Thursday, 24 January 2013
From Instagram to Open Journalism: Towards Public Space Online
http://stearns.wordpress.com/2012/12/19/from-instagram-to-open-journalism-towards-public-space-online/
Why the Internet is killing print
journalism- Online article.
My job as a newspaper reporter is
giving me a front-row seat to the debate over whether the Internet is killing
print journalism. From my perspective the Internet isn't the only challenger,
but it's definitely the one getting the attention.
Print journalism has faced a number of challenges for years. The cost of ink and paper continue to increase, cutting into a newspaper's profit and forcing changes such as the reduction in size of many newspapers. This reduction has led many readers to believe that they are getting less news while being asked to pay more for the newspaper.
Print journalism has faced a number of challenges for years. The cost of ink and paper continue to increase, cutting into a newspaper's profit and forcing changes such as the reduction in size of many newspapers. This reduction has led many readers to believe that they are getting less news while being asked to pay more for the newspaper.
With the Internet newspapers can
publish numerous articles online without necessarily worrying about the cost of
materials such as paper. Photographers can publish photo galleries with dozens
of photos instead of the one or two that may accompany a story in the print
product. A reporter can upload the text of a new city law so that people can
read the law for themselves, not just read the reporter's description of it.
Journalists are also vying for the
public's attention. Mass media has offered a fast food version of distributing
information that can rival and often beat the radio and television. It fits
into today's on-the-move society and lets readers pick and choose what
information they desire rather than scan the newspaper for the stories that
they find of interest.
In turn this is changing how
journalists report the news. Reporters are now told more than ever to write
tight. While there used to be some room for creativity in telling the news,
nowadays the focus is getting the facts out quickly. That doesn't often leave
room for anything other than the basic information, which enables the Web
junkie to move onto the next page.
It also makes the news in the next
day's paper even more old than it previously was. A newspaper's competitors
often include its own Web site. While the Web stories are supposed to be
shorter and to leave something of value for the next day's newspaper reader, such
as more detail, this isn't always the case.
There is also a cost factor. While
newspapers are increasing in price, people can often read their news for free
online. Efforts to charge are hampered by the common perception that news
should be free online. Companies such as Yahoo and America Online paved the way
for such delivery, and people are not as quick to change when the money's
coming out of their own wallets.
While the Web is delivering some stiff competition
to print, it isn't necessarily fair to say that it is the death of newspapers
as well. Their survival is pinned on how well they can adapt to an online
world. That survival depends not only on reporters but
on representatives who must convince businesses of the value of
advertising online.
It also opens up a wide range of
tools for the newspaper journalist. Instead of just relying on our words, we
can bring in audio and video and a variety of other formats.
We must master a curve of technology
that goes a bit beyond our notebooks and word processing programs. But for
those who are successful, a brand new world exists.
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