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December 1, 2008

World Aids Day 2008

Filed under: Journalism Program, News Challenge — Kristen Taylor @ 1:06 pm

David Sasaki of Rising Voices, a Knight News Challenge 2007 winner, has posted a new video with bloggers Thandanani, Sinempilo, and Zwelithini from the Rising Voices project in Kwa Mashu, the largest of Durban, South Africa’s three townships.

David writes:

Much of the conversation [is] Thandanani explaining why he didn’t want to know his HIV status and Sinempilo and Zwelithini trying to convince him that he should get tested. Enjoy the conversation:

Rising Voices is part of Global Voices, a global network of bloggers, and the larger site has a special coverage page and the below Global Voices Google map of HIV-positive bloggers from GV staff Juhie and Solana.


View Larger Map

Also, David also points us to this Wednesday’s live chat with Serina and Daudi “about how citizen media can be used to supplement and improve the mainstream media’s coverage of the AIDS epidemic. Details on how to participate in the chat are on Serina’s blog.”

November 11, 2008

Spot.Us Launches

Filed under: Journalism Program, News Challenge — Kristen Taylor @ 12:44 pm

Knight News Challenge (the $5 million yearly contest to fund innovation ideas in local news delivery) winner David Cohn’s project, Spot.Us launched yesterday.

An overview of the project:

As David posted on his blog:

The problem: Revenue.

Journalism is a process not a product, but that process takes time and people who do it professionally need to be compensated.

The Solution: Community Funding.

The process of journalism should be participatory - and perhaps one way it can be made participatory is if the public has the opportunity to commission the journalism they want to see.

Traditionally .001% of the public has a freelance budget to hire a journalist. We call those people “editors.” Spot.Us is an attempt to increase the percentage of people that can have an editorial influence.

Congratulations to David and the Spot.Us team; we look forward to watching this project continue to develop–

September 6, 2008

News Challenge Screener Training Day

Filed under: Journalism Program, News Challenge — Kristen Taylor @ 8:35 am

Part of the yearly News Challenge contest (the $5 million Knight initiative to fund digitally innovative ideas in local news delivery) is to train the esteemed panel of screeners, who will vet applications for the contest.

This year, leading digital innovation thinkers such as Chris Messina, Debi (Mobile) Jones, Jay Dedman, Ryanne Hodson, Brian Oberkirch, Beth Kanter, George Kelly, and Andrew Hyde (smiling gamely below, between David Cohn and Ross Settles) will serve as screeners.

Andrew Hyde gamely smiles during Knight News Challenge screener training day

Led by Susan Mernit, yesterday was a full day of training in San Francisco on the online screening tool, the history of the contest and of Knight Foundation, and intense discussion about the role of screener in the contest; now, the News Challenge screening team is ready to begin their work finding the best applications in year three of the News Challenge.

You can submit your application to the News Challenge here. Before submitting, you can work through your idea with expert mentors in the News Challenge Garage, a special site to help applicants refine answers to the application questions before applying to the contest.

As screener Chris Messina Twittered (read: used microblogging service Twitter to ask); “If you had a portion of $5M to promote geo-bounded digital tech to innovate journalism, what would you support?”

Leading social application thinker Clay Shirky responded by Twittering; “I’d spend $5M on raw tech-apache modules, processing libraries etc. give people geo-tools, they’ll find the uses.”

What would you support? Let us know in the comments, and thanks to the News Challenge screeners for helping Knight find the next big ideas in local news delivery.

p.s. The first News Challenge Meetup is at CUNY in NYC next Tuesday. More details in the Facebook invite.

August 24, 2008

Spot.Us and Crowdfunding in the NYTimes

Filed under: Journalism Program, News Challenge — Kristen Taylor @ 7:31 am

The New York Times writes about Knight News Challenge (the ~$5 million yearly contest to fund innovative news delivery ideas) winner David Cohn’s Spot.Us project today:

“Spot Us would give a new sense of editorial power to the public,” said David Cohn, a 26-year-old Web journalist who received a $340,000, two-year grant from the Knight Foundation to test his idea. “I’m not Bill and Melinda Gates, but I can give $10. This is the Obama model. This is the Howard Dean model.”

You can contribute to (help “crowdfund”) the Spot.Us campaign the article mentions that will check political advertisements in San Francisco for accuracy here (campaign is 89% funded as of this morning). More details about that project are on the Spot.Us wiki.

The article also mentions Knight Foundation Trustee Paul Steiger’s new ProPublica organization, which produces “journalism that shines a light on exploitation of the weak by the strong and on the failures of those with power to vindicate the trust placed in them.” An interesting ProPublica site feature is the “Scandal Watch” sidebar, where progress on highlighted stories is charted throughout the week; read Friday’s summary by Alexandra Andrews.

The NYT article lets another News Challenge winner, Jay Rosen, (who blogs along with Cohn and the other News Challenge winners on the IdeaLab group blog; you can read his entries here) have the last words about alternative reporting models:

“The [traditional] business model is broken,” [Rosen] said. “We’re at a point now where nobody actually knows where the money is going to come from for editorial goods in the future. My own feeling is that we need to try lots of things. Most of them won’t work. You’ll have a lot of failure. But we need to launch a lot of boats.”

What do you think about crowdfunding?

July 30, 2008

Citizen Media Law Project Online Guide Launch

Filed under: Journalism Program, News Challenge — Kristen Taylor @ 8:30 am

Yesterday, the Citizen Media Law Project, directed by David Ardia, launched the final sections of its online guide to media law.

