RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘citizen journalism’

Chip Shot: Winners of MeeGoâ„¢ Article Contest Announced

Congratulations to the five winners of the Intel AppUpSM developer program “Innovate, Educate and Win” MeeGo™ article contest. The winners, each receiving $2,000, describe how to develop different types of Intel AppUpSM center apps for the MeeGo platform. Awards were given in such categories as graphics & user experience, innovation, porting, and multitouch & gesture enablement. The winners – Thomas Perl, Dmitry Rizshkov, Niels Mayer, Aparna Nandyal, George Christopher and Suresh – live in Austria, India, Russia and the U.S. Their articles are designed to help developers do things like write MeeGo apps for citizen journalism, port Symbian apps and create modern mobile apps with Qt. Check out this blog post for more details.

Uncensored web

Digital Planet
Dave Lee
BBC World Service

Protest in Iran

It has been 40 days since Neda Agha-Soltan, a young Iranian woman, was killed during an anti-government protest in Tehran.

Within hours, graphic scenes showing her final seconds of life dominated newspapers and bulletins over the world.

Yet this moment wasn’t recorded by a professional journalist working for a big news organisation. Instead, a regular bystander captured the powerful footage and uploaded it online.

The clip of Agha-Soltan’s death is just one of hundreds of pieces of citizen journalism to come from Iran in the past few months.

With journalists forced to stay in their hotel rooms, or even leave the country, these amateur recordings quickly became the only means of getting uncensored news out of Tehran.

No entry

With no correspondents allowed on the ground, the BBC, like almost all major news organisations, is forced to rely on the honesty of citizen journalists to provide details from the protests.

Inevitably, with valuable information comes deceptive mis-information and programme makers have to make difficult decisions about how to harness social networks.

"We look at what’s going on on Twitter, and then we follow it up in order to verify"

Azi Khatiri

Download the podcast

"On Twitter you see people tweeting on various protests that have happened," Dr Azi Khatiri, an interactive producer for the BBC’s Persian TV service, said.

"But, as a news organisation we have to make sure what we report is accurate and correct.

"We look at what’s going on on Twitter, and then we follow it up in order to verify," she told the organisation’s Digital Planet programme.

"We have various contacts inside of Iran that we call up so they can tell us that, for example, a protest has actually happened."

Flood of information

Since the disputed election results, BBC Persian has been inundated with content sent in by viewers.

Far from being a hindrance, Khatiri says the great flood of information helped the team decipher content and identify reliable information.

Protest in Iran

"We literally get hundreds on days that massive protests happen inside Iran," said Dr Khatiri .

"When somebody tells us that something has happened, and then we get 10 or 20 pieces of film coming in from mobile phone footage, it shows the same thing: it actually did happen."

However, Bill Thompson, a technology journalist, said the move to citizen journalism didn’t necessarily spell the end of the professional.

"Anybody can now have access to these sources," he said.

"But of course there’s no validation or verification of the stuff coming out. The role of the journalist is not just to be the person who gets the information, but the person who puts it in context and makes sense of it."

"When it comes to complex political situations, where people’s lives are at risk, the mainstream news organisations come into their own because they have done this before. We know how to check something, we know how to get the balance right," he added.

He said that he was also concerned that citizen journalism was only representing the young, web-savvy community of Iran, and that the older generation, with perhaps different views, are being drowned out.

However Dr Khatiri is adamant this isn’t the case.

"A lot of the older generation have also been out in the street.

"This is not just the one-sided, young and youthful and funky sort of a protest. You would think, ‘OK, do people in the provinces really give a damn Is it really their cause as well’ I say that yes, it is."

Digital Planet is broadcast on BBC World Service on Tuesday at 1232 GMT and repeated at 1632 GMT, 2032 GMT and on Wednesday at 0032 GMT.

You can listen onlineor download the podcast.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

10 Best US Cities For Local Food (PHOTOS)

We here at HuffPost Green think the local food movement is a thriving and exciting part of the discussion about sustainability. After researching the best local food in the United States, we compiled this slideshow of our discoveries, focusing…

Traffic rockets to Twitter site

By Dan Whitworth
Newsbeat technology reporter

Twitter website

The number of people visiting Twitter increased 22-fold in the last twelve months, according to an internet monitoring company.

According to Hitwise, the site is now the fifth most viewed social networking site compared with the 84th last year.

Ninety-three per cent of Twitter’s growth has happened in 2009.

Director of Research at Hitwise Robin Goad said: "If people accessing their Twitter accounts via mobile phones and third party applications were included, numbers could be higher."

Another measure of Twitter’s popularity is its jump in the overall internet rankings.

Last year it was the 969th most visited site on the web. It’s now the 38th most visited website.

Protestors in Iran

Twitter is popular with celebrities like Jonathan Ross and Stephen Fry.

"If anything, the service is even more popular than our numbers imply," said Robin Goad.

"We are only measuring traffic to the main Twitter website.

"If people accessing their Twitter accounts via mobile phones and third party applications like Twitterific or Tweetdeck were included, the numbers could be even higher.

"Media coverage of the site has escalated significantly this year and high profile celebrity endorsements likes Ashton Kutcher have come rolling in."

Micro-blogging site Twitter has also had a major impact on so-called ‘citizen journalism’, when members of the public use the site to break major news stories or updates such as the terror attacks in Mumbai or the recent protests in Iran.

But the social networking website still has some work to do to catch the likes of MySpace, Bebo and Facebook.

The number of people using Facebook has risen above the 20 million mark this year in the UK and 200 million around the world.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Crowdsourcing, citizen journalism, and the lesson of scrapbook news

I want to further explore the idea of “scrapbook news” as a way of reframing the crowdsourcing/citizen journalism discussion.
One reason mainstream news organizations haven’t embraced the concepts may be that the spirit (if not the letter) of the cit-j discussion tends to focus on the people involved rather than the news being covered. That is, [...]