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November 2007 Archives

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Underwritten by John S. and James L. Knight Foundation

Jennifer Woodard Maderazo

Last.FM, Jango, Pandora Trounce Music Discovery via Radio

Back before the Internet, listening to the radio was a one-sided experience. Beyond the occasional call-in request, music radio was about listening to whatever the DJs decided to play whenever they decided to play it. But a new breed of online music services are giving listeners access to music content on demand, and most are for free. Can these...

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Digging Deeper

TechPresident, 10Questions Put Spotlight on 'Voter-Generated Content'

Just as the Internet and technology have shifted the playing field in media, allowing bloggers and podcasters to help set the news agenda, so has the realm of politics been disrupted by technology that gives voters more power to inject their own issues into the fray. And in the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign, that disruption has been strongest in...

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AdvertisingShift

The Web Privacy Manifesto

How much do online marketers and websites know about us? Do they save records on what we've bought, sites we've visited, people we've contacted? It's a subject that few of us bother with until we find out our private information has been stolen or inadvertently been made public. And privacy concerns have been front and center lately as MySpace...

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Your Take

Should the FTC set up a 'Do Not Track' database for online marketing?

With the rise of behavorial marketing online -- where marketers serve ads based on where you've gone online -- there's also a rising concern about how much privacy we are giving up. Do we realize that marketers are tracking the sites we visit online and that we would need to erase our computer cookies in order to keep that info...

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7 Lessons Learned While Judging World-Changing Blogs

I spent the past week in freezing wet Berlin, helping judge the Best of the Blogs awards once again, an international competition run by the German public media outlet, Deutsche Welle (DW). There were some surprising winners, some heated arguments among the judges flown in from around the world, but overall a good set of winners who rose above...

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Weblogs

Losing the Journalistic Security Blanket

Here's the quiz of the day for 21st Century Journalism 101: What makes news critics howl, able reporters swoon and strong editors weep? (Hint: The great unwashed and untutored of the blogosphere consider them pure manna.)

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MobileShift

Pocket Journalism Takes More Than Stylish iPhones

An AP technology story out of Japan hit home week. It detailed how young folk in Asia are abandoning the PC by the drove.

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Citizen Journalism

Teaching Citizen Journalism Challenges Both Profession and Professor

I have a unique place in the citizen journalism world -- I teach one of the very few practical courses in this growing area of our profession.

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NewspaperShift

Rethinking the Mercury News...with Community Participation

When I was clicking through the website of the San Jose Mercury News metro newspaper, I noticed the navigation bar had the usual tabs for News, Tech, Sports, Business, and finally, Help. But this time, rather than consider this Help tab as a way for readers to get help, I could hear the Mercury News calling out to readers...

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Your Take

What's the role of unions in the digital age?

Unions have had a long history representing media workers at traditional media organizations. But now they are being tested, as those very same traditional media outlets are creating more and more non-union digital jobs while eliminating union jobs. Unions have always had a role in helping workers vs. the media companies, but now they must figure out how to...

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