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Top UK news stories on Digg in 2007

Posted by James Ball on 10 January 2008 at 08:15
Tags: BBC, Digg, Guardian Unlimited, Journalism, Mail Online, Telegraph.co.uk, The Sun Online

The social bookmarking and news recommendation site Digg, which determines its front-page content by allowing its users to vote for (or “Digg”) links posted by other users, has gained a reputation for generating huge spikes in traffic to web sites that stike the Diggers’ fancy.

So what stories have the often-geeky Diggers chosen in 2007? Surprisingly, perhaps, every one of the top ten most-Dugg stories from the UK comes from a traditional news website. It’s a heady mix of sex, violence and astrophysics. Take a look for yourself:

(more…)

2 comments

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Hillary campaign excluded UK journalists, says Telegraph correspondent

Posted by Martin Stabe on 8 January 2008 at 15:07
Tags: Guardian Unlimited, Mail Online, Telegraph.co.uk

Telegraph correspondent Toby Harnden, blogging from the Iowa caucuses earlier this week, notedhow unhelpful the Hillary Clinton campaign had been to foreign journalists — in stark contrast to the victorious Barak Obama campaign:

The Hillary Clinton staff excluded all foreign press from their “victory” celebration. A smug, humourless functionary called Lane told me and my colleague Alex Spillius that 700 US national press were allowed but no nasty foreigners – not even the BBC.

He said that there was foreign pool coverage for video and tv – but no print pool – explaining, condescendingly, that “If you think about it, there couldn’t be foreign print pool because it would have to be in lots of different languages.” Well, how about print pool in English, buddy? He gave me the email of an AP correspondent who was the “national” pool. I emailed her asking for the pool copy. Did I get it? Of course not.

Contrast that with the Obama staff. Senior aides chatting away to big shot and small fry reporters alike. Credentials and access to as many reporters and members of the public who wanted it. Throughout the Iowa campaign, Obama volunteers would thank us for coming, accompany us to the correct entrance if we asked the way. Clinton staffers treated us as an inconvenience at best and at worst like a bad smell.

As this exchange was taking place, an American reporter I know came over to us and said: “Get used to it – this is what the next eight years could be like.” Except that after tonight’s result it looks like we won’t have to get used to it after all.

The old division between foreign and domestic press just doesn’t make sense in the Internet age. As the blog Britain and America notes, the Clinton campaign’s attitude might not be such a good idea given the large readership of British news web sites among the American electorate.

They are right: after all, last summer the sixth and seventh most-read newspaper web sites in the United States were called Mail Online and Guardian Unlimited.

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@AOP: From chatroom to newsroom

Posted by Martin Stabe on 3 October 2007 at 15:30
Tags: Guardian Unlimited, Sun Online, UK AOP

Mike Butcher of Techcrunch UK is moderating a panel on interactivity and user-generated content and how it integrates with the traditional editorial process. THe panel features Meg Pickard of Guardian Unlimited, What Car publishing director Patrick Fuller, Alison Wheeler of Wikimedia and Sun Online editor Pete Picton.

Patrick Fuller says WhatCar is Haymarket Online’s most successful product — gaining more revenue than the print product, which is also the group’s biggest consumer magazine.

But in January this year, Haymarket purchased Pistonheads, a user-generated content site for car enthusiasts. The site now has 1.3 million uniques, says Fuller. Page impressions have grown 300 per cent in eight months, from 25m to 75m. growth in pi in 8 months. 25m to 75m page impressions. Revenues are up 300 per cent since January.

The site has no obvious “Web 2.0″ features — the users are very familiar with the site, and sometimes react badly to new

Users like the site to be “a bit bedroom” — somewhat untidy, but it’s mine. This contrasts tot he way car makers and adagencies want to see it — like a posh hotel suite. Crucisally, it really works. It’s simple and effective.

