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Here at the Online News Association Conference in Toronto

October 21st, 2007 · No Comments

Online News Association Conference premieres. Wed. Oct 17, 2007. – today was the first day of the conference. though you wouldn’t know it by the lack of a registration table. supposedly it’s a “pre-conference” day, but there are a bunch of workshops going on. maybe they just need to admit that it’s a 3-day gig.

i attended a panel discussion about “citizen journalism,” which is one phrase that could describe what the Media Mobilizing Project is doing. However, MMP folks don’t seem to like it and i think i am beginning to understand why. thus far, the mainstream groups seem to treat the work of “citizen journalists” as “user generated content” that they can exploit to their own means – cheap or free labor that adds information to their content-hungry sites. it’s not necessarily an altruistic relationship.

that doesn’t mean that all such projects need to be viewed so cynically.

the folks at creating community connections (creatingcommunityconnections.org) are working with students at columbia college who in-turn work with a number of neighborhoods and cover them. okay, so that’s not the immpressive part. i don’t think that having privileged college students cover “bad” neighborhoods that they are not from is a good thing. it was unclear whether or not they trained folks from the neighborhood too. or maybe i just took bad notes.

yet they incorporated an innovative call-in feature to their site that allows people to call an automated messaging service, record an audio story or drop leads for the site’s reporters to cover. the stories can then be published as audio files on the website. if i’m not mistaken, the project’s directors’ worked with an online publication called Oh My News http://english.ohmynews.com/ which i have yet to check out.

the creator of the Twin City Daily Planet was a former mainstream reporter who saw that his paper’s virtual and physical product did not do the area justice. inspired by ohmynews.com, the site is a collaboration between professional journalists (i guess the folks who went to school and are getting paid) and citizen journalists who contribute. it was funded (as was the other project above) by a J-Lab grant at the University of Maryland.

interestingly the TC site both produces original content and aggregates news from a variety of sources. the online paper also collaborates with several ethnic news publications in english, spanish, somali and hmong – which blew me away. i really like the idea of collaborating across linguistic and cultural boundaries. furthermore, like the Media Mobilizing Project, the TC Planet partnered w/ their city’s wireless provider to generate “hyper-local” news/content. they’re also partnering with the public library, Minnesota public radio and local nonprofits. the director (fill in name here) recommended the site new american media.org which does news aggregation and training apparently.

as i took notes during the discussion, i imagined that it would be fantastic for mmp to work with seniors, disabled rights groups and look at how we can integrate call-in audio and cellphone aka mobile technology into the future site. i later heard that a program called WAP is what provides mobile technology integration w/ the web, so i’ll have to look into it.

Tags: Work

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