of post”.

Tweet: http://ping.fm/F2TxI @jayrosen_nyu Is it reasonable to expect from everyone who amplifies a message that they link to the origin?

Jay Rosen, I believe that this is a challenge for the rebooted news system and I would love to learn your take on it.

Let me offer an example.

My wife, Minnna Ojamies, is a native Finn, who follows the Finnish mainstream media closely. She serves as my “human filter” to the news in Finnish. She uses Google Reader to share the news reports which she considers most interesting. I subscribe to her shared reading on Google Reader.

Also I happen to share stuff I read; articles, posts and tweets which I think may be of interest to others and/or which I would like to capture for possible future reference.

What I share on Google Reader flows into an RSS feed (edited on Yahoo! Pipes to include the string “[Reading:]” in front of the headline), which is forwarded by notify.me via Ping.fm onto a number of “social” web services including my account on Twitter.

The other day, she shared this article published on Taloussanomat, reporting that the 100-dollar laptop, for which Nicholas Negroponte has been campaigning, had arrived.

I hadn’t seen this news in any of the other RSS feeds that I subscribe to. Unfortunately, the article was rather poor on source references. Also, it didn’t mention much anything about the timing of availability of the laptop in question, nor about its competition.

In other words, there was little transparency and verifiability to go by. Yet, when it comes to overall credibility as a news brand, Taloussanomat finds itself – in my perception at least – in positive territory. Therefor I shared it.

The topic interests me and if the report turns out to be “new and true”, I will be happy that I captured and amplified it. If not, I will be disappointed in Taloussanomat and regret amplifying noise rather than signal.

I could have done my own background check, of course. A simple web search would probably have done the trick. And services like Techmeme are helpful, too.

But my point, really, is that it may not be realistic to expect “amplifiers” to routinely carry out verification checks.

Personally, when I am in “reading mode”, catching up with my RSS subscriptions, I don’t  necessarily want to allocate much time to verification. My priority is to read, capture and share (and amplification is a by-product which serves the rebooted news system).

So, I’m kinda wondering if it would be acceptable that we simply link to where we read the news – in my case the article by Taloussanomat – and perhaps trust that the rebooted news system will somehow take care of verifying the origin itself.

That, across all these chains of amplification, some people will actually go back and refer to the origin of the story – especially when doubt or controversy (combined with a lack of transparency or verifiability) pass a certain threshold.

 

There’s another remark or two that I wanted to make around amplification being the new circulation.

If we accept this framing of the new news system for a moment, it might lead us to believe that pay walls a la Rupert Murdoch constitute indeed an act of shooting oneself in the proverbial foot.

Let’s assume for a moment that the way to reach people on-line is less about signing up subscribers and more about amplification.

In a sense, the newspaper sales model can be associated with “push” and the amplification model with “pull”. Through subscription and sales outlets, stuff is pushed to people on certain terms, but only after recieving the package will they find out what they appreciate and what not. What they subsequently do like and decide to amplify is what they have pulled out as signal from the noise.

You can’t put it back into the tube, Mr. Murdoch!

In such a world, where pull trumps push and amplification trumps circulation, any content behind paywalls cannot be amplified.

Or rather, of course the message can be amplified – Washington Post readers also have Twitter accounts – but the paywall discourages the referencing of the original source.

So, if amplification is the new circulation, perhaps the amplifiers (that’s us) won’t always take the trouble of reading and verifying the original source, especially when it’s made cumbersome to do so. If important enough, we’ll do the fact-checking somehow routing around the paywall. Perhaps we’ll find our own sources.

Hm, Dave Winer, perhaps it’s not only that sources are going direct, (@davewiner, what would be the best link to this theme?), but also readers will go direct, namely directly to the source.

Tweet: http://ping.fm/F2TxI @davewiner Seems to me that not only sources, but also receivers go direct, namely to the source.

(When sources go direct, they become senders. And if senders can go direct, so can receivers or readers.)

Finally: how about if the half time of news is approaching to zero, much like the cost of storage of digital content is approaching to zero?

In a variation to Chris Anderson, will it make best business sense to give the news away for free and sell something else? Some type of premium content? Live experiences?

