Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries: The Newspaper Publishing Industry
Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries
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Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries
58 (Fuller, 2010). Often practical constraints and routines within newsrooms make the integration of user created content in legacy news publishers’ websites difficult. Research shows that on many news websites, links are provided to invite users to participate, but actual user participation options are often limited (Rebillard & Touboul, 2010). Users are allowed to fill in a survey, add a comment or give feedback to editors. But the addition of non- professional contributions into the online news stream of legacy newspaper websites is (still) less common practice. However increasingly, traditional newspapers incorporate participatory options in their own websites and the interest in user participation grows (Rebillard & Touboul, 2010). In Germany, for instance, the regional newspaper Opinio is fully composed of weblogs (Tomesen, 2005). Many authors have discussed the potential of more participatory forms of journalism, which use citizen’s contributions, but still see important roles for professional journalists to play. Charlie Beckett (2010) for instance investigates the options of networked journalism and claims that a continuous interaction between citizen contributors and professional journalists has in cases such as the British 2010 elections led to ground breaking and influential new forms of journalism. Professional journalists took on different, but still indispensable roles in moderating content, encouraging people to contribute, linking citizen contributions to background information, and checking facts. Another perspective comes from Jay Rosen (2011), who introduces the concept of the pro-am (professional amateur), which refers to practices in which news publishers invite dedicated users to contribute on a regular basis. An example of this is the Public Insight Network, an organisation which manages a database of over 100.000 people who have agreed to being used as a source for journalists. The database contains information on their interests, networks and location, thereby enabling the professional journalists of associated news media to ask the right questions for support to the right people ( http://www.publicinsightnetwork.org/ ). Moderation, obligatory registration codes of conduct and different other mechanisms of self- regulation are employed to stimulate and support a certain quality level on user generated news sites (Hellberger, Leurdijk, & Munck, 2010). So while the discussion on the quality and reliability of citizen journalism and blogs will continue, there is also evidence that more and more sophisticated ways of moderating content and improving the quality of user generated content are being developed. Download 1.37 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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