Showing posts with label citizen journalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label citizen journalism. Show all posts

1.17.2007

Week 8: The Internet is not for geeks only

Here's an interesting development in citizen journalism. BBC announced plans to offer training to citizens who want to go into "citizen journalism," according to an article in the Editor's Weblog, citing at least two sources.

Apparently, BBC wants to open up its in-house training program to the public. As I was reading this, I recalled Karen Lema's blog titled, "A little journalist in us." She somehow sums up the point that citizen journalists, bloggers, or mobloggers --for bloggers who use mobile devices --need to learn a thing or two about "journalism." They have to follow certain principles in journalism--which I completely agree with. These principles involve being objective, thorough, honest, balance, and truthful. BBC's move is clearly a move towards teaching these same principles to bloggers, CJs, mobloggers and whatnot.

But what is journalism, anyway? What do they do? Some say they're storytellers. Others say they make sense of facts and information they get and hopefully re-tell them straight to readers with much honesty and integrity. That's the ideal scenario. But over the years, we've seen the quality of journalism decline despite the ideals this vocation proclaims. Journalism has been maligned by the very people who preached objectivity, truthfulness, honesty, and transparency. The public has also grown tired of the traditional media.

Now, here comes the Internet allowing anyone to be a "journalist" and the traditional media is now trying to figure out where they fit in. For sometime, traditional journalists saw the Internet a fad and hoped it would go away. But it didn't. It changed and still continues to change the face of journalism.

It's correct to believe that the Internet or technology per se are just tools, which journalists can use in their practice. However, these very same tools are now available to everyone to disseminate information While journalists proclaim they had years of training and experience, the public's collective and collaborative efforts have slowly matched what media had been offering: information. Are they doing journalism? No or perhaps not yet.

Bottomline: I would be slow to dismiss all these developments in technology and journalism as fads. While our roles as journalists will not change very much in the future, we should also understand how these things will work for us and not against us.

And to end, here's an interesting quote from colleague and Filipino journalist and blogger Joey Alarilla's column from INQUIRER.net:

We are living in an age where we can shoot videos and take photos using our mobile phones, and upload these on the Web for use with articles. This is far cheaper and speedier than the old way of having a TV reporter, camera crew, producer and editor create a short segment on television. And you can already shoot the video with the Web in mind, with an understanding of how it will complement the other elements in your multimedia story.

This is what many in Old Media still don't realize, that we have to create content for the Web, instead of just uploading shovelware.

1.06.2007

Week 6: CJ is still journalism gone hi-tech.

I recently had a brief online exchange with a colleague on how bloggers and journalist would soon become "one." He disagreed, stressing bloggers and journalists have clashing values. Journalists follow established standards, while bloggers don’t. But in countries where media is censored, blogs have only been the means to do “citizen” journalism.

Citizen journalism is an idea that can be broken down further to understand what it is. Journalism is a "profession," for some a vocation. This title has often been given to people who work for media organizations. Their role is to deliver news that hopes to help citizens make better and more informed decisions.But the act of doing journalism does not necessarily mean one has to be employed in a newspaper.

With the Internet and blogs, regular people are now empowered to do journalism. That is if they follow the ethical "standards" of thoroughness, accuracy, fairness, transparency and independence.

Dan Gillmor says it best: “Technology has given us a communications toolkit that allows anyone to become a journalist at little cost and in theory with global reach. Nothing like this has ever been remotely possible before.”

But to quote Spiderman: “With power comes great responsibility.”

I believe citizen journalism is journalism the way it was, or the way it should be. Citizens now have been given back the power not only to consume but also “pro-duce” news, as Gillmor puts it.

What blogs have done to journalism is make citizens part of the news process. Bloggers won't replace journalists. But both will be working together in the future to deliver a better version of the news. Call this the future of journalism. But I would simply call it journalism with stress on the citizens.

12.12.2006

Week 5: Embracing “citizen” journalism

I recall an interview with one of Philippines’ top blogger Abe Olandres. The premise of that interview was this: Should bloggers follow ethical guidelines in journalism?

Abe is a well-read professional blogger writing about technology. He prefers to be called a "meta-journalist," a term that describes his tech punditry. But after reading Mark Glaser's article , I say Abe is a journalist.

No matter how he puts it, Abe is doing journalism. He writes based on facts -- but insists that some are based on "speculations" or better, an informed guess based on industry sources.

As Max Kalehoff, an executive at Nielsen BuzzMetrics, wrote on Jeff Jarvis’ BuzzMachine blog :

Why not just call journalism “journalism” — a word the citizens, amateurs, networks, distributors and professionals can understand? Journalism can be “practiced” in all sorts of ways, and by virtually anyone. You don’t even have to be a citizen or a professional; you could be a foreigner, or even an alien from outer space. But I do agree with your overall beat: journalism is not some exclusive club; it’s something that takes many forms, including all the ones you describe.
Citizen journalism has emerged because of the Internet and blogs. Similar to Dan Gillmor's story on Joe Nacchio, Abe and other local bloggers like J. Angelo Racoma have become sources of my stories. From time to time, they pick up juicy information, which I end up writing as a full-blown news report.

As Gillmor pointed out, citizens like Abe and Racoma are no longer consumers of news. They make the news. They are today's citizen journalists. Gillmor adds:
[T]echnology has given us a communications toolkit that allows anyone to become a journalist at little cost and, in theory, with global reach. Nothing like this has ever been remotely possible before.