Net Architecture and the Future of Journalism

July 2nd, 2010

My dearest hope for journalism — and the point of all my efforts since I quit my commercial-news day job nigh ‘pon ten  years ago — is that it adapts to the Internet as a medium, by adopting a decentralized organizational structure, in sync with the Internet’s basic/essential architecture as a network.

To wit: Power and access are distributed, everyone’s equally capable and embedded in a peer context, and thus the enterprise of journalism should focus on good process and good practice at the peer level: to facilitate collaboration, resource exchange, and the circulation of information/ideas/dialogue.

This is the philosophical underpinning of YOUR LOCAL NEWSDESK’s vision of a peer-to-peer network for journalists.

Now, check out this except from John Naughton’s essay in The Guardian, “The internet: Everything you ever need to know”:

“The answer lies deep in the network’s architecture. When it was being created in the 1970s, Vint Cerf and Robert Kahn, the lead designers, were faced with two difficult tasks: how to design a system that seamlessly links lots of other networks, and how to design a network that is future-proof. The answer they came up with was breathtakingly simple. It was based on two axioms. Firstly, there should be no central ownership or control – no institution which would decide who could join or what the network could be used for. Secondly, the network should not be optimised for any particular application. This led to the idea of a’ simple’ network that did only one thing – take in data packets at one end and do its best to deliver them to their destinations. The network would be neutral as to the content of those packets – they could be fragments of email, porn videos, phone conversations, images… The network didn’t care, and would treat them all equally.

“By implementing these twin protocols, Vint Cerf and Robert Kahn created what was essentially a global machine for springing surprises. The implication of their design was that if you had an idea that could be implemented using data packets, then the internet would do it for you, no questions asked. And you didn’t have to ask anyone’s permission.”

Can you imagine? Journalists who don’t have to ask permission. Democracy demands nothing less. Decentralized peer communities make it all possible.

Noted: NPR’s Vivian Schiller at the IRE conference

July 2nd, 2010

The speech by NPR CEO Vivian Schiller at the recent Investigative Reporters and Editors conference in Las Vegas indicates that the wise teachings of the small, independent news nonprofit are going mainstream. The following key points from her speech are not new, but it’s great to see them made in such a high-profile setting:

Partnerships=good. Yeah. Competition’s in the blood, but teaming up multiplies impacts and extends limited resources.

Innovation=decentralized. She doesn’t actually up and say this, but the revelation is there, waiting for its moment:

“It’s a fascinating paradox that investigative reporting, often the most painstaking, labor intensive and sometimes solo form of journalism, has also been at the very forefront of experimentation and innovation.”

Let me suggest that rather, it makes sense the “painstaking … and sometimes solo form of journalism” is where the innovation happens … working on one’s own, or with a small team of collaborators, relieves, albeit temporarily, the news producer of the heavy hand of the vertical/institutional power structure.

Innovation happens in practice, in action, among the multitudes, in a massively parallel process of individual and small-group effort. A topheavy power structure just gums that process up.

Indeed, she notes the experience of NPR Executive Editor Dick Meyer’s “very first contact” with “the weird new thing called the Internet” at a similar IRE conference in the early 1990’s:

“At that early conference, he says he learned about ‘user groups’ to find sources and witnesses in disaster areas where phone and cell service might be out — what we now call crowdsourcing. IRE invented computer-assisted reporting and database reporting. You’ve been using social networks before they were called social networks — there were ‘gophers’, list serves, more user groups. Technology allowed reporters to use objective methods to develop and analyze empirical data — of campaign contributions and spending, of budgets, of pollution. Reporting about institutions could in this way move beyond the anecdotal, beyond personalities and even beyond conventional scandal. You — the people in this room — invented much of that.”

Precisely. Absolutely. Innovations in the use of technology do not happen in the board room. They happen in the lab, and in the field, where people are actively putting the tech to expedient usage.

Now perhaps I can shoehorn in a corollary to all this: The sooner that journalists can shake off centralized production and management models, the sooner the Fourth Estate will be able to live up to its idealized role in our democracy.

Investigations=fundability. About this, we shall see. While it is true that there’s a renewed interest among funders in supporting investigative work — a tacit recognition of the threat to democracy presented by what Tom Stites calls our “wildly corrupt” business/political milieu — the larger issue of philanthropic support for vital news and public-information projects and processes remains knotty. The need greatly outstrips the resource, at this time, for reasons that are far too complex for this brief discussion.

That stated, the renaissance that Schiller notes is indeed gathering steam.

However, it’s been a long time coming, and the work is hardly done. Indeed, it’s hardly begun. Much more infrastructure needs building, and much more systemic reform and reinvention awaits the courage and opportunity of those who care about the future of journalism and democracy.


Noted: “Let’s subsidize open broadband, not journalists”

June 15th, 2010

Dan Gillmor delivers a fascinating essay in Salon.com about the value of open broadband infrastructure and net neutrality, which he compares to postal subsidies of early America and their defining role in advancing democratic participation.

Corollary to that is the notion that the government should otherwise not be involved with journalism subsidies, specifically because the newspaper/media industry has been “so transcendentally greedy in its monopoly era that it passed on every opportunity to survive against real financial competition.”

Large media corporations should also be paying for the free content that new journalism nonprofits such as ProPublica offer them. When commercial media take free content from news nonprofits, they are getting a free public subsidy, and are only deepening their disinvestment in actual content generation.