In such scenario, high-quality news including investigative reporting will merely be a brand builder, an investment rather than a business of its own.

Why an “e2i” blog would be a good idea for Nokia

In a comment to my status update on Facebook,

"http://ping.fm/73D1E Should I wait (forever) until "Updating Nokia device view" in Ovi Suite ends, before I can sync the photos from my N97?"

…one friendly ex-colleage wrote:

"you should get an internal blog"

…immediately followed by:

"ahh you are not in Nokia anymore…"

It's funny you should mention that, my friend 🙂

As it happens, I was the first person in Nokia's global corporate communications team to start an internal blog, back in January, 2005. I called my blog 'theCapture', to reflect the immediacy of blogging; that it enables us to capture our (hereto mostly tacit) thoughts and ideas, and to make them explicit in order to grow our shared knowledge together.

You know, standing on the shoulders of giants and all that.

cap-ture (…) -n. 4. the act of capturing. 5. the thing or person captured.
(source: Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language)

I had fallen in love with the cluetrain and developed a strong belief that blogging (outside AND inside the company) would inevitably help 'Fortress BigCo' to actually start conversing with its customers AND itself (i.e. its employees), rather than continuing on the cul-de-sac of broadcasting sanitized packages of strategically aligned "messaging".

NRC's Bob Iannucci said it well in December of 2005, when he contemplated the main drivers for internal blogging:

  1. Flattening the organization
  2. Speeding up communication and decision making processes
  3. Reinforcing ideas

I considered it a test bed for the way we would develop the Nokia News Service – the main news channel on the intranet at the time – into more of a social medium. We re-branded and relaunched the service as the 'News Hub' in November 2006.

Judging by the jury of the CiB Awards 2007, we did a reasonably nice job.

(The concept caught on; suddenly we had a VideoHub, a BlogHub, a Hubcast…)

But I digress; back to your suggestion, [NAME OMITTED].

You know what? It would actually make sense for Nokia to "syndicate-in" a blog produced by an external.

By the end of this month it will be a year ago since I left the company. During this year I have learned how being a "real" user – having to compare the devices, the operator plans, the software and  services, and having to fix bugs as well as features – is very different from being a Nokia employee with full technical support and money being no object (to using the best fit-for-purpose tools). Now, on a daily basis, I run into challenges relating to my Nokia brand experience that I didn't use to encounter while on the inside.

Take for example my current issue regarding the N97's synchronization to the Nokia Ovi Suite and Nokia Photos. At HQ in Keilalahti, tech support would have fixed this for me – or actually, the problem likely wouldn't have occurred in the first place.

So, why would an "external2internal" blog be a good idea for Nokia?

The benefits of an "e2i" blogger are a combination of increased diversity, balance, and reality check.

The internal culture reinforces a positive bias towards the company and
the brand.

Don't get me wrong: Nokia is an admirable company and I'm
a fan! I care! Otherwise I would be wasting my breath. Did you
notice that I'm hanging on to – and publicly defending – the Nokia N97
in spite of all the (social) iPhone pressure? 🙂

And it is exactly because I care that I also point out
concerns such as the ones expressed by Robert Scoble. Tell me whose job it is
inside the company to bring this kind of stuff to people's attention. And yet, I think it's relevant to everyone in Nokia. An "e2i" blogger would add value here.

The external world is tougher and more real. IMHO and FWIW, it would be
of value to Nokia people – be they in comms, marketing, design or
R&D – to read how people in the real world experience their brand.
After all, who owns the brand, anyway?

The external view is different. The daily challenges to someone on the outside are different. With diversity you generate more, and often more creative, ideas.

(See also Hugh MacLeod's diagram explaining why corporate blogging works.)

Now, I might be inclined… But first we would really need to talk about that small dilemma of "sponsored conversations" 🙂

Posterous better for podcasting than TypePad?

Uploading audio files to be embedded in posts on TypePad – and in the RSS/podcast feed which is managed by FeedBurner – appears to be excruciatingly slow.

