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Virgina Tech shooting raises new issues for journalists

Posted by Martin Stabe on 17 April 2007 at 14:06
Tags: Ethics, Facebook, Journalism, MySpace, blogging

The Virginia Tech shootings are rapidly becoming one of those milestone stories that periodically highlights the trends emerging in participatory media — and the new questions reporters need to ask themselves when attempting to use these new materials.

The local paper near the Virginia Tech campus is the Roanoke Times, a US regional well-known for online innovation. It jumped into action right away, posting a blog-style rolling story that noted new information as it came in. Within hours, the site featured audio, video, slideshows and interactive graphics.

Virginia Tech’s student newspaper, the Collegiate Times, has also covered the story admirably. It’s web server inevitably crashed under the sudden influx of worldwide interest, but the student journalists quickly came up with a way to redirect traffic elsewhere.

Video footage shot on mobile phones also became a staple of the coverage. Amateur material became available quickly on Flickr and YouTube. CNN used amateur photos and videos from its I-Reports citizen journalism site in its reporting.

Seeking new information during the shooting and afterward, many students posted their experiences on blogs, as well as social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook.

On his blog, new media journalist Steve Outing wrote:

When traditional media doesn’t serve the needs of the community — in this case, for people involved in the story because they may have friends or family members at the school to learn the fate of those people — then people turn to services that do. In this case, Facebook.

But these sometimes heartbreaking postings also provided leads for professional journalists scrambling to find new information for their reports on the shooting, so journalists from around the world also began posting on these sites urging their authors to contact them.

The reaction from some other commenters on the students’ sites was highly unfavorable to journalists who acted in this way, suggesting that the reporters’ online approaches to the victims was inappropriate. Some even questioned why any reporter from a faraway media needed to report on what was at that point a very local tragedy.

In a valuable post discussing his own approach to one student, the BBC’s Robin Hamman notes that some Livejournal users were less than impressed by journalists’ “clumsy” approaches:

[Y]esterday’s events, and the ensuing media frenzy in the comments of a LiveJournal user and elsewhere, show that where mainstream media does use - and yes, that word was chosen deliberately - content created by bloggers, that the journalists, researchers and reporters do it with sensitivity.

Think when you link. Understand that some content published in public was never intended to be seen by a mass audience.

Another worrying twist to the story came when unverified assumptions posted online began to wrongly identify one Virginia Tech student as a potential suspect. With little reliable information available about the identity of the gunman, web users attention began focusing on the Livejournal page of a 23-year-old Virginia Tech student said to live in the dorm where the shooting started and whose web site showed him posting with a collection of guns.

The student reports receiving death threats as a result of the insinuation that he was the gunman. He eventually posted a statement on his his blog protesting his innocence. ABC News’ blog The Blotter and Wired’s security blog Threat Level both highlighted the case.

Over at his Online Journalism Blog, Paul Bradshaw puts it well. This event highlights trends that will become increasingly common as the generation that grew up with social media ages, and some of the new skills and roles that journalists will have to adopt in covering stories like this one.

Tags: Ethics, Facebook, Journalism, MySpace, blogging

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  1. Random.Family.Law.Thought&hellip |  17 April 2007 at 6:10pm

    [...] is cathartic in their personal grief. I don’t know what to think on this complex question. Here’s a thoughtful article on this very topic, however. Here’s something I do know. On Paul’s LiveJournal, at 6:34 EDT, “aciel” [...]

  2. Steve G |  17 April 2007 at 6:10pm

    Here’s an article about all the facebook memorial pages being created.. it also has links to the profiles of the individuals killed… maybe we can all send their profiles messages of condolence or something nice for their families to read.

    http://collegecandy.com/2007/04/17/facebook-supports-the-vtech-tragedy/

  3. Think Progress » Vi&hellip |  17 April 2007 at 7:12pm

    [...] While many media organizations have turned to the blogs and social networking sites for news on what happened, some news organizations — such as ABC, NBC, and the Times of [...]

  4. Martin Stabe&hellip |  17 April 2007 at 11:01pm

    [IMG]

  5. USNews.com: PaperTrail&hellip |  18 April 2007 at 2:39am

    [...] but the student journalists quickly came up with a way to redirect traffic elsewhere," notes the Press Gazette. In addition to its ongoing coverage, the Times also has one of the most up-to-date lists of [...]

