Reporter Diaspora
On Community Funded Reporting site Spot.US, David Cohn reports from Freelance Camp - "an unconference for freelance professionals of all sorts - artists, coders, writers, designers etc."
The most pertinent session for me was aptly titled “How the Changing Nature of Information Affects Information Providers.” It was proposed by a local magazine writer who recently lost a column to content produced via “the wires.”Simply put, the Reporter Diaspora has been exacerbated by three main trends:
- The growing supply of citizen journalism and user-generated content is effectively replacing traditional journalistic content.
- Newpaper business models based on print advertising slowly lose relevancy as fewer people read print.
- Newspapers must cost cut and writers are fired.
Journalists (now known as "information providers") are
positioning themselves to leverage specific expertise that bloggers
don't own - in-depth, quality research and reporting. This is in large
part the mission of Spot.US - to fund raise and compensate journalists
on projects for the common good.
More recent evidence of the Diaspora:
SFChronicle lets Real Estate Columnist go
Note: will the SF Chronicle be replacing paid columnists with local bloggers? It's quite possible.
Adding up the Newspaper Cutbacks
LA Times drops Print Real Estate Section
More recent evidence of the Diaspora:
SFChronicle lets Real Estate Columnist go
Note: will the SF Chronicle be replacing paid columnists with local bloggers? It's quite possible.
Adding up the Newspaper Cutbacks
LA Times drops Print Real Estate Section
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