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The value of crowdsourcing can be more than mining social media for sources.
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Jan. 19, 2011, 9 a.m.
Popular on Twitter: SXSW, caffeine on the go, the effects of WikiLeaks
Tucson video captures victim sacrificing himself for others
20 interactive panels that journalists should attend at SXSW
Now you can buy a bucket of Starbucks coffee using your cell phone
World Press Photo launches a multimedia contest
Starbucks accepts mobile payments nationwide
State Department: WikiLeaks “has caused little lasting damage”
RightHaven copyright-enforcers are now going after commenters
The demise of Dean Singleton and the rise of private equity
Big Picture founder Alan Taylor jumps to The Atlantic
Michael Kinsley, in Politico, “showing some real bite”
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Adrienne LaFrance
May 21, 2012
Buzz Bissinger: Newspaper editors are “very cautious — too cautious”
The
Friday Night Lights
author reflects on how newspapers have changed, why editors need to take risks, and the sale of Philadelphia’s two largest newspapers.
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Links on Twitter: The demands of blogging, Freakonomics spins-off and OC Register gets a mobile boost
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Seeking Alpha’s Premium Partnership Program and the evolution of paying for content
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The latest from Nieman Lab ➚
From cold calls to community building: ProPublica tries to make crowdsourcing more meaningful
ProPublica hopes its Patient Harm Facebook group will show that the value of crowdsourcing can be more than mining social media for sources.
NPR snags Brian Boyer to launch a news apps team (and they’re hiring)
“I’m a project manager masquerading as a programmer masquerading as a journalist,” Boyer says.
MinnPost tracks new (and stalled) laws with Bill Explorer
Buzz Bissinger: Newspaper editors are “very cautious — too cautious”
The
Friday Night Lights
author reflects on how newspapers have changed, why editors need to take risks, and the sale of Philadelphia’s two largest newspapers.
This Week in Review: Red flags before Facebook’s IPO, and two sides of Google’s smarter search
When is a website not a website? For Talking Points Memo, the turning point was in 2012
TPM’s Josh Marshall says he now views what was launched as a website as a bundle of knowledge and expertise that “exists inherently on no particular platform” — which is why he’s moving big into mobile and video.
The newsonomics of News U.
Journalism and education are both about knowledge. Could their post-disruption business models start to blur?
Flipboard + public radio could be a killer combo
Users already spend a lot of time in the Flipboard app, and if past data is any indication, audio could keep people “flipping” a lot longer.
Google’s Richard Gingras: We are at the beginning of a journalism renaissance
In a video of his recent talk at the Nieman Foundation, Gingras shares his thoughts on how newspapers can rethink their approach to distribution, work flows and innovation.
For its 2012 elections coverage, MTV swaps out citizen journalism for gamification
MTV, the Knight Foundation, and a collection of news organizations are teaming up to produce a fantasy-football-style election game.