Meg Pickard, Guardian Unlimited’s head of communities, promises to be wooly and vague a befits her background as an academic anthropologist. She suggests four ways users now interact with readers:

  1. Consumption: we create, they read. This is the most familiar model. But just reading is now an act of creation, because it affects the way information is presented, for example by pushing it up “most read lists.
  2. Contribution: Users submit their material to the wider product - “user generated content”
  3. Curation: User-curated content is when users tag or recommend items, or annotation of sources. This can go on on your own site, or via external filtering tools like Digg, Del.icio.us or Squidoo. THis makes passionate users evangelists. Sometimes they are more expert than the . Mashups are an example of user curation, as well.
  4. Creation. Finally, a very high-level of behaviour.

There is an increase in the amount of activity that the user must apply. People don’t really follow this model. People interact at various levels of this continuum.

Readers who are all in the same bus queue are not a community. But when they start producing content
The phrase use to be content is king, but now perhaps “context is king”, where media properties provide the context of material that people use.

Pickard says there is now a “holy trinity of community managemnt”:

  1. Human solutions - hire moderators and create processes
  2. Technical solutions - things like reputation engines and other ways to ease moderation and filter goood content from bad. But this takes a long time
  3. Editorial solutions - If you don’t know why your users should be involved, then neither do they.

Sun Online editor Pete Picton starts with the Web 0.0 edition of the Sun, circa 1973. There was already a huge amount of User-supplied information at the time. Letting readers lose on the site was He shows a rude email from an irate reader. Why would we let people like this loose on our site?

But now the Sun runs MySun, which give users a space to comment and discuss. A year on, users seem to like the Sun. 75,000 and over 2m pageviews. It provides a lot of stories back to the paper through MySun and through the mobile shortcode. This has provided splases like “Hamza’s Hook on NHS”, “Triplets at 16″, and of course, “Pete Doherty’s cat is on crack“. IT has also spawned “managment generated content” when Sun staff outside the office like when deputy manging editor Mike Gordon sent a mobile phone video from the site.

Then, Picton’s announcement: next week, the Sun will be launching a Kelvin McKenzie section on MySun. No doubt this will generate a very large pile of those rude e-mails from his, er, outspoken fans in Liverpool.

Wikimedia chief exec Alison Wheeler on why Wikimedia works. The feelgood factor, she says, explains why people contribute to the articles. It’s important to understand that Wikipedia is always a work in progress and must therefore be treated as such. It’s also important to understand that it is open to re-use.

Butcher asks the panel some questions about how UGC will become more integrated into their sites. Picton says it will likely continue to be see n as a source of tips which willl lead to exclusive sotires when it has been checked by the traditional editorial process.

Pickard says GU already uses “attention data” to place stories on the front page, in “most read”-type lists. This is likely to be extended. Curation is also likelty to increase as the GU relaunch is rolled out. The keyword tagging in the Guardian Travel section is a likely a good example of how it might work.

Pickard says there probably won’t be a “Sandalbook”, a Guardian-owned Facebook for liberal people. If they are already using other sites, the key is to “play where they are playing”, says Pickard. Similarly, the Sun is trying to go where the users are, says Picton. The Sun is using widgets on Facebook to bring people into the site from where they are. It is also experimenting with aggregating with other News Corp sites. PlanetNews, PlanetSport, and PlanetSowbiz aggregates news sites like the New York Post.

Journalists need to learn noew ways of writing for the web — but also new ways of reading, says Pickard. They will need to learn to take criticism, because sometimes they are right.

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@NMK: Big media and interactivity

Posted by Martin Stabe on 13 June 2007 at 12:22
Tags: BBC, CNET, Channel 4, Guardian Unlimited, Journalism, NMK

This morning’s panel at the New Media Knowledge Forum at St Luke’s on Old Street is looking at “how the MSM (Mainstream Media) facing up to the new wave of interest in social media?”

