Main Page Content:
CraigslistRSS feed
-

Holovaty’s Everyblock launches, promotes geocoding of local news and data

Posted by Martin Stabe on 24 January 2008 at 09:12
Tags: Craigslist, data, geotagging

Everyblock, the company founded last year by US programmer-journalist Adrian Holovaty with a $1.1 million (£550,000) cash injection from the Knight News Challenge, has launched its eagerly-anticipated local news web site.

In an introductory blog post, the EveryBlock describes its mission this way: “We aim to collect all of the news and civic goings-on that have happened recently in your city, and make it simple for you to keep track of news in particular areas. We’re a geographic filter — a ‘news feed’ for your neighborhood, or, yes, even your block.”

The four-person company seeks to help make sense of the wealth of local news and information that is available on any number of web sites.

Users in the three American cities where the company is initially launching — Chicago, New York and San Francisco — will be able to enter an address to find local news and public information in that area, such as news stories from local media as well as council information such as building permits, crimes, restaurant inspections. The site also aggregates other locally-relevant data from around the web, such as classified advertisements from Craigslist and photographs from Flickr.

In an e-mail interview with Al Tomkins of the Poynter Institute, Holovaty explained that the site is complementary to local news media sites and that he is hoping to encourage news organisations to adopt geocoding to user-centric localisation to their web sites:

“On EveryBlock, you’ll find out when your local pizza place is inspected, but you won’t find an analysis of the mayoral budget or Chicago’s bid for the 2016 Olympics (unless they plan to build a stadium near your house),” Holovaty told Tomkins.

-

AOP: Tim O’Reilly on “Publishing 2.0″

Posted by Martin Stabe on 4 October 2006 at 11:42
Tags: BBC, Blogs, Craigslist, Google, Journalism, Mashups, Nature, Online, Second Life, UK AOP, Wikis, Yahoo

Tim O’Reilly of O’Reilly media is now giving his keynote about “Publishing 2.0″. The title of his talk, like the title of this blog, is obviously a reference to “Web 2.0″, a term O’Reilly is credited with coining.

One thing that Web 2.0 companies have in common, O’Reilly says, is that they are making money from software, but not by selling software. They are using the Internet as a platform. It’s no longer an add-on to the PC.
The big change in the industry is about “harnessing collective intellignce” which is only possible on a network. That is the essesnce of Web 2.0.

Yahoo!, the orginal aggregator, let tried to create a catalogue of the best material on the web. Google, was the first search engine that didn’t just look at documents, but also what people were doing with documents, though PageRank. Google works and gets better every time someone creates a link to an online document.

EBay is people coming together. Amazon doesn’t have a clever breakthrough. They just work hard on it. They get their users to add value to the site over and over, making them better than their competitors.

Early map publisher Mapquest didn’t realise that users add value. They saw it as database publishing.

Web 2.0 is the era of asymmetric competition. Google plays by different rules. They are an advertising player. Previous models didn’t work, so now Yahoo has to compete on Google’s terms.

Craiglist is the best example of this. Craig Newmark recently boast that his company, with just 18 employees, is the seventh-biggest site on the interent, just below News Corp with 38,000 employees.
The biggest competition for O’Reilly technology books is people searching online. As a consequence the mix of books in the publishing business is changing. They are  oublishing far fewer reference books. Tutorial books, which can’t be done well online, now more important in their mix.

O’Reilly  shows a slide showing an IBM visualisation of the history of a single Wikipedia entry. Over time, more and more people contribute to an entry that originally was largely written by just one individual.

Then he shows an Alexa graph comparing the online Encyclopedia Britannica against Wikipedia. Britannica is a flat red line while Wikipedia is growing rapidly.

Sites can be either designed to get network effects like this, or they can be designed in a way that does not encourage such effects.

Flickr is a good example. He shows a Flickr tag cloud and compares it to Shutterfly, a “Web 1.0” photo uploading site. After uploading new photos, Shutterfly invites users to give friends access to them. On Flickr, by contrast, the default option is to make the uploaded photos public. Users have to chose to make them private. Think about the choice of defaults that encourage network behaviour.

We are seeing computer programming as journalism, commonly called Mashups. He mentions Adrian Holovaty’s ChicagoCrime.org web site (a favourite of this parish). Holovaty’s previous project was LJWorld at the Lawrence Journal-World, a small paper in Kansas, which gave local community groups the ability to create content. Both projects, says O’Reilly, are good examples of the power of seeing computer programming and user-generated content as journalism.

Digital rights management: you have to think about not having too much of it. The correct approach to DRM is like taking a cat to the vet: hold it loosely, or it will claw you. Apple defeated Sony in the music space by holding DRM loosely.

We have to be players in the workd of mashups and UGC. The web will continue with or with out us, more and more in a network world. “We have to figure out how to become players in that world, or we’ll be left behind,” he concludes.

