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arnie Grossblatt

thedigitalist.net » Skills in the Digital Era part two - 0 views

  • in my view there is no need for a digital editor as such in a trade publishing house, rather an editor who understands the digital world:
  • it’s marketing that will have to continue to change the most to find new readers and new ways of reaching readers.
  • Writing that uses new media by incorporating visuals, sound, movies and so on in different delivery platforms such as the new Sony Reader, Alternate Reality Games mixing narrative and interaction by readers and contributors, self-published material, collaborative wikinovels and other kinds of informal, or extra-formal creativity, are exactly the kind of material that a traditional trade publishing house such as Pan Macmillan, however innovative, finds it very difficult to use, or even acknowledge, in a publishing process, and it’s unlikely to be seriously practical in the short term, which means until someone can think of a way to make money out of it, not least because digital projects are typically seen by customers and authors as free or very low-cost, when in fact they’re often more expensive than traditional ones because of the high set-up and development costs
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  • two key issues: accuracy of conversion, which we set at 99.999999%, instead of some competitors’ 99.95%, and attending to the reader experience by providing accurate and appropriate metadata, which is one of the points I want to illustrate later on to show why I believe editors need new knowledge not new skills
  • What it needs to do instead is create a new post-publishing process, a sort of après-lit, which makes clever and effective use of reader involvement through websites and with social-networking tools, but that is familiar Web 2.0 material and outside the scope of this answer.
  • How much is digital going to change the way I work?’
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    One editor's take what endures and what changes for publishers and editors in the digital world.
Paul Riccardi

Web 2.0 is so over. Welcome to Web 3.0 - Jan. 8, 2009 - 0 views

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    Speaking of Web 2.0, this article takes an interesting viewpoint. While these sites have changed the way we communicate, they're not exactly raking in the money for their owners.
Paul Riccardi

How Facebook is taking over our lives - Feb. 17, 2009 - 0 views

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    Unless you've been living on Mars, in a cave, under a rock, with your fingers in your ears, you obviously know Facebook is ubiquitous. Companies are taking advantage of that fact. The accompanying charts are fascinating.
Tiffany Klaff

Facebook Withdraws Changes in Data Use - 0 views

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    About who owns the content on Facebook.
arnie Grossblatt

if:book: a unified field theory of publishing in the networked era - 0 views

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    Strikes me as a very intresting idea and a new take on publishers' value-add. This could also be something that publishers could monetize - think of what Scholastic could have done surrounding the Harry Potter series had they been more proactive.
Derik Dupont

Twitter Tops 50 Million Tweets Per Day - mediabistro.com: BayNewser - 0 views

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    Jobs and recruiting for media professionals in journalism, on-line content, book publishing, TV, radio, PR, graphic design, photography, and advertising
Derik Dupont

'Washington Post' Integrates Facebook into Its Site - 0 views

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    Top Newspaper Publishing Stories - Editor & Publisher provides newspaper industry headlines covering emerging and important news.
Ryan Holman

Spotify tethers future to Facebook (Social network membership mandatory for subscribers) - 1 views

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    Hmm. This is British and talks about a primarily British (that I can tell) service marrying itself to Facebook, but it has interesting implications should others decide to adopt the same thing. "'There's been a big barrier to sign-up, we wanted to remove that and make it a seamless experience,' [Daniel Ek, Spotify co-founder] said in one tweet, apparently indifferent to the criticism that Spotify had just erected a barrier where there wasn't one before." "'We want to remove barrier to sign-up and create a more seamless experience...' he confirmed in a follow-up." Yep, it'll be completely seamless for the advertisers who want to target Spotify users, they can get all sorts of other info on them besides just that they downloaded Rebecca Black's "Friday"...Zuckerberg must be laughing all the way to the bank.
arnie Grossblatt

The New Presumption of Transparency - 0 views

  • In the U.S., public figures have to prove that statements about them are false and made with malice -- but in Britain a statement that harms one's reputation is enough to justify a libel action. Defendants must prove that statements are true or "fair comment." This has a chilling effect on the reporting of damaging facts.
  • "If information cannot be freely exchanged, if journalists must fear being sued over information reported in good faith on matters crucial to our defense, matters such as the financial networks supporting jihadist terror, then we cannot make sound security policy," former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy said at a recent conference on "libel lawfare." This is a useful term to describe lawsuits to suppress facts about radical Islam and terrorism.
  • The Web means that publishing anywhere means publishing everywhere, thus subjecting authors and publishers to litigation in pro-plaintiff jurisdictions
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  • Among the proposals under consideration is to broaden the law to give American publishers the right in the U.S. to sue plaintiffs who bring what U.S. law would consider abusive lawsuits.
  • Digital technology makes sharing information possible and, increasingly, makes it mandatory.
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    "The Web means that publishing anywhere means publishing everywhere, thus subjecting authors and publishers to litigation in pro-plaintiff jurisdictions"
Derik Dupont

Photo-Blogging Site DailyBooth Raises $1 Million - Digits - WSJ - 1 views

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    Money continues to rain down on "real-time" start-ups. The latest example: a fledgling two-person company called DailyBooth.
Ryan Holman

NorthJersey.com: Is Facebook dying as it's thriving? - 0 views

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    What comes after Facebook? Another social netowrkign site, or a whole new animal? How will we as publishers adjust our marketing?
Allison Begezda

Philadelphia Newspapers To Offer Subsidized Android Tablets - 0 views

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    Eager to hop on the tablet trend, the publisher of The Philadelphia Inquirer and Philadelphia Daily News plans to sell discounted Android tablets with preloaded content. The announcement, first reported in Adweek, will cost the publisher - Philadelphia Media Network (PMN) - somewhere in the six figures.
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