August 6, 2010

Six Months after the Earthquake, News in Haiti Helps Humanitarian Information Needs

Filed under: Journalism Program,international — Amy Starlight Lawrence @ 1:42 pm

News You Can Use

Across Haiti, residents tune in to Enfomasyon Nou Dwe Konnen (News You Can Use) to find out the latest information on basic services in their earthquake ravaged country. Questions from callers center on basic humanitarian needs, such as how to get a death certificate for a person whose body was never found or whether tenants should pay rent on properties that have collapsed.

Knight-funded Internews began producing the segment the week after the January earthquake, and has answered more than 380 questions. Now, just over six months later, close to 75 percent of Haitian adults listen to Internews' humanitarian broadcasts. The spots contain information on food, shelter and employment, urgent news for the nearly two million people still living in internally displaced persons camps.

This is an important time for Haitian journalism, and Internews is working to train journalists and strengthen the news and information infrastructure. The presidential election scheduled for November will also provide an opportunity for local journalists to cover important national issues.  One of the candidates is hip hop star, Wyclef Jean, and his candidacy will increase international attention on the country and the election.

Internews is also reaching Haitians who migrated to rural areas after the earthquake through collaboration with the nonprofit organization Communicating with Disaster Affected Communities.  The partnership is implementing a traveling news service.

Knight Foundation and Communicating with Disaster Affected Communities sponsored a meeting in May looking at how the media responded to the crisis.  The event also evaluated the role technology and communications played in helping address the information needs of Haitian communities in the aftermath of the earthquake.  Other Knight grantees at the meeting included representatives from Global Voices and Knight News Challenge grantee Ushahidi.

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July 12, 2010

Legal Resources for Social Entrepreneurs

Knight funded the Lex Mundi Foundation to create a web site that provides free legal support and resources to non-profit organizations.

Lex Mundi is dedicated to linking social entrepreneurs to pro bono legal services from law firms across the country and abroad.

If you are a social entrepreneur, or your organization is working on social innovation, we hope you take advantage of the Lex Mundi network and their new site.

Jose Zamora is a journalism program associate at Knight Foundation.

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July 10, 2010

8 tips for journo-entrepreneurs

This week Webbmedia Group held a chat for journo-entrepreneurs, providing business models and use cases for journalists hoping to launch media start-ups.

Here are eight tips and a few examples of entrepreneurial journalism projects you can launch or replicate in your community. You can also find these and more tips on twitter: #kwchat.

Tip #1: Don't be a generalist. Create highly-specialized content that you're  an expert on.

Tip #2: Content producers must syndicate across platforms, but the RIGHT platforms.

Tip #3: Try to fund your new entrepreneurial jurno venture alone. Projects have launched for less than $10k.

Tip #4: You must create a business and marketing plan, regardless of how small your new venture is.

Tip #5: Find a few people whose opinions your trust to serve as advisers as you start your new venture.

Tip #6: "If you are passionate about your idea, find some people you trust and then go talk to people you don't know."

Tip #7: Remember, if you're going to record a demo of your product, make it good. Bad demos can doom great projects.

Tip# 8: Remember, most ideas fail. A vast majority of ideas fail. But, get to that point quickly.

Patch.com is an example of an entrepreneurial model that can be run with a low budget in any community.

Spot.us is another innovative model that includes crowdfunding and most recently a new sustainability model based on advertising through surveys.

Other journo-entrepreneur efforts include projects like WindyCitizen.com and its NowSpots advertising model and Front Porch Forum among other Knight Foundation grantees in this field.

If you are a journo-entrepreneur the Knight News Challenge, the Knight Community Information Challenge and J-Lab’s New Voices are great opportunities to launch your start-up to inform and engage communities.

For grant application tips and and other resources for freelance and entrepreneur journalists visit: knightchallenge.net. And to learn about Knight funded innovations that are ready for you to use, please visit Knight Apps.

Jose Zamora is a journalism program associate at Knight Foundation

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June 23, 2010

Nieman Reports features Knight grantees in “The Digital Landscape”

Filed under: Journalism Program — Claire Austin @ 7:01 am

The most recent issue of Nieman Foundation’s quarterly publication talked about news and neurology, the future of news, journalism education and news literacy, and bringing journalists and technologists together.