In the Q&A, O’Reilly is asked who in traditional media “gets it”. He says Nature publishing group is doing some amazing work in this area, with open peer review and have figured out how to keep things behind the firewall while also exposing it to search engines. The BBC and Washington Post are also very good, he says.

Simon Waldman asks whether O’Reilly will shift more into an ad-funded model from paid-for books. He says the Safari service is subscriptions and is not the third-largest channel for sales. Thirty per cent of the pageview come from books that are not selling as books. It’s an example of Chris Anderson’s long tail theory and a huge shift to content that wasn’t being monetised at all previously.

Bill Murray asks about UGC as journalism. Much UGC is created by a tiny fraction of the user base. So what is the role of the traditional editor?

O’Reilly says Wikipedia is an example. They have traditional editors, but are just using a different set of tools, but there is an editorial role. Google, similarly, has supervisors for content, particularly to weed out spam.
We’re seeing the age of the computer-aided editor, and the function is that of the person who is doing the curation of content has much more powerful tools.
Will consumers become cynical about publishers’ self interest in soliciting their UGC?
O’Reilly says yes. Some will completely miss the boat and there will be lots of cynicism. Think back to the early days of the PC and all the companies that no longer exist. As a result of that, should we have discounted the personal computer?

“The companies are bubbles on the wave, they are not the wave,” he says. We’re moving towards a global platform and you have to figure out how to be part of it. Eventually, the industry will consolidate and innovation will move elsewhere. But we are just seeing the very beginning. Imagine when every divice you carry records its location all the time. Some insurance companies are using this data to set rates depending on where you drive. Somebody owns that data and needs to manage it.
The web is just a phase. It’s really about the “Internetisation of everything,” he says.

What will be Web 3.0? Two things are candidates for that moniker, says O’Reilly. Sensor-powered network, which contains devices rather than human-powered “bionic software”. These applications made humans components of the application.

Another candidate is virtual worlds, like Second Life. Electic Sheep is a company that only has offices in the virtual world. In the physical world they are scattered around North America and meet virtually only opn Sheep Island in Second Life.

That’s where the next AOP conference is going to be held, Torin Douglas jokes, closign the session.

1 comment

-

Liveblogging the UK AOP conference

Posted by Martin Stabe on 4 October 2006 at 09:59
Tags: Craigslist, Guardian, Journalism, Online, UK AOP

9:30 I’m at UK Association of Online Publishers’ conference in London, where outgoing chairman, Haymarket’s Bill Murray, has just welcomed Simon Waldman of Guardian Media Group as the new chairman.

Waldman says AOP has changed dramatically from its start four years ago, when, he says, it was little more than a group of shoulders for online publishers to cry on because nobody in our business cares about the Internet.

“These are exciting and frightening times for the media owners,” Waldman says, as “traditional business models begin to creak”.

“We are all beginners”, says Waldman. “Rarely has there been a time when so many have faced so much radical change.”

9:40 As an example of what Waldman said, the BBC’s Torin Douglas recaps two stories from the Today programme that underline Waldman’s points: the impending launch of online TV station 18 Doughty Street and Blair and Brown’s agreement not to increase the BBC licence fee above the rate of inflation, along with yesterday’s news from Nielson/Netratings about lack of consumer awareness about new media terms.

9:45 Carolyn McCall, chief executive of GMG, begins her keynote.

McCall says the Guardian’s online video offerings will consist of more than just video content from PA or Reuters. Instead, original video from the group’s production company Guardian Films will be edited for use on the web.

The Guardian is to be the leading liberal voice in the world, says McCall. It is both a creative and commercial goal. This is only possible because of the Internet. Inconcievable 5 years ago. Engement with users is essential to remaining relevant if puiblishers don’t want to be mere content providers for aggregators.

10:15: In the Q&A, McCall is asked how journalists have responded to the Guardian’s digitial strategy. “Journalists are curious peoplep and are curious about the new way of working, so they are not a monolithic or homog greoup,” she says. Some will always embrace new technology early and see it as another way get their content to a wider audience.

For the rest, journalists don’t like being told what to do. It’s best for publishers to engage with them and explain explain that there is an imperative to do this in order to be a player at all in the future.

“You can’t underestimate how much giving journalists the tools they need helps,” she says, citing the new newsroom for the Manchester Evening News.

-

Rusbridger: Express will “fall off a cliff”

Posted by Martin Stabe on 23 March 2006 at 15:00
Tags: Craigslist, Express, Guardian, Journalism, Online

Before winning Newspaper of the Year (and then being turned away at the door of the Met Bar after-party) this week, it seems Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger was busy recycling bits of the Craig Newmark speech he gave at Queen Mary, University of London, back in February.