I'm wondering if it would be more convenient to email the file onto Posterous, which will then post it on TypePad. I could then create a "multimedia/podcast feed" from Posterous, using FeedBurner, and offer that multimedia feed as a separate link on my TypePad blog.

Just a thought.

The blog content portability debate needs to happen in public

I feel like caught in a crossfire. Let me first explain my own position:

As I have repeatedly blogged ('Is it worth switching from TypePad to WordPress?', 'If you were to start blogging today…', 'Hopes and fears of switching to WordPress'), in my opinion bloggers suffer from a lock-in to blog services which probably shouldn't be all that difficult to unlock.

I don't really understand why there doesn't seem to be an easy way to export, convert and import the contents of any blog between any of
the major blog platforms.

My blog runs on TypePad. If I so
wished, it should be dead simple for me to click "export" in the
TypePad interface, save an export file on my local hard disk, then
import it to a new or existing blog on Blogger or WordPress. And vice
versa.

Portability

It's like number portability between mobile operators.
Nowadays it's a snap to switch between operators while keeping your
phone number (at least in Finland and generally in Europe), the moment
a more attractive pricing plan comes along.

Not that any
operator volunteered. Number portability is something the competition
authorities have forced through. It's been good for competition. It's
been good for users. It's been good for new entrants to the market.
It's been good for those companies that offer the best price/quality.

So,
that's what I would like to happen to blog conversion. I'm not a geek
and it's been prohibitively intimidating to me to even start  trying to
convert my blog from TypePad to e.g. WordPress.

Now, someone
came along offering to "rescue" TypePad blogs. They're called
Foliovision and they are campaigning agressively, in a tone of voice
that is rather hostile to TypePad.

So, yesterday I read this article, 'Typepad Export Options: Congenial Lies from SixApart's Anil Dash',
on Foliovision's website. I don't like the tone and I can't judge if
everything in this article is true. But the topic certainly seems
relevant to me.

| (re-blogged!)

So I shared this piece through Google Reader as
I do with most of the stuff I read online and find interesting. My
shared reading is posted automatically onto a number of social media sites, including my account on Twitter.

By
reblogging stuff I read, I do not endorse its contents. Instead, I
merely intend to indicate: I've read this, I find it interesting and
worth keeping a trace of for future reference, and I'm sharing this as
part of the conversations I care to engage in.

Now, I totally understand that Anil Dash is upset because Foliovision's Alec Kinnear is calling him a liar. And yet, I was surprised to receive a direct message from Anil via Twitter, saying:

"I'd appreciate if you checked foliovision's lies with me before you reblogged it."

I was surprised that Anil wanted to tell me this off-public.
And by sending this message to me directly, I feel that he implies to
me that I should resolve this topic with him through a back channel.

So, it seems to me that my answer to Anil must be:

Anil,
I was only sharing what I had read and deemed relevant. I have no
reason to think that you are lying, nor do I endorse such notion.

However, the debate about the portability of blog content has to happen in the open because it concerns everybody.

I
invite you to explain what you mean by "Foliovision's lies". Did the
interview take place or not? In which way do you feel you are not
correctly represented? Which part(s) of the article is/are, in your
view, not true?

More to the point, does Foliovision's 20-step guide for TypePad to WordPress conversion
hold water? Or is there a considerably easier way? A way that would not
compell TypePad customers who'd like to "switch operators" to pay $350 for someone like Folivision to help them?

After all, the bigger issue is: how can we make blog conversion push-button simple?

(BTW, I just found DataPortability.org. Hopefully they are doing something about this problem as well…)

Capturables from Rebooting the News #10

Just arrived to the office. Lots of stuff I feel like unloading.

On my way here I listened to episode 10 of Rebooting the News. I think it was one of the best shows in the series so far (among the first 10, that is – I have some catching up to do).

Jay Rosen makes two very pertinent connections between the tech world and journalism. The first connection is about bug catching, a very common and appreciated practice in software development, but very under-utilized and unappreciated in journalism.

In software development, everyone acknowledges that you cannot ship a perfect product. There will always be bugs and users are actually thanked for pointing them out. In journalism however, the expectation is that journalist check and double-check before they publish, and then ship a "perfect" product. If a reader points out a mistake or contradiction, typically the journalist either doesn't respond at all, or responds in a defensive fashion. Jay explains it as tribalism.

