2013 reassessment - News 2.0

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An update of the 2012 presentation, not that different, but the podcast adds new detail

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News 2.0can journalism

survive the internet?

A re-assessment

A/Prof Martin HirstJuly 2013

News 2.0: what next?Two years after publication of News 2.0 what’s

changed?

A reassessment of the seven theses of the book

A look at recent developments

What are the new questions

Are there any new answers

News as conversation Journalists no longer control the distribution of

the content they produce.

This is a very scary thought for many journalists, but the reality is that once something is published (usually on Web sites), it belongs to the audience of readers and becomes part of a conversation about the news.

News 2.0the news industry is seen to be failing our

democratic ideals

journalists are low on international surveys of people we trust

the professional ethos of journalism is under threat from UGC

the commodity form of news is no longer providing the profits it once did

Phone-hacking says it all?The phone-hacking scandal demonstrates the

basic thrust of News 2.0 A crisis of trust and credibility Journalists stuffed up badly

But it is also an economic crisis caused by a failure of management Journalists were encouraged into hacking in

pursuit of profits Ethics goes out the window in favour of money-

grubbing and base motives

Murdoch makes it worse

June 2013:

Exposed by staff saying that the police inquiry was incompetent and excessive

Admits that paying officials for stories is endemic in the British press

Promises to take care of staff

Issues a pathetic half-apology when discovered

CNN) -- News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch is apologizing for secretly recorded criticism of police investigations into his newspapers, but he says he's still frustrated by the extent and length of the probes.

Thesis 1: news is a universal human need

news has been around for thousands of years

because of market forces the mainstream media has let down the public

pursuit of profits has led the MSM down market

we are living in a sick celebrity culture that distorts our self-perception and slowly drives us all insane

We are consuming as much as we did, if not more news today, but not in the same way we used to.News is coming to us from a variety of sources and we are consuming in more mobile ways.

Thesis 2: digital technologies are changing

how we consume newsglobally, television is still the dominant news and

entertainment media, but for how much longer?

news is going mobile and it's being condensed

the 140 character text message and “tweet” could be the future of news

The curating of news – what Axel Bruns calls ‘gate-watching – is now much easier and more widespread.

Apps like storify, pintrest, paper.li and instapaper make it much easier to collate ‘bricolage’ and curate MSM and other materials to re-publish to friends and networks.

Thesis 3: the singularity of convergence has

changed news forever professionalism has become a trap for journalists - they

are tied into a corporate culture that is losing its shine

perhaps, as Robert McChesney suggests, journalists have to become "unprofessional" in order to reconnect with audiences

D-I-Y & UGC news via social networking is on the rise

we are no longer reliant only on MSM for news.

Thesis 4: the crisis in the news business is not the

same as the crisis in journalism

they are related, but different

a crisis of trust and credibility and a crisis of profitability

we are now in a critical juncture and the global financial crisis is a further threat to the political economy of the news business

Thesis 5: new online business models are not yet

provenadvertising – most likely in market economy

user pays – subscription model

public service broadcasting – not politically supported

online only publishing – unknown quantity

public trust model – expensive to establish

philanthropy – peanuts really

Who pays the piper?

Thesis 6: there are positives in social

networking and Web 2.0some parts of the world are more connected than

they’ve every been

the collective nature of trust and verification is a key element of peer-to-peer sharing of information and can apply to news

we need to position journalism as the collective wisdom of the public interest and speaking truth to power

Thesis 7: Can journalism survive the Internet?

what happens to “journalism" when the economics of the news business are no longer working?

if news is a universal trait of human society (thesis 1) then a method needs to be developed of continuing to provide reliable and common news-like information from trusted public sources

What happens next?

The slow decline of newspapers will continue

Time-shifting and on-demand will continue to grow for video content

Daily news will be largely web and broadcast based

Newspapers will need to become more like magazines to survive

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