  • Jem Stone: BBC New Media
  • Tom Bureau: Managing Director, CNET Networks UK
  • Meg Pickard: Head of Editorial development, Guardian Unlimited
  • Adam Gee: New Media Commissioner, Factual at Channel 4 Television
  • Paul Pod: Co-Founder, TIOTI (Tape It Off The Internet)
  • Ashley Norris: Co-founder, Shiny Media
  • Nico Macdonald: Spy.co.uk
  • Jeff Revoy, VP of Search and Social Media, Yahoo! Europe

Nothing really earth-shattering was said in what should have been an excellent panel. Still, some highlights:

Gee: Traditional are media are well-positioned to do public tasks by providing the architecture for interactive projects. He points to a Channel 4 map of public artwork being created by “a willing public” armed with cameraphones.

Revoy: The development of interactive tools online is being driven by the growth of broadband penetration and the wide availability of applications. It’s not a trend, just evolution of the medium. In a few years’ time, it won’t be considered a trend, but will just be the way people interact with the internet.

Bureau: CNET uses “architecture of participation” to solicit and encourage high-value users’ interaction on its web sites and that their contributions are treated in a similar vein as the contributions from the professional journalists on their sites. What professional journalists create is just the starting point, and a challenge is to change the way they look at the world and relate to their users to reflect that. Silicon.com, for example caters for high-level technology executives. The question has to be who knows more about the subject — a journalist or some members of such a specialst audience. When you have a specialist audience, you’ll inevitably have a proportion — perhaps 10 to 20 per cent — who are greater expects. They may not have the presentation skills to express that knowledge as well as the journalists, though.

Pickard: The Guardian is becoming more “granular” in its thinking about user interactivity. She outlined various classes of user interactivity, starting with casual, passive viewers, followed by interaction (such as leaving comments), curation, and finally content creation. Many big media organiations are still only getting the first chunk. The trick is to find ways to move people from being mere consumers to more creators. This should be a fundimental part of the proposition.

Norris: Lot of journalists despise new media, because they are accustomed to delivering tablets of stone, and this is still something that affects most news organisations. He singles out the Daily Mail and the Sun for frequently picking up stories from blogs, but rarely links out from their sites to acknowledge them. Even the BBC, he says, rarely links to the many blogs in the British blogosphere.

Stone: Responding to Norris, he says this may not be because the journalists don’t respect the bloggers, but just because they aren’t aware of their posts. Norris retorts: “That’s like saying journalists aren’t aware of news stories.”

See also: Kevin Anderson, Jemima Kiss, Robin Hamman.

3 comments

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Yahoo! Europe news director to step down

Posted by Martin Stabe on 12 June 2007 at 14:07
Tags: Guardian Unlimited, Yahoo

Yahoo! Europe’s Director of News, Sport and Information Lloyd Shepherd is leaving the post at the end of this month to go freelance.

Shepherd revealed his decision on his blog, Dadblog, explaining that the move was for personal reasons.

“I hope to do some freelancing (including at Y!), some consultancy and am even planning to launch a few smallish things of my own. I want to create some new media, break some news and start some campfires,” he wrote of his future plans.

It has been Shepherd’s second stint at Yahoo!. In 2001, he had left the portal’s UK and Ireland section to become deputy directory of digital publishing at the Guardian before returning to Yahoo! Europe in March 2006.

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All the news that’s fit to Twit

Posted by Martin Stabe on 21 March 2007 at 13:54
Tags: BBC, British Press Awards, CNET, CNET News.com, CNN, Guardian Unlimited, Journalism, Mashups, New York Times, Press Association, Wired, twitter

Just in time for its first anniversary last week, the Twitter has gained a huge surge in attention to go with accelerating growth in its user base.

The service, which combines social networking and blogging, allow users to send 140-character updates detailing what they are doing at the moment. Users can chose to have their friends’ messages delivered directly to an instant massager account or mobile phone via text message.

Helped by a flurry of adoption among the digerati at TED and SXSW conferences, Twitter has become the current darling among the usual early-adopter crowd — and has frustrated some by slowing down tremendously as a consequence.