Blogging seems to allow for a less defensive attitude. Blog posts are perceived as less finished or less perfect, and bloggers seem more willing to correct and update their copy, while acknowledging readers' feedback.

It's an interesting phenomenon to point out and certainly something that needs to be addressed in the "new news system".

The second connection Jay makes is about usability. Why are geeks not better at making things easy to use? Dave Winer says it's because it's so damn hard to do. And it requires a great sense of empathy – the ability to put oneself in the users' shoes. He mentions Martin Scorsese and Marlon Brando.

Jay sees a nice parallel in that journalism is about making it easy for users to user their own democracy, lowering barriers to participate without much prior knowledge. (This is so true and elegant!)

What else? The Church of the Savvy. That's Jay's description of the undeclared religion of the press. Above anything else, journalists will value, remain loyal to and defend their savvy-ness.

Jay's inspiration of the week is Elvis Costello's recording of Nick Lowe's classic, 'What's So Funny 'Bout Peace Love and Understanding'.

Note-to-self: action points:

  1. Check out Jay's tumblr blog – I didn't know he had one, and I was wondering why Google Reader hasn't served me any blog content from Jay lately (I've subscribed to PressThink);
  2. Check out blogtalkradio, which is what Dave is using for these podcasts. I need to figure out a way to produce podcasts easily and economically.

[REPEAT from June 1: Dave built a dedicated site for 'Rebooting the News', at http://rebootnews.com/. He also created an RSS feed of this podcast series, at http://rebootnews.com/rss.xml. And a package of the first ten episodes which he uploaded as a torrent to Mininova at http://www.mininova.org/tor/2637891. He announced all of this here: http://www.scripting.com/stories/2009/05/30/rebootingTheNews110.html]

And don't miss the FriendFeed room either!

The hassle of maintaining “about”-info on TypePad

Over the past week or so I've been updating the "About" information on my blog at www.josschuurmans.com and some other Internet destinations where I have a presence.

TypePad has some standard functionality to help members create and update an "About Page", as part of the TypePad user interface.

First, edit the content modules on your Author Profile from:
http://www.typepad.com/account/profile

Then, select the content modules for your standard About Page from:
http://www.typepad.com/account/profile/about

I wanted to not only update my info, but also have a description running on the right-hand column on my blog. So I created a TypeList note to display a summary of my "about"-info. You can create TypeLists from:
http://www.typepad.com/site/lists

Now, my account name on the TypePad sytem, "ojamies", differs from my own name and the name of my blog. I have domain-mapped my blog to www.josschuurmans.com, but it turns out that the default About Page which TypePad generates will not be mapped to the same domain. Instead, it will reside at: http://ojamies.typepad.com/about.html. (whereas my TypePad Profile lives at: http://profile.typepad.com/josschuurmans)

I find this odd.

As you may read below from the exchange I had with TypePad's support desk, re-domain-mapping my whole site in order to include the About Page would change all the URLs of my blog posts.

I find this odd.

The alternative then was to create an additional About Page, just like a normal page, and manually populate it with similar information as goes onto the default page. The new page lives where I would want it to, at: http://www.josschuurmans.com/about.html

Perhaps the "blessing in disguise" in this case was that the manually created page is more flexible, so I can edit and add information that I couldn't select to the default page.

One thing I would have liked TypePad to offer is the possibility to categorize pages. Then I could have categorized my manually created About Page under the "about" category, which now only shows blog posts, no pages.

To recap, I now have more or less the same "about" info in five different places on the TypePad system:

  1. In a TypeList on the right-hand column of each page on my blog at www.josschuurmans.com;
  2. In the About Page I manually created at http://www.josschuurmans.com/about.html;
  3. In the About Page which TypePad has generated at http://ojamies.typepad.com/about.html;
  4. In my TypePad Profile at http://profile.typepad.com/josschuurmans;
  5. In blog posts categorized under http://www.josschuurmans.com/about;

I find this odd.