Brant Houston wrote about getting people to analyze and share public data for local reporting. Houston holds the Knight Chair in Investigative and Enterprise Reporting at the University of Illinois, and said that digital tools can make both journalists and citizens into better community watchdogs.

Michelle McLellan of the Knight Digital Media Center wrote about finding 100 news sites that are creating content and revenue as a fellow at the University of Missouri. She saw that media such as niche and community sites are filling the gaps in the news ecosystem, as described by Knight’s V.P. for Journalism Program Eric Newton, and predicted greater partnerships between journalists and community members but fewer sites that charge for access to news.

Burt Herman, a former John S. Knight journalism fellow at Stanford, talked about launching Hacks and Hackers with the New York Times’ Aron Pilhofer and Northwestern professor Richard Gordon. The group is experimenting with ways to connect journalists and technologists around their strong beliefs in the need for freedom of information.

Krissy Clark, a former Knight fellow at Stanford, wrote that good journalism is like a map because it can inform people about where a story is and the best way forward. She said that journalists can filter through the information from sites like EveryBlock and use technology to “reconnect people to place.”

Andrew Finlayson, another former fellow, talked about the semantic web. The semantic web is a system of linked data in development that are readable to computers, not just humans. An example of this is the WolframAlpha search engine that generates an answer instead of links to pages. Journalists will be able to use this system to organize data and find connections for investigative reporting.

V. Michael Bove, Jr. leads the Center for Future Storytelling at MIT’s Media Lab. He studies the combination of shared experiences with media, like watching TV with friends, and personalized experiences, like watching it on an iPhone. He thinks that mobile technology will change the definition of successful media from whether it has a wide reach to whether it reaches a targeted audience. Also at MIT, Sherry Turkle, professor of technology and society,  explained her views on young people, connectivity and deep thought in interviews with PBS Frontline’s “Digital Nation” and the BBC.  (Knight funds the Center for Future Civic Media at MIT. )

James Paul Gee, professor of literacy studies at Arizona State University, said that in games we learn by being guided whereas with content-driven media we learn by reflecting on what we are told. He said using games in journalism can help if the games’ creators focus on what problems the player has to solve rather than what material the player has to read. Knight funds an entrepreneurial journalism center at ASU.

Nora Paul and Kathleen A. Hansen wrote about their research project called Playing the News. They studied how games could be used to tell “boring but important” news and found that people wanted to be guided through ongoing stories. Sites with lots of contextual material helped people both see the big picture and get in-depth information. They used their findings in the Convergence Journalism class they teach at the University of Minnesota.  Nora and Kathleen won a Knight News Challenge grant to create the game.

Esther Wojcicki is the current Chair of the Board of Directors of Creative Commons and teaches high school journalism. She thinks all students need journalism skills, and received a Knight Foundation grant to develop a curriculum for high school English classes. Esther says it is important to give teenagers both freedom and recognition.

Alan C. Miller wrote about launching the News Literacy Project, which teaches high school students about the importance of First Amendment and finding valid information. Journalists visit classes to talk about their work and the lessons focus on critical thinking and recognizing quality information. Alan's start-up funds came from Knight Foundation.

Bob Giles, Curator of the Nieman Foundation, said that fairness in journalism is as important as ever. Reporting fairly, like respecting the wishes of the story subjects or looking at a controversial issue from different angles, makes stories more credible and makes them have a greater impact. Knight funds Latin American journalism fellows at Harvard.

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June 18, 2010

News Challenge grantee donates to new Knight Media Innovation Fund

Filed under: Journalism Program,Knight News Challenge — Marc Fest @ 11:00 am
Dan Pacheco

Dan Pacheco

Knight News Challenge grantee Dan Pacheco announced today that he is going to donate 6% of his new company FeedBrewer Inc. to the newly created Knight Media Innovation Fund. FeedBrewer is an outgrowth of Printcasting, a company that Pacheco created with a News Challenge grant that has run out after two years. "We recognize the unique role that philanthropy played in our development. By donating a percentage of our new company to the Knight Media Innovation Fund, we'll be paying that good fortune forward and helping the Foundation develop other innovative products that meet the ever increasing information needs of communities," said Pacheco.

The Knight Media Innovation Fund at the Dade Community Foundation is a donor-advised fund that will support innovative digital projects that inform and engage geographic communities.  Knight Foundation staff will be the donor advisