Skip to main content

Home/ Social Informatics/ Group items tagged journalism

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Judy Panagakos

Library Student Journal - 0 views

  •  
    I just found this, and don't recall seeing it before. It is a peer reviewed journal aimed at MLIS students. It comes out of Buffalo. I just wanted to share, no specific article, but it looks like a good resource. Open access journal.
  •  
    Thanks for sharing this Judy... I think someone once posted something about it on LISSA. I just checked the editorial team and there's two Rutgers students listed. I don't them though.
Judy Panagakos

SoSocial Aspects of Digital Information in Perspective: introduction to a special issue - 1 views

  •  
    Journal of Digital Information Article Roberta Lamb and Susan Johnson, University of Hawaii, Manoa
  •  
    This is interesting, I hadn't noticed it earlier
Naomi House

I, reporters - 0 views

  •  
    Interesting article from The Economist about applying distributive creativity and group piecework to journalism. "Under the rubric "My Boss Is a Robot" they are testing whether it is possible to draw on the sort of distributed creativity that the internet has made possible-and faddish-to perform the equivalent of journalistic piecework. To start with, the group has chosen to bash out the kind of article with which Babbage is all too familiar: a write-up of a newly released scientific research paper. Rather than assign the task as a whole to a single person, their system will try to tease apart and outsource different elements of analysis and production."
Laurie A.

Middle East Protests: A Country-by-Country Look - 0 views

  •  
    This is a nice feature by the NY Times on what is going on in the mideast. I like how they combine a regularly updated summary written by the Times next to a live twitter feed of what is happening in each country. It's a nice combining of citizen and traditional journalism.
Naomi House

Learning to Love the (Shallow, Divisive, Unreliable) New Media- by James Fallow (The At... - 0 views

  •  
    Fascinating defensive of new social media in journalism and a critique of those who miss the good old days. Reminded me of the book "The Good Old Days, They Were Terrible". from the article "At an individual level, I think the "distracted Americans" scare will pass. Either people who manage to unplug, focus, and fully direct their attention will have an advantage over those constantly checking Facebook and their smart phone, in which case they'll earn more money, get into better colleges, start more successful companies, and win more Nobel Prizes. Or they won't, in which case distraction will be a trait of modern life but not necessarily a defect. At the level of national politics, America is badly distracted, but that problem long predates Facebook and requires more than a media solution. "
Laurie A.

Public lives and private communities: The terms of service agreement and life in virtua... - 0 views

  •  
    Argues that Terms of service (TOS) agreements have implications for the political and legal structures under which our virtual selves will function. Also, the Wall Street Journal has actually been running fantastic series of investigative reports on this topic, called "what they know": http://online.wsj.com/public/page/what-they-know-digital-privacy.html
Naomi House

Twitter fair game for journalists - 0 views

  •  
    This is an article about a British court ruling about privacy, identity and journalism and their lack of privacy on the internet. Strangly this week a US Court ruled on a similar case but said FB statements cannot be used to fire an employee. Interesting the differences in the UK and US rulings.
Jessica McDonough

Anonymous no more - 1 views

  •  
    Is browsing anonymously possible?
  •  
    Not surprising that FB is behind this one... it's interesting that it took the national media's attention to change it: "Facebook plugged this leak of personal information, but only after the problem was given prominent coverage in the Wall Street Journal. When the leak was highlighted by computer scientists in August 2009, nine months earlier, Facebook took no action."
Laurie A.

New York Times will no longer be free after March 28 - 0 views

  •  
    Worst news: The New York Times rolled out a plan on Thursday to begin charging the most frequent users of its Web site $15 a month in a bet that readers would pay for news they have grown accustomed to getting free.
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    You get 20 articles free per month. You can get unlimited articles directed through social media. It's $15/month for web access. I wonder if there's a student price?
  •  
    How depressing.
  •  
    update: I found in the comments section a comment from a NYTimes spokesperson who said that it will be free for students. I haven't been able to find that in the subscription section.
Laurie A.

Long-Form Journalism Finds a Home - 0 views

  •  
    "The Atavist has captured new ways to present long-form content for the digital age, mixing multimedia presentations and deep, engrossing articles." Article written by David Carr, although Nick Carr might like this because it understands that "The Web is good at creating short and snappy bits of information, but not so much when it comes to long-form, edited, fact-and-spell-checked work."
  •  
    reminder to everyone - today the NYTimes goes behind a paywall, and you will only be able to read 20 articles a month for free. But if you click on this article through diigo, it shouldn't count against your 20. I've heard conflicting reports whether NYTimes digital will remain free for students, or if they will get discount on the $15/month rate. I can't find anything official on the web right now. Has anyone else heard anything?
1 - 10 of 10
Showing 20 items per page