Not only is this a big hassle in terms of maintenance; I'm also wondering how it all affects search engine optimization?

Anyway, for completeness, here's my exchange with the kind people at TypePad's support:

[STARTS]

Automated Error

On Jul 30, 2009 2:21 PM, you (josschuurmans) said:

I
created a new type list note. After saving it, I clicked the "publish"
tab. Then I was presented with 4 destinations: my 3 blogs and my About
Page. When I clicked the link to "view" the About Page, this error
occurred. I wonder if this means that I don't have an About Page?

On Jul 30, 2009 6:03 PM, TypePad Customer Support said:

Hi,
It
looks like you entered a URL for a link without the http:// at the
beginning.
Try entering the URL with http:// at the beginning, as
http://ojamies.typepad.com/about.html and that should work better for
you. We hope this helps. Please let us know if there is anything else
we can do for you.
Thanks,
Zalary

On Aug 1, 2009 4:50 PM, you (josschuurmans) said:

Okay,
I found my About Page at http://ojamies.typepad.com/about.html
However, I have domain-mapped my blog to: http://www.josschuurmans.com.
How can we arrange this so that my About Page is also domain-mapped,
i.e. to: http://www.josschuurmans.com/about.html ?

On Aug 1, 2009 9:34 PM, TypePad Customer Support said:

Hi,
If
you'd like your About page to use the domain URL, your entire site will
need to be mapped. It looks like you currently have the domain mapped
to a specific blog. You can delete the current mapping that you have in
TypePad and set it up again. Changing the Domain Mapping settings,
however, will change links to your existing posts. Instead of changing
how the domain is mapped to your blog, you may want to create a new
page with your About information.
More information is available in the article on creating additional
About pages here:
http://kb.typepad.com/id/390/
We hope this helps. Please let us know if there is anything else we can
do for you.
Thanks,
Zalary

On Aug 4, 2009 10:31 AM, you (josschuurmans) said:

How would the links to my existing posts change if I domain-mapped my entire site?

On Aug 4, 2009 9:48 PM, TypePad Customer Support said:

Hi
Jos,
Thanks for the note. If you change domain mapping, the folder name
would be added to its URL. instead of your weblog being at
http://www.josschuurmans.com/ it would be at
http://www.josschuurmans.com/josschuurmans/ instead.
So a link like
http://www.josschuurmans.com/2009/08/jacob-nielsen-on-social-intranet-software-opening-up-corporate-communication.html
would become
http://www.josschuurmans.com/josschuurmans/2009/08/jacob-nielsen-on-social-intranet-software-opening-up-corporate-communication.html
instead.
This will break all outside links to your site, so like Zalary
mentioned, we would recommend you use a TypePad Page and create a new
About Page within the blog instead.
I hope this helps. Please let us know if there is anything else we can
do for you.
Thanks,
Kymberlie

On Aug 6, 2009 11:15 AM, you (josschuurmans) said:

Zalary, Kymberlie, thank you both for explaining!
(I'll close this ticket now)
Best,
Jos

[ENDS]

Forrester and the smell of “sponsored conversations”

Anyone can smell this rat from a distance. It stinks. Unless Kmart gave you free nose plugs on top of the $500 gift card to "review" their shopping experience…

Chris Brogan is one of those names that keep popping up in the marketing-oriented corners of the blogosphere. So I've been kind of interested in reading what insights he's bringing to the party. But with this stunt, he's basically saying:

"Hello! Over here! Yes, me. I'm pimping myself, what can I do you for?"

Dan Gillmor teaches us to be sceptical about the credibility of what we read online:

"(…) We all have an internal “trust meter” of sorts, largely based on
education and experience. (…) A news article in New York Times or Wall Street Journal
starts out in strongly positive territory on that trust meter. An
anonymous comment on a random blog, by contrast, starts with negative
credibility. (…)"

As a blogger, if you allow yourself to be paid to write about a commercial item by the company who markets that item, no matter how transparent you are, no matter how well you disclose that you are paid and that the opinions you write are your own, you will have negative credibility.