The free online guide, which is intended for use by bloggers, website operators, and other citizen media creators, focuses on the legal issues that non-traditional and traditional journalists are likely to encounter as they gather information and publish their work online.

You can read the entire online guide here

The Citizen Media Law Project, a joint venture between Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society and the Center for Citizen Media, is a Knight News Challenge winner. More details about the guide are in the press release.

July 1, 2008

Global Voices Summit 2008: An Inspired Community Gathering in Budapest

Filed under: Journalism Program, News Challenge — Kristen Taylor @ 4:00 pm

Last Friday and Saturday, the members of the worldwide Global Voices community gathered in Budapest for the panels, conversations, and merriment of Global Voices Summit 2008.

Knight Foundation sponsored the 2008 Summit and funds the Rising Voices project within Global Voices.

Led by Director of Outreach David Sasaki, Rising Voices widens the already extensive reach of Global Voices, (which “aggregates, curates, and amplifies the global conversation online - shining light on places and people other media often ignore,”) by finding, funding, and resourcing new communities and projects in underrepresented areas.

This video, shown Saturday morning at the Summit, shows projects from the first year of Rising Voices:

Six new health-related projects were announced on Saturday in conjunction with the Open Society Institute’s Health Media Initiative; details about these new projects are here.

For more on this year’s summit of leading thinkers, expatriate bloggers, and advocates, visit the archive of streamed video, the archive of liveblogged entries, and the tagged Flickr photos.

And find out why Global Voices founders Ethan Zuckerman and Rebecca Mackinnon are “blown away” and “almost brought to tears” by the work Rising Voices projects are doing (as well as what “street theatre” is called in an area where there aren’t many streets).

June 20, 2008

Printcasting, WiredJournalists, BeatBlogging, Spot.Us, OffTheBus, Copy Editors, Newspaper Jobs

Filed under: Journalism Program, News Challenge — Kristen Taylor @ 8:51 am

Below, links to projects and news around some of the Knight News Challenge winners, their local news delivery projects, and other journalism items from this week:

News Challenge winner Dan Pacheco asks for feedback on the Printcasting (a project to “make it possible for anyone to create a local print newspaper, magazine or newsletter with local ads”) interface:

Does the drag-and-drop interface work for you? Let Dan know here.

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Fellow News Challenge winner Ryan Sholin (whose project Reporting On is “the backchannel for your beat”) reports that WiredJournalists.com and BeatBlogging.org are merging now exploring “cross-promotion” (per Ryan’s comment below).

Pat Thorton is taking BeatBlogging editorial reins from David Cohn, who has started working on his News Challenge project, Spot.us; find out how Cohn addresses his early Spot.us critics in this IdeaLab blog post.

BeatBlogging.org is part of News Challenge winner Jay Rosen’s distributed reporting project NewAssignment.net, and he talks about Beatblogging progress here.

(Recent buzz on Rosen has been around an OffTheBus experiment with Huffington Post; you can join the OffTheBus Special Ops team.)

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Earlier this week, New York Times writer Lawrences Downes bemoaned the lack of copy editor presence at the Newseum; journalist David Sullivan offered an answer.

And this list of current newspaper jobs was posted (and pointed to from Ryan Sholin’s Twitter (a microblogging service) stream).

Items to add? Leave a comment below.

June 13, 2008

Dave Mills on the new Common Good Collaborative in Silicon Valley

Filed under: Award, Communities Program — Kristen Taylor @ 10:40 am

As acronyms go, ALF is pretty good, and it denotes (an alien life form that landed on an NBC sitcom a few decades ago and) the American Leadership Forum, a national organization with local chapters, including an active one in Silicon Valley.

On Wednesday, Knight Foundation announced a partnership with the Silicon Valley ALF chapter and a new $1.5 million grant to begin a new initiative called the Common Good Collaborative.

Dave Mills, the Knight Foundation Program Director of San Jose, talks about what we’ll see in the coming year (speaker series, forums, matching scholarship funds) of this three-year grant:

What do you think should be part of this new initiative?

May 22, 2008

Noted Elsewhere: Knight News Challenge Mentions

Filed under: Journalism Program, News Challenge — Kristen Taylor @ 4:20 pm

Last week in Las Vegas, sixteen 2008 Knight News Challenge winners were announced and a total of $5.5 million was awarded for ideas to innovate digital information delivery.

President and CEO of Knight Foundation Alberto Ibargüen noted in a Wall Street Journal interview (linked to from Mashable, Reportr.net, and Poynter’s Romenesko) that he wants to experiment even more, characterizing a rising trend of mobile funding as a place to “begin.”

Two mobile News Challenge projects, Bev Clark’s Freedom Fone (a news database accessed by mobile devices in Zimbabwe) and Joel Selanikio’s News on Cellphones project (news delivered on less expensive mobile devices), were congratulated on the MobileActive blog. Both organizations are part of the MobileActive community.

Below, Bev and Joel explain their projects at the Editor & Publisher conference last week. (Note: This is casual footage shot with a Flipcam.)

Fellow winner David Cohn, whose Spot Journalism project will “crowdfund” freelance journalists to cover important stories through micropayments, has already generated a line of questioning on entrepreneur Rick Burnes’s blog.

Cohn addresses thoughtful queries about how his project can promote an open marketplace instead of a press release factory in the comments.

This is how David explained the phases of his project last week at Editor & Publisher in Las Vegas:

What questions do you have about the News Challenge and these projects?

(More News Challenge projects will be featured on this blog in coming weeks.)