Archive for November, 2006

Blogs Won’t Take Over Newspapers

Thursday, November 23rd, 2006

(Week 6 Journal for Cyberone)

Blogs are certainly a form of citizen journalism, but although they prove to be a complementary addition to the existing forms of journalism, they will never be able to take over existing media.

The most critical disadvantage that blog-generated contents contain is the question about how credible that information is. Currently, news agencies and other news-related service providers act as a gatekeeper, which not only protects reporters, but also protects the public in that the entity takes responsibility for what it publishes. Writers of blogs, however, are not yet required to follow guidelines or certain fact re-checking procedures that are undertaken in major news servicers.

It is also interesting to note that much of the controversial blog-generated contents were created by people already involved to some extent, in journalism. The reason these contents became so widely known was because the writer already had an established credibility from his or her job, although that job necessarily may not have a direct link with the particular contents contained in the blog. This is why perhaps, certain Internet portals, in desperate search of UCC, are thinking of beginning a separate blog newsfeed service- not with citizen reporters, but with real reporters, to ensure a certain level of quality or credibility in the news.

However, as citizen-participated news Web sites such as OhMyNews have shown, sometimes the regular citizen notices things that reporters have not. Even with their extensive network of reporters, even wire news agencies such as Reuters or AP could not cover all aspects of society.

News agencies should therefore encourage citizens to participate in generating news contents, but should also establish a separate department with people who monitor such material. In Scandinavia, some newspapers are already doing such services; the contents that they receive from citizens include not only text but photos as well. The only difference is that based on these citizens’ reports, the newspapers conduct indepth reporting to confirm facts provided by the citizen. If this filtering process does not take place, it would be difficult to determine which citizen reports were created out of the feeling of making the society a better place, and which were merely promotional reports with no sound facts to support the claim.

Blogs, as the word web-log implies, are extremely personal areas being used increasingly as a marketing tool, not only for companies, but for individuals as well. But because of the subjectivity (and one-sided views) that blogs allow, readers should keep in mind that the information contained in blogs has an element of high risk.

[Feedback from Rebecca Nesson]

What I want to push you on is the issue raised by Nick Sylvester’s situation. That is, are credible facts actually what makes journalism reliable or unreliable? In some cases the print media uses facts in a way that causes them to be misleading even if they are true. In other cases, such as Nick’s writing, interesting and worthwhile ideas are communicated without reliance on the reader trusting the facts. I agree with you that there are advantages to having a medium where facts are checked, but it seems to me that we often fail to see the advantages of media like blogs because we are so hung up on the facts not being checked. A medium where facts aren’t checked gives a writer a whole lot more freedom in the communication that is lost when you go to a fact-checked medium like print news. We tend to see the advantages of the fact checking without considering all of the modes of communication that we are prevented from getting because of the fact-checking requirement.

Carlo Pimpernel exhibition in Second Life

Monday, November 20th, 2006

Carlo

I had the pleasure of meeting the Dutch painter Carlo Pimpernel at a special exhibition held at the Kanno Gallery. This special exhibit took up the entire second floor and was composed mainly of abstract works and landscapes. Carlo was present in an SL avatar, and I was lucky to discuss with him on several of his paintings. I liked his abstracts better than his landscapes, which were mainly of Tuscane, Italy. The landscapes were too loud, and too reminiscent of van Gogh, although the bold colors and powerful brush strokes were apparently Carlo’s style.

I asked Carlo why he chose to host an exhibition in SL- he said that he wanted more people to see his work, although he admitted that the paintings were much “better” in RL. I certainly agreed with the latter. Although I could sense to a certain extent what the paintings looked like, I could not grasp the texture of the canvas or the actual three-dimensional feel of the paint. It is one thing to be looking at artwork on the Web and another to be looking at it in RL. It is something the Internet will not be able to replace.

I thought it was ironic, therefore, that the Kanno Gallery was selling Carlo’s paintings not as the originals, but as “contents” for 600L each (So the painting continues to hang in the gallery and I take home another “original” painting). Of course, all of the paintings at the exhibition are RL paintings, but in SL, the paintings were only reproductions of the original. So in a sense, Kanno could sell a hundred reproductions of the same painting. So for the person buying Carlo’s painting in SL, the painting does not hold any huge value. Perhaps Carlo should have made the paintings no mod/no copy and sold the ones that were hanging instead of copies.

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Website link on Berkman’s Cyber Island

Thursday, November 16th, 2006

I caught Becca one day, setting up some “boards” on Berkman Island that link us to the course Web site. She had been talking about (and actually working on) creating a robot that would serve as a tour guide for the island, but making a tour guide is apparently not an easy task that requires extremely advanced scripting skills. So she decided that the first thing to do was to let people know what we’re doing at Berkman, and that providing a link to the Web site would do just that.

becca1.jpg

Whenever I talk to Becca through chat, I feel very comfortable with her and only sense her as a very intelligent, young woman. However, when I actually hear her speaking, it is an entirely different story. There is something very empowering about her voice that awes you. It is funny because Professor Nesson also has a very empowering voice, only their styles are completely different. He is the mesmerizing, hypnotizing chanter, sending out heavy puffs of his own logic that settles around you like a thick incense. She is as clear and crisp as an early winter morning, her thoughts ringing out like bells.