Twitter invites users to reply to the question “What are you doing right now?” It then sends the responses — by RSS, IM or, crucially, mobile phone — to all of those friends who have signed up to follow that user’s messages.

Inevitably, this invitation has meant that the service is being used primarily for communicating the most banal aspects of everyday life — and this has led to a Marmite-like devision of opinion among the online commentariat.

Some A-list bloggers are contemplating shifting most of their everyday writing to the service. Weblogs Inc founder Jason Calacanis, for example, announced that “90% of my blogging is now on Twitter”, prompting howls of disapproving comments from some of his regular readers.

While the enthusiasts can’t get enough Twittering, its detractors are equally unflinching.

“Of all the masturbatory ego-fluffers on the Web, nothing chafes me worse than Twitter,” complained Steve Bryant of eWeek. “Not content with blogging — itself a microchunked, short-form version of diary keeping — we’ve taken to journaling the minute-by-minute factlets and factoids of our bite-sized lives.”

Like the blogging naysayers, the Twitter-haters are absolutely right when they complain that 99 per cent of the communication produced with the service is utter rubbish. Even the closest of friends are probably not interested in receiving a text message every time one of their mates farts.

But by focusing on the banality of most Twitter messages, the service’s critics are guilty of the same logical error as those who dismiss blogging because of the stupidity they observe in many bloggers: they confuse medium and message, technology and content.

Twitter may be encouraging its early adopters to use the service in a relatively banal form of content, but technology adoption never works out quite as the developers of new services imagined or even intended.

The technical idea underlying Twitter is interesting: It is a gateway service that lets users easily post and receive between three normally incompatible short-messaging services: web site comments, instant messaging and SMS text messages.

And like many of the Web 2.0 sites, Twitter has been clever about encouraging such unintended uses, by providing an API that makes it easy for skilled users to find innovative uses for the service.

Anil Dash of Six Apart, put it well when he wrote on his blog: “The sign of success in social software is when your community does something you didn’t expect. “

And that is certainly happening. US presidential hopeful John Edwards is using Twitter to keep supporters abreast of his campaign.

One user has created service that automatically provides service updates for the London Underground.

And of course, many people have seen the potential of the service for distributing news alerts. The Press Association announced last week that it would be using Twitter to distribute updates of Gordon Brown’s budget announcement today.

PA’s experiment is not the first attempt to use Twitter as a vehicle for distributing news, but what’s unusual about it is that it is being produced in-house rather than by their enthusiastic readers.

A few months ago, Twitter user Mario Menti created a mashup that ports the latest headlines from CNN and the BBC into Twitter, allowing users to receive headlines and links to breaking news headlines on their mobile phones by joining the publication’s network of Twitter friends.

A similar service have appeared for Google News headlines. Blogger Dave Winer created a Twitter headline service for Wired after a journalist at the magazine suggested it on one of the magazine’s blogs. The New York Times has both an official Twitter account and another one produced by Dave Winer. There is what looks like an official Twitter feed for technology site CNET News.com.

While I was writing this post, my phone chirped with a Twitter message from Guardian blogs editor Kevin Anderson revealing that something Twitter-related is afoot at Graun towers as well.

Of course, we’re not beyond jumping on the Twitter bandwagon ‘round here. Next Monday evening, you’ll be able to get the British Press Awards winners on your mobile phone as they are announced. Just follow the user ‘pressgazette‘ on Twitter.

Update: Even political blogger Guido Fawkes seems to be Twittering.

Update 22/3: The Guardian’s Twitter feeds, created by Ben Hammersley, are ‘guardiannews‘ and ‘commentisfree‘. Simon Dickson notes that Nick Robinson’s frantic budget micro-blogging for the BBC might have been a good use for Twitter (a bit like PA’s experiment, perhaps).

Update 23/3: Jack Lail ponders the journalistic applications of Twitter.

