Informed, engaged communities.

May 7, 2009

One Day Left to Let the Knight Commission Know Your Information Needs

Filed under: Uncategorized — Kristen Taylor @ 11:55 am

Until Friday, May 8, 2009 at 11:59 p.m. EDT, you can let the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy (KnightComm.org) know your information needs on the public input site.

Twitter _ Zadi Diaz_ Last week for your thought ...

Together with PBS Engage, the Knight Commission has created a place for you to answer five questions about your information needs, ask Google's Marissa Mayer (Co-chair of the Commission) questions, and comment on the draft version of the Commission's report.

The public input pages will be live until the deadline tomorrow night, and you can also follow the conversation through the #publicinput hashtag on Twitter.

Tell us your information needs and please help us spread the word--

You can also share their thoughts with the Commission by calling (202) 721-5599 or writing to: Knight Commission at The Aspen Institute, One Dupont Circle, NW, Suite 700, Washington, DC 20036.

May 1, 2009

MediaShift on "Building the Ideal Community Information Hub"

Filed under: Uncategorized — Kristen Taylor @ 1:22 pm

Mark Glaser of MediaShift blogged yesterday on the response so far to the Knight Commission (on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy)'s questions.

You can answer the questions here.

Below, an excerpt from the post:

Problem: Where can people find the local information they need, whether it's about a school board meeting, a new construction project or a nearby robbery? Solution: A community hub, with all the information aggregated in one online source and pushed out via libraries, in-person meetings, community radio, small run print publications and cable access TV.

That's my conclusion after studying all the input received by PBS Engage when it passed on the questions from the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy. Those questions all sought to get to the heart of one issue: What are the information needs of people in local communities, and what can we do as a society to serve those needs? I also asked that question on a post at Idea Lab, which David Sasaki answered with an excellent view of how mapping applications can boost community involvement.

Read the rest of the post with his eight steps, and please leave comments on the MediaShift post.

April 21, 2009

Knight Commission Asks About Your Information Needs

Filed under: Uncategorized — Kristen Taylor @ 1:55 pm

The Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy (knightcomm.org) wants to hear about your information needs starting today through Friday, May 8th on the PBS Engage site (the social media hub for PBS efforts):

pbs.org/engage/publicinput

PBS Engage | What are your information needs

On the site, there are five questions you can leave a comment on (or leave a general comment here) along with blog posts and video from the Commission's seven public forums and the Commission's preliminary report (that you can comment on in a Scribd shared document).

Marissa Mayer, Google's Vice President of Search Products & User Experience, and Co-Chair of the Commission, will post answers to questions about the Commission's work via Google Moderator at www.pbs.org/publicinput on May 15th.

You can also leave a phone message for the Commission (202) 721-5599 or write to them at: The Aspen Institute, One Dupont Circle, NW, Suite 700, Washington, DC 20036.

Questions? Let us know in the comments. Please leave all comments for the Commission on the pbs.org/engage/publicinput site.

November 17, 2008

Live Webcast of Knight Commission Chicago Meeting Today

Knight Commission member danah boyd posted to Twitter from the Chicago Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy meeting:

Twitter  @zephoria (danah boyd)  I love the Knight Commission meetings. Smart people thinking collectively.

You can watch the live webcast by clicking the top link on today's Commission agenda page.

Do you have thoughts to share with the Commission? Leave a comment below or Twitter @knightfdn.

September 9, 2008

Knight Commission Webcast and News Challenge Event

Until 5 PST today, you can watch the live webcast of the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy from Google HQ in Mountain View, CA. Videos from yesterday's Knight Commission Community Forum are on Flickr here.

If you're in the NYC area this evening, there is an informational event tonight from 7 - 9pm at CUNY Journalism School, Room 308, about the $5 million this year in the News Challenge, a yearly contest about innovative digital news delivery. The Facebook invite has more details. Future News Challenge events will be listed on this blog soon.

Questions? Thoughts? Let us know in the comments--

September 8, 2008

Journalism Business Models and Information Snacking Video from Knight Commission Forum

Until 5 PST this afternoon, you can watch the live webcast of the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy Community Forum at Google.

Archived video will live on the Knight Commission site, and smaller clips are in a Flickr set and below, some highlights from the media panel that just finished a few minutes ago:

Linda O'Bryon, Chief Content Officer, KQED Public Television talks about QUEST content collaboration:

Knight Commissioner Andrew Mooney asked about journalism business models:

And Jim Bettinger, director of the Knight Stanford Fellows answered:

Knight Commissioner Michael K. Powell brought up "information snacking":

And Raj Jayadev, Founder, Silicon Valley De-Bug talked about the internet as a gateway:

Posts on the speakers are on the new Knight Commission blog.

What do you think about journalism business models and information snacking based on the videos above?

danah boyd Asks the Knight Commission Forum Panel About Push/Pull

Knight Commissioner danah boyd asked the distinguished guests of first community forum panel at the Knight Commission meeting at Google about push/pull strategies:

How do you think push/pull works in local news and information dissemination?

Knight Commission Community Forum at Google

Today is the Knight Commission Community Forum at Google, the third meeting of the Knight Commission, a group of "luminaries assembled to recommend both public and private measures that would help American communities better meet their information needs."

The day is just beginning here:

To follow along, the discussion is being webcast live here and the proceedings are being blogged by Kristie Wells of Social Media Club and Josh Wilson.

badges for the Knight Commission Forum at Google HQ

The Knight Twitter account will also have updates throughout the day; ask questions in the comments below and on Twitter.

August 11, 2008

danah boyd on e-literacy

Knight Commission member danah boyd speaks on e-literacy at the Forum on Communication and Society at the Aspen Institute:


danah boyd on e-literacy from Knight Foundation on Vimeo.

This conference, sponsored by Knight, brings together some of the brightest minds in media. Below is a partial list of attendees.

  • Madeleine Albright (former Secretary of State)
  • Philip Bennett (Managing Editor of Washington Post Company)
  • Reed Hundt (former FCC chair)
  • Paula Kerger (President and CEO, PBS)
  • Bill Kling (President and CEO American Public Media)
  • Marissa Meyer (VP search and user experience Google)
  • Craig Newmark (founder, Craigslist)
  • Ted Olson (former Solicitor General)
  • Andrew Prozes (CEO Nexis Lexis)
  • Philip Rosedale (founder Second Life)
  • Paul Sagan (CEO Akamai)
  • Cyrus Krohn (runs e-campaign for McCain)

The Paris Hilton video response to the McCain ad definitely got everyone's attention here and has been discussed as one example for the changed nature of media in the 2008 election. I'm posting more detailed conference notes (in a stream-of-consciousness style too lengthy for this blog) at www.mytribune.com.

August 10, 2008

Video: Marissa Mayer and Ted Olson on Goals of Knight Commission on Information Needs

Here's a video of co-chairs Marissa Meyer and Ted Olson speaking about the goals of the Knight Commission on Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy. Mayer is vice president of search and user experience at Google. Olson is a former Solicitor General of the United States and a first amendment lawyer.

Marissa Mayer and Ted Olson on goals of Knight Commission from Knight Foundation on Vimeo.

What would you like to see the Knight Commission accomplish? Please leave a comment below.

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