23 de julho de 2011

internet is improving journalism or not?



 

Post-debate, The Economist

Do you agree with the motion?

69%
voted yes
31%
voted no
This debate has finished. Voting is now closed. 

Voting at a glance

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Representing the sides

Jay Rosen
Defending the motion

Jay Rosen  
Author, blogger and journalism professor at New York University
The internet is improving journalism by driving towards zero the costs of getting it to people, and by vastly reducing the capital requirements for quality production. This has opened the market to more players, allowing more ideas to be tried.
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Nicholas Carr
Against the motion

Nicholas Carr  
Author, blogger and writer-in-residence at the University of California, Berkeley
The internet, by altering the underlying economics of the news business, has thinned the ranks of professional journalists. Has the net created other modes of reporting to fill the gap? The answer, alas, is equally straightforward: no.
READ MORE

About this debate

Like many other industries before it, the news industry is being disrupted by the internet. Among other things, technology is undermining the business models of newspapers: the news organisations that employ the most journalists and do the most in-depth reporting. At the same time, the internet enables new models of journalism by democratising the tools of publishing, allowing greater participation from readers and making possible entirely new kinds of organisation, such as WikiLeaks. Do the benefits of the internet to the news ecosystem outweigh the drawbacks?

Some argue that a more participatory news system, and greater openness on the part of news organisations, offers journalists new and better ways to do their jobs, serve their communities and hold those in power to account. Others worry that the internet is hollowing out the news system, reducing funding for in-depth reporting and encouraging journalists to lower their standards and focus on what is popular, to attract traffic, rather than what is important. What do you think?

Background reading

Ideas arena: The news industry

A special report on the news industry: Bulletins from the future

A special report on the news industry: The Foxification of news

A special report on the news industry: Coming full circle

Newspapers: The strange survival of ink

The rise of content farms: Emperors and beggars

SXSW blog, day two: Journalistic nuclear physics

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