On the flip side, hollowed-out commercial newsrooms are great potential clients of third-party/nonprofit journalism providers. That’s no substitute for the hundreds-strong newsrooms of yesteryear, but it’s an intriguing “B2B” model that remains largely untapped by the emerging wave of new journalism nonprofits. There’s no reason those nonprofits need to be asking for gov’t handouts.

That’s the whole point of the Newsdesk.org project: Build a new network of nonprofit, third-party news providers, aggregate their work, and sell it.

While a public subsidy for journalism must necessarily not be used for propping up the lumbering dinosaurs of newsprint — public subsidy is indeed necessary to create ground-level infrastructure for civic dialogue and information exchange. And this is something that goes deeper than fiber-optic buildouts and net neutrality.

The issue is of singular importance to the small/non-corporate news producer, and in particular the nonprofit producer who may be doing important work that is off the radar of the commercial sector. You know — the type covering parolee health issues or pollution in low-income neighborhoods that causes asthma in local kids. Stuff that’s not very sexy, doesn’t sell ads, but is damnably significant in terms of our democratic pretensions as a society.

Even something as aggressively entrepreneurial as the Newsdesk.org model, which should be able to accommodate this kind of reporting, needs the public subsidy simply to get the model up and running.

Gillmor previously noted in a 2007 op-ed in the SF Chronicle that local, community foundations have a vital potential role in supporting this kind of work. The Knight Foundation seems to have taken a cue from that with their Community Information Challenge to get community foundations involved in local journalism.

Where I want to see public subsidy is twofold:

  • For the creation of non-market-dependent fora for important discourse and information exchange that’s outside the market’s interest.
  • For the no-strings support of focused civic inquiry that, again, falls outside the interest of traditional commercial markets.

While it could be argued that wide-open broadband infrastructure performs the same function as public libraries, town squares and the local Lyceum or civic meeting hall, I want to go further and assert that some form of staffing or curation is a vital part of that infrastructure.

By “public subsidy” I do include public money under private management by the private philanthropic sector, along with relatively novel (to the U.S.) ideas about directing some commercial profit towards non-commercial information exchange and inquiry. For example, a tax on ads, billboards, or electronic media hardware — the idea being that the price of commercial access to “the public” is the guarantee of the public’s access to non-commercial information and dialogue.

The make-or-break issue at that point becomes one of how the money is managed — and it’s a path full of peril for any management vehicle to navigate. The jagged rocks of Populism lurk, just below the water, on one side; the smooth and seamless cliffs of elite Meritocracy loom on the other.

Seems like an opportunity for some real social innovation!

Read a little more on the topic, in this interview with Stanford’s Ted Glasser on the potential for a National Endowment for Journalism.

Newsdesk wins SPJ’s national Excellence in Journalism Award

May 4th, 2010

I’m a bit dazzled to announce that Newsdesk.org won the Society of Professional Journalists Award for Excellence in Journalism for our multimedia series, “The Bay Area Toxic Tour: West Oakland.”

This is a national award given by the SPJ’s Sigma Delta Chi Foundation, which this year received over 1,300 entries from some of the biggest names in the business. We are honored, grateful and rather thrilled. Thank you to the SPJ selection committee for this wonderful acknowledgment of our work.

Hats off to the incredible Newsdesk.org team of reporter KWAN BOOTH and legendary photographer/multimedia-guy KIM KOMENICH! It was an honor to be your editor for this project. The awards ceremony is coming up in Las Vegas in October, where we will join other recipients, such as the Chicago Tribune, Huffington Post, Associated Press and ProPublica.

Deep gratitude is also due two others who won’t be acknowledged by the award: our Saint of Patrons, DAVID COHN of Spot.Us, for helping us raise the money to pay Kim and Kwan; and Newsdesk.org adviser VIRGIL WARD PORTER, for dreaming up the Toxic Tour idea with me almost 10 years ago during our commercial-newsroom days.

It was precisely the lack of opportunity to do this kind of rich public-health reporting that prompted me to leave my commercial-news day job and start Newsdesk.org in the first place.

Toxic Tour: Next Stop?
The goal of The Toxic Tour is to document the impacts of pollution on communities. This award is exciting not just because it recognizes our existing work. It also advances the cause of developing Toxic Tour reporting projects in other communities around the Bay Area and around the nation.

Indeed, the first thing Kim did upon hearing the news was to express hope that we can use this to jump-start further Toxic Tour coverage in the SF Bay Area — such as in Bayview-Hunters Point, with its factory effluent and irradiated shipyard, or across the Bay in Richmond, home to numerous chemical refineries and low-income housing.

And what about West Oakland? The issues there have hardly gone away. Wouldn’t it be an accomplishment to hang up a shingle there and really cover the situation in depth, over time?

And what about where you live? The EPA estimates there are more than 450,000 brownfields in the United States. And how many communities nationwide are adjacent to active industrial sites?

We have much more work to do. The Toxic Tour documents pollution and communities, and there are many more stops around the SF Bay Area and around the nation in desperate need of journalistic attention. Please support our public-service mission by making a tax-deductible donation today.

Noted: “Britain’s third party leader grabs spotlight”

April 29th, 2010

This AP item on the Liberal Democrat party’s leader is remarkable for its “barely there” coverage of what the Liberal Democrat party actually stands for.

There’s lots on Clegg’s stage presence, though. Was the debate that shallow? Or did the journalist overlook the heart of the story?

“Britain’s third party leader grabs spotlight”
Associated Press, April 29, 2009


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