  6. links for 2007-04-18 &laq&hellip |  18 April 2007 at 3:32am

    [...] Press Gazette Blogs - Fleet Street 2.0 » Virgina Tech shooting raises new issues for journalists Round-up of coverage of the Virginia Tech shootings. (tags: internet participatory journalism citizenmedia facebook) [...]

  7. Notes from a Teacher: Mar&hellip |  18 April 2007 at 5:22am

    [...] at Innovations in College Media Steve Outing: Social networking plays a role in another big story Online Press Gazette: Virgina Tech shooting raises new issues for journalists Mathew Ingram: The crowd reports the Virginia Tech [...]

  8. Press Gazette Blogs - Fle&hellip |  18 April 2007 at 8:52am

    [...] Virgina Tech shooting raises new issues for journalists Main [...]

  9. BBC - Radio Five Live - P&hellip |  18 April 2007 at 12:56pm

    [...] II: Martin Stabe looks at the issue in the Press Gazette blog. /* Audio & Music Interactive Social Bookmarks */ #blog_entries .ami_social_bookmarks { margin: 0 0 [...]

  10. Think » Blog Archiv&hellip |  18 April 2007 at 3:04pm

    [...] horrific shootings at Virginia Tech provide a prime example of how users took control of the flow of information.  Smart media companies are figuring out how to harness this citizen [...]

  11. MoD’s ban on ITN points&hellip |  27 April 2007 at 3:39pm

    [...] media material?MySpace News launch expectedMedia critics look at online Virginia Tech coverageVirgina Tech shooting raises new issues for journalistsMC2’s financial PR offering takes shapeThink before you TwitterOnline PR still has a long way to [...]

  12. cybersoc.com&hellip |  6 June 2007 at 2:50pm

    weeks - the media, and everyone else, seems to have rather suddenly discovered facebook. It’s perhaps slightly contentious to suggest, but it seems to me that much of the sudden interest can be traced back to the way that news and media organisations used facebook as a source of information and quotes in the immediate aftermath of the Virginia Tech massacre. In the last week I’ve had an almost unmanageable stream of friend requests, discussion threads, and pokes from BBC colleagues - last time I looked there

  13. Under siege from the futu&hellip |  11 June 2007 at 12:50pm

    [...] On the other hand, new media also enables journalists to contact potential sources faster and more easily than ever before. Anonymous corporate blogging and whistle blowing initiatives like Wikileaks make it easier to find leads. And thanks to the younger socially networked generations, events like the Virginia Tech shootings now have more primary journalistic material than ever before. [...]

  14. Thoughts of Nigel&hellip |  12 June 2007 at 9:02am

    notice of the social networking sites for news angles,stories etc I think this sudden interest in the social web is a good thing, not just because it will help them understand the social norms in those spaces so that journalists don’t find themselves blundering their way in again following the next big breaking news story, but because it means that we’ll be there to actually spot stories as they are reported by members of the public who happen to be on site - blogging and twittering and

  15. cybersoc.com: social soft&hellip |  13 October 2007 at 3:19pm

    [...] help them understand the social norms in those spaces so that journalists don’t find themselves blundering their way in again following the next big breaking news story, but because it means that we’ll be there to [...]

  16. Virginia Tech shooting: a&hellip |  5 December 2007 at 7:31pm

    [...] Press Gazette Blogs - Fle&hellip  |  April 17, 2007 at 1:06 [...]

  17. » Netzwerkplattform&hellip |  1 April 2008 at 1:14pm

    [...] und Verantwortung nachdachte; weitere Texte zu dieser ethischen Debatte finden sich z.B.  auch hier und hier.. Darin finde ich folgende Einsicht sehr bemerkenswert: Next time something horrific like [...]

  18. Time for a code conduct f&hellip |  20 April 2008 at 3:30pm

    [...] But aside from these, there seems to be a paucity of advice out there toward helping journalists in the world of Facebook, blogs and forums. This is a little worrying given the negative impact on the profession, when journalists rush online gung-ho into sensitive subjects, like the Virginia Tech tragedy. [...]

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