'We're all Web journalists'
I think most practicing journalists today are as Webby as any blogger you care to name. Journalists have had access to broadband connections for longer than most civilians, and nearly every story they tackle begins with a Web dump of essential information from Google or a proprietary database such as Nexis or Factiva. They conduct interviews via e-mail, download official documents from .gov sites, check facts, and monitor the competition-including blogs-the whole while. A few even store as a "favorite" the URL from Technorati that takes them directly to what the blogs are saying about them (here's mine) and talk back. When every story starts on the Web, and every story can be stripped to its digital bits and pumped through wires and over the air, we're all Web journalists.The premature triumphalism of some bloggers indicates that they haven't paid attention to how Webified journalists have become. They also ignore media history. New media technologies almost never replace old media technologies, they merely force old technologies to adapt and find new ways to connect with their audiences.
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1 Weblogs reference ''We're all Web journalists'' jornalistas já são «criaturas da web»Trackback excerpt: Num texto de deliberado cepticismo, o editor da Slate, Jack Shafer escreve sobre a relação entre bloggers e jornalistas, a propósito da conferência sobre credibilidade que teve lugar na Universidade de Harvard. Shafer aponta exemplos de outras "maravil... [Read More]
Posted on Atrium at January 31, 2005 10:50 AM
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