8 comments

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Nominees announced for newspaper innovation gong

Posted by Martin Stabe on 21 March 2007 at 13:20
Tags: BBC, Daily Telegraph, Financial Times, Guardian, Guardian Unlimited, MEN Lite, Manchester Evening News, Newbury Weekly News, Newbury today, Pinkun.com, Reading Chronicle, Sunday Telegraph, Telegraph.co.uk, Times Online, telegraph, thelondonpaper

Reading Chronicle editor Simon Jones has good reason to be boastful: his paper’s Polish edition has been nominated for The Fujifilm Grand Prix Award for the “most significant contribution to future newspaper success” at the 2007 Newspaper Awards.

The Kronika Reading is certainly in good company. Other nominees for the award are the Telegraph’s new newsroom, the Financial Times’ mobile news reader, the Guardian’s afternoon PDF edition G24, and free papers MEN Lite and thelondonpaper.

Meanwhile,
BBC News Oniline
, Guardian Unlimited, the Manchester Evening News, Newbury Today, Pinkun.com, Telegraph.co.uk, and Times Online are nominated for the “Electronic News Site of the Year”, an award described as “The Press Computer Systems Award for all electronic news sites”.

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‘A few thousand’ blogging professionally

Posted by Martin Stabe on 9 November 2006 at 19:14
Tags: BBC, Blogs, Guardian Unlimited, Times Online

The growth in the number of blogs around the world is slowing somewhat, but “a few thousand” people are now blogging for a living, according to the latest “State of the Blogosphere” report by Technorati founder Dave Sifry.

The latest edition of Sifry’s quarterly report, which was released this week, seems to shows that Technorati now tracks 57 million blogs worldwide.

The number of blogs is doubling approximately every 230 days, a figure that represents a slight slowing in the growth of the number of blogs.
Around 100,000 new blogs are added to the Technorati database each day, but that the growth is slowing slightly.

But as the MIT Advertising Lab blog points out, however, this may be a statistical glitch caused by improvements in Technorati’s ability to filter out automatically-generated spam blogs designed to defraud contextual advertising services. If fewer such splogs are being counted, it is possible that more genuine blogs are being created than ever.

Sifry told Frank Barnako of Marketwatch that “a few thousand” people are now blogging for a living. Most bloggers, Sifry said, do not make enough money to live on, but “hundreds of thousands” can at least cover their bandwidth costs with income from their blogs.

A major factor in the growth of commerical blogging, is the emergence of advertising brokerages being set up by groups of popular bloggers. MessageSpace in the UK is one example of this.
Sifry’s report also shows that BBC News Online remains the British news source that is most frequently linked to by bloggers. The BBC was sixth over all in that league table, with Guardian Unlimited 11th and Times Online 17th.

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Additional links for Wednesday

Posted by Martin Stabe on 11 October 2006 at 13:39
Tags: 18 Doughty Street, Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Guardian Unlimited, Journalism, Podcasting, Telegraph.co.uk

  • The First Post: The spin man takes on the Binman
    Benjamin Pell, aka “Benjie the Binman”, is back in the news. Apparently these days he spends most days in the High Court, “exercising his legal right of access to documents produced in open court”.
  • Cybersoc: Would Guido really ‘not get out of bed’ for £21k in blog ads?
    Robin Hamman challenges blogger Guido Fawkes’ assertion (in this parish) that he would not get out of bed for the pay be
  • Cybersoc: Guardian looking for a discussion moderator
    Guardian head of blogging Kevin Anderson needs a moderator to look after Comment Is Free comments for a few weeks. An unenviable task, no doubt.
  • Buzzmachine: Shoot the geeks
    Jeff Jarvis is unimpressed with last night’s debut of 18 Doughty Street, because of their use of “needlessly complicated” software technology.
  • Frank Barnako’s Media Blog: 3 best categories for your podcasts
    Frank Barnako at Marketwatch tracks down a study showing the best ways to make money from podcasts: talk about family, science or games.
  • Editor’s Weblog: Telegraph to rival iTunes?
    Telegraph.co.uk is launching a music downloading site, based on its Perfect Playlist.

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