The problem is two-fold:

  1. Even if you think you are not influenced by your sponsor, you probably are. Do you think the sponsor is going to make a little extra effort to give you an unusually good customer experience? Yes, me too.
  2. Even if you really were not influenced by your sponsor, how are we, your audience, to know? You tell us you were free to write whatever you wanted. If you mean that nobody censored your text, I'll buy that. But I think we all know that if you wrote a favorable piece, you'd probably be in a better position to receive another treat sometime in the future. If it was negative, you might not get invited again. Did that influence you in any way? And how could we tell?

    If you're weak enough to pimp yourself for "sponsored conversations", no way you're gonna be strong enough to resist such temptations. You're bought and that's it.

The odorous term "sponsored conversation" is bon ton (and possibly coined) at Forrester, the research firm. Why I feel drawn into this rant is because I read Forrester-blogger Josh Bernoff's piece about how Forrester wasn't going to accept sponsorship from Augie Ray. Augie had offered Josh $500 to write about his blog, hoping to increase traffic.

In Bernoff's view it's alright for marketers to approach bloggers this way, and it's up to bloggers whether they want to take the bait or not.

I think Forrester is making a mistake by taking such a laissez-fair stance on the issue. As Augie implies, the firm does somewhat appear to apply double standards by, on one hand, not objecting against bloggers taking money for "sponsored conversation", while on the other hand ostensibly refusing to take money themselves.

If Forrester thinks it would be bad for their credibility to be paid for "sponsored conversation", then why don't they point out this credibility problem to bloggers in general? Why not advise bloggers against it?

For that matter, doesn't this practice tarnish the brand of the sponsor as well? I mean, how credible is Kmart after this stunt? So, shouldn't Forrester advise brands against this practice, too?

Anyway, Augie got his coverage by Josh Bernoff, as requested:

"(…) I'll pay $500 for a "sponsored conversation" on your Groundswell blog. My guidelines are simple: You can write whatever you want, provided your blog post is dedicated to Experience: The Blog, contains more than 200 words, includes at least one link to my blog, and you mention my name and the name of my blog. (…)"

Augie, you wrote in a comment to Josh's piece that he saved you $500. How come? Now that Josh delivered, aren't you going to hand him the $500 you promised?

Forcing yourself to become part of the conversation

(From Seth's Blog: 'Four videos about noise, social and decency')

Best quote from Seth Godin in this short video on (micro?)blogging, starting at 00:44:


"(…) basically you are doing it for yourself to force yourself to become part of the conversation even if it's just that big (i.e. small – JS). (…)"

http://www.youtube.com/v/livzJTIWlmY&hl=en&fs=1&

Dugg: PressThink: Filter the Best Stuff to the Front Page: A Demo | Jay Rosen

Jay Rosen wrote on June 16, 2008:

“(…) OffTheBus and NewsTrust.Net ran a little test two weeks ago. It’s a crowdsourced week in review feature for high quality John McCain coverage, June 2 to 9. Here’s the background and results. (…)”

What I find more interesting about this blog post than the content of the experiment or indeed the ensuing US-centric political flame war in the comments is the concept of the experiment, as well as Jay’s reference to Dave Winer’s rivers of news, and the concern that filtering may not keep pace.

(…) The mission of NewsTrust—it’s nonprofit and non-partisan—is to be a “guide to good journalism.” The site offers a “range of tools to help you find and share” the best work.

(…) Sites like NewsTrust take it for granted that expansion in media space
is a good thing. But filtering and forwarding systems must keep pace.

(…) In this connection, I point you to NewsJunk.Com, a new site. Dave Winer, with some co-conspirators, created a river of news intended for serious users of political coverage. It’s designed to be radically inclusive and selective. (And fast.)

(…) Ethan Zuckerman, co-founder of Global Voices Online—a
“find new voices” project that’s working—said he was concerned that
tools to organize the flow and make it practical for people to use were
not keeping pace with expanded opportunities to publish.

(…) For a more intelligent and flexible filter we can trust in pro editors
to adapt to the Web. We can turn to bloggers (they edit the Web for us
and always have.) Or we can try the participation route, also called
social media. (…)”

read more | digg story