Member since Sep 16, 2009, follows 0 people, 0 public groups, 11 public bookmarks (11 total).
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orkut - Photos on 2009-10-22
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- Oakland University Sign-On Service on 2009-10-15
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Picasa Web Albums - santosh.trueindia - Flood victims Relief camp on 2009-10-15
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Kneale: 4 Lessons of the Letterman Scandal - Politics and Government * US * News * Story - CNBC.com on 2009-10-02
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Read: Before we decide to beat the daylights
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Bank of America | Online Banking | Transfer Funds | Add Account on 2009-10-01
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Please resubmit the request or contact the account owner to verify the
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West Bloomfield Salons, Spas, Health and Beauty Services in West Bloomfield, MI on 2009-09-30
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Google Reader (916) on 2009-09-30
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output. The light appears
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Facebook | Home on 2009-09-29
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Tweeting Under Fire on 2009-09-25
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WHEN WILDFIRES swept through Southern California in October and
November 2007, everyone with a home near the fire line was desperate for
information. But the traditional means of finding time-sensitive news were
flawed.
After the crisis, when a trio of disaster
researchers asked residents how they felt about mainstream news coverage, the
investigators heard complaints that "the information was insufficient, either
because it lacked specificity to their area; was biased towards metropolitan
areas; seemed focused on the sensational at the expense of those in rural or
outlying areas; or was simply inaccurate." And the government? Sometimes it did
a good job of getting breaking news to the public, but other times its outlets
were "slow to update information to at-risk and evacuated communities or simply
overwhelmed and stymied by on-line
traffic."
Fortunately, there were alternatives. As
one interviewee told the researchers, "the only way we all have to get good
information here is for those who have it to share it. We relied on others to
give us updates when they had info and we do the same for others." That meant
going online, to community forums such as RimOfTheWorld.net and
SoCalMountains.com: quick, constantly updated efforts fueled by voluntary,
amateur action. Earlier fires, another resident explained, had taught the locals
that "there is no 'they.' 'They' won't tell us if there is danger, 'they' aren't
coming to help, and 'they' won't correct bad information. We have to do that
amongst ourselves."-
lauren kallabat on 2009-09-25
I am going to use this highlighted sectin in my paper to show how social networking sites now compete with offical news sources to be the first and best sourse of news. Social networking sites are available to fine tune their news to their audience based on their specific locatin, whereas bigger news sources are unable to do that. Bigger news sources can ony generalize, and people do not like that.
When in crisis, and actually in general, people are going to use the source that tailors the news for them.
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These do-it-yourselfers were enormously successful. By the end
of the crisis, professional reporters and professional emergency workers alike
were relying on RimOfThe-World.net for the most up-to-date information. It was a
bracing lesson not just for anyone who assumes that ordinary people are helpless
in the face of disaster but for anyone who doubts that DIY media can ever
out-perform the mainstream press - 1 more annotations...
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- Academic OneFileĀ Document on 2009-09-25
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