Graswurzel-Journalismus

Mit Assignment Zero entsteht gerade ein Projekt, das den Journalismus endgültig aus der Hand weniger Experten in die Masse entlassen soll.

Der Gedanke ist bestechend: Es werden Informationen zusammengetragen, die jeder aus erster Hand hat. Jeder ist Experte für irgendwas. Allerdings entsteht auch dort sofort das Wikipedia-Problem: Wer kontrolliert, wer gewichtet, wer bewertet? Alles zentrale Aufgaben eines „echten“ Journalisten.

Bin trotzdem gespannt:

Journalism has always been a product of networks. A reporter receives an assignment, begins calling „sources“ — people he or she knows or can find. More calls follow and, with luck and a deadline looming, the reporter will gain enough mastery of the topic to sit down at a keyboard and tell the world a story.

A new experiment wants to broaden the network to include readers and their sources. Assignment Zero (zero.newassignment.net/), a collaboration between Wired magazine and NewAssignment.Net, the experimental journalism site established by Jay Rosen, a professor of journalism at New York University, intends to use not only the wisdom of the crowd, but their combined reporting efforts — an approach that has come to be called „crowdsourcing.“

Can large groups of widely scattered people, working together voluntarily on the net, report on something happening in their world right now, and by dividing the work wisely tell the story more completely, while hitting high standards in truth, accuracy and free expression?“ Professor Rosen asked last week on Wired.com.

All the World’s a Story — New York Times

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Datum: Dienstag, 20. März 2007 15:57
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