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« November 2005 | Main | January 2006 »

22 December 2005

Citizen Journalists make your own TV news

Channel 4 and ITN have joined together to offer viewers the chance to develop their own ‘citizen journalism’. Breaking the News – developed by indie producer Illumina Digital - enables viewers to produce their own news stories through an online initiative designed to improve media literacy.
ITN will provide images that users can then edit to compile their own packages. The new website can be found at www.channel4.com/breakingthenews and will also offer master classes with ITN journalists as well as a course in broadcast news.

Matt

Do bloggers have any power?

Todaypage As part of the Today Programme Christmas poll about who runs the country they broadcast a short discussion on bloggers, and what kind of power they wield.
Judy of adloyda and Tim Ireland of bloggerheads took part in the discussion and raised some interesting points:

> Britain leads the way in constructive use of weblogs – MP’s and councillors are engaging in public meetings which take place in cyberspace.
> This compares to the US where blogging is predominantly a tool for people to shout from outside of the system – making noise but not necessarily engaging in debate.
> Blogging also provides a forum for people to stand-up to the establishment and tell the real story – Iran and Iraq were quoted with bloggers playing a role in countering the news stories and the government line.

You can listen again to the discussion here.

Matt

05 December 2005

Citizen-journalism, watch out happy snapper!

Citizenjournalist Emily Bell, editor-in-chief of Guardian Unlimited, writes in the Media Guardian today about the dangers of encouraging reader-reporters. It’s an issue which has been causing friction between big-media who are trying to encourage new contributors and some of the press unions here in the UK.
There was a rearguard action against citizen-journalism by some in the industry following the London bombings. The Chartered Instituted of Journalists warned against the dangers of ordinary citizens being sent to take pictures or footage of disasters as they unfold. In a report on the subject I produced for BBC Radio Sally Feldman, Head of the School of Media, Arts and Design at the University of Westminster argued that the media had always used eyewitness reports, just that they're not more immediate, and the equipment is more ubiquitous.
In the column in today’s Media Guardian, Emily Bell, again raises the concerns of the CIoJ – this time about terms and conditions for anyone submitting pictures to the Daily Telegraph newspaper.
One clause has the sender of the photograph agree “to indemnify Telegraph Group Ltd, against all legal fees, damages and other expenses that may be incurred … as a result of a breach of the above warranties.”
So it appears the Telegraph is trying to protect itself against breach of privacy, libel, or copyright. She goes on to warn:

“More menacing for both media owners and those with images they wish to share - whether via a newspaper website, a sharing site such as flickr.com or even their own blog - is how taking casual snaps can, even in seemingly innocuous circumstances, land you in trouble. Image rights owners, particularly of large and valuable events, are becoming ever more aggressive in pursuing their value.
Fifa, for instance, has decreed that during the World Cup in 2006 no website can run images of the games until an hour after final whistle - an absurd rule for what amounts to a major news as well as sporting event. … The rules of "no one would bother" seem to have also gone by the board when it comes to hunting down copyright infringements. A colleague visited a gallery in the US and took a photo of a sculpture, posted it to his blog, and was pursued by the estate of the sculptor for euros 30 for image rights infringements.”

Where would that leave the citizen-journalist who submitted contributions? It seems big media is trying to protect itself against any litigation.

Matt

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  • Welcome to CitizenSpin. I’m Matt Foster, and this is a weblog devoted to managing corporate reputations online. CitizenSpin is about shaping corporate communication strategy, using the tools of online communication and the blogging community. For public relations the frontier territory of the Internet is providing challenges and opportunities: citizen journalists, blogs, podcasting, consumer relations. My background is as a professional communicator working as a journalist and producer for both broadcast and print media here in London. Feel free to browse through and add your comments. Matt

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