This link has been bookmarked by 21 people . It was first bookmarked on 16 Apr 2007, by Bill Harshbarger.
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07 Nov 08
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28 May 08
Jessica DheereA key role of the media in the future will be to provide the places—to become the platform—for people to link what they know with who they know, and to expand both their knowledge and their network.
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10 May 08
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11 Mar 08
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10 Mar 08
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23 Oct 07
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19 Apr 07
Pelle Sten"But Zuckerman didn't mean that the days of editors and journalists are past. He was rather suggesting that with facts, information and opinions circulating freely and broadly, their role is changing into that of facilitator, coach, flow organizer."
journalistik deltagande_journalistik bruno_giussani ethan_zuckerman globalvoices
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17 Apr 07
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16 Apr 07
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The media, in the words of Dan Gillmor, founder of the Center for Citizen Media, are shifting from a "read-only" system to a "read-write" one. The most remarkable aspect of the interactive digital environment is indeed the progressive vanishing of the lines dividing the producer and the consumer of information, the writer and the reader. People with cameraphones are always more likely than professional journalists or photographers to be where the news happens, when it happens (witnessing, for example, 9/11, the tsunami and the London bombings, pictured here - photo Alexander Chadwick/AP). The phenomenon is not exactly new: one of the most famous video footages, the Zapruder film of John F. Kennedy's assassination, was exactly that: an act of random, amateur journalism. Nowadays people routinely carry photo and video devices and have access to the Web. The Zapruders of our time populate YouTube and MySpace and blogs and other similar places that are capturing their creativity and allowing its expression.
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The media, in the words of Dan Gillmor, founder of the Center for Citizen Media, are shifting from a "read-only" system to a "read-write" one. The most remarkable aspect of the interactive digital environment is indeed the progressive vanishing of the lines dividing the producer and the consumer of information, the writer and the reader. People with cameraphones are always more likely than professional journalists or photographers to be where the news happens, when it happens (witnessing, for example, 9/11, the tsunami and the London bombings, pictured here - photo Alexander Chadwick/AP). The phenomenon is not exactly new: one of the most famous video footages, the Zapruder film of John F. Kennedy's assassination, was exactly that: an act of random, amateur journalism. Nowadays people routinely carry photo and video devices and have access to the Web. The Zapruders of our time populate YouTube and MySpace and blogs and other similar places that are capturing their creativity and allowing its expression.
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jose muriloEthan Zuckerman, the Harvard-based co-founder of GlobalVoices and an insightful blogger, was asked whether newspaper and television editors were still relevant in these days of participatory, "citizen" journalism: "Don't speak. Point!"
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15 Apr 07
Martin StabeBruno Giussani: "[J]ournalists ... need not fear what's coming because it will be exciting and vastly expand their possibilities. But ... they will need to reinvent themselves as a skilled part of a crowd rather than as lecturers"
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