In the speech’s recent incarnation, delivered at the Royal Society of Arts on 16 March (MP3, 21Mb) and reported by Mike Butcher, Rusbridger added a few snipes at those who don’t don’t share his foresight about the Internet’s effect on the newspaper business model:

He noted that Richard Desmond’s Express Newspapers are trying to “pretend the Internet doesn’t exist” - and Desmond himself is drawing a large salary in the meantime. “At some point,” said Rusbridger dryly “The Express titles will fall off a cliff as the last reader dies.”

-

The tyranny of online advertising

Posted by Martin Stabe on 14 March 2006 at 14:05
Tags: Craigslist, Investigations, Journalism, Online

Speaking at South by Southwest Interactive film festival in Texas, Craigslist founder Craig Newmark has said newspapers should invest more in investigative journalism.

This echoed similar sentiments Newmark aired in an interview a fortnight ago, during which he was asked what he would do if he were the editor of a newspaper dependent on classified sales. Newmark said: “I’d be moving to the Web faster, hiring more investigative journalists, engaging the community and speaking truth to power.”

But is it really that easy? Nicholas Carr, a former executive editor of the Harvard Business Review, has a thoughtful response. Newmark’s sentiment is all very nice, Carr says, except that the disaggregation of newspaper content on the web makes investing in expensive forms of public-interest journalism very difficult:

Traditional newspapers sold bundles of content. Subscribers paid to get the bundle, and advertisers paid to have their ads in the bundle, where those readers would see them. In effect, investigative and other hard journalism was subsidized by the softer stuff — but you couldn’t really see the subsidization, so in a way it didn’t really exist.

And, besides, the hard stuff contributed to the value of the overall bundle. That whole model has been slowly unraveling for some time, but the web tears it into tiny little pieces. Literally. The web unbundles the bundle - each story becomes a separate entity that lives or dies, economically, on its own. It’s naked in the marketplace, its commercial existence meticulously measured, click by click. … The economic incentives created by the web model are very different from those of the old print model - and it’s economic incentives that ultimately determine business decisions.

In another post, Carr offers an example of what the different economics of online journalism could mean for the types of stories that publications are incentivised to run:

Let’s say you’re an online newspaper. You do a long, complex story about the relationship between political strife and disease in Africa. It’s a good story, and it’s an important story, and it’s expensive to produce (you have to send a reporter and a photographer overseas). But it’s not a story that gets readers to click on ads, and it’s not a story that lends itself to the kind of keywords that advertisers bid a lot of money for. You also do a brief review of some new high-definition TVs coming on the market. It’s a cheap story to produce. And it produces loads of high-priced clickthroughs by readers.

The loss of some classified advertising revenue to sites like Craigslist is only part of the problem for online newspapers: The disaggregating effect of the Internet and the much greater detail with which advertisers can monitor which stories generate page views is another. As Carr says public-interest investigative and foreign reporting has always been subsidized by fluffier, more advertising-friendly content. But online, this system of invisible invisible subsidies is far more transparent and will become more difficult to sustain. In the long term, this is a much more serious problem than classified advertising revenue.

-

No need to fear Craigslist?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 6 March 2006 at 12:53
Tags: Circulation, Craigslist, Newspapers, Online, United States

The founder of the free-classifieds web site Craigslist, has told an American newspaper that the effect of his free-classifieds web site on local newspapers is much exaggerated.

Falling circulations, Craig Newmark told the Rocky Mountain News in Denver, is a far bigger problem for local newspapers.

Local papers will still be around in 20 years, Newmark predicts in the interview: “I think they will be around and much stronger, but the information will be delivered electronically. Keep an eye on the scrollable displays that you could roll out of your cell phone (with news tailored to each individual).”

Asked what he would you do if he were running a newspaper dependent on classified advertising revenue, Newmark said: I’d be moving to the Web faster, hiring more investigative journalists, engaging the community and speaking truth to power.”

Newmark’s hugely popular free ads site has editors, including the Guardian’s Alan Rusbridger, worried about a major source of newspapers’ ad revenue.

-

Don’t be evil (to newspapers)

Posted by Martin Stabe on 2 March 2006 at 11:11
Tags: Craigslist, Google, Online

The threat to newspaper revenues posed by Craigslist is so last month. The next online villain for publishers? Google. Jack Schofield writes in the Guardian:

This week, the excitement is about Google’s forthcoming payments system, now available to a select few (https://services.google.com/inquiry/sell). If you sell things on Google Base, Google can handle the payments - making it a potential threat to eBay and PayPal, as well as to Craigslist, and newspapers that sell classified advertising. And Amazon. And everyone.

Craigslist provides free classifieds, but not any method for its users to accept credit card payments. Of course, neither do newspaper ad sites. Analysists quoted by Red Herring say the payments mechanism combined  with the new listings service Google Base, could become a new cash cow for the search giant.
Google has had a busy week, also announching a mobile phone version of Google News.

E-mail Newsletter Signup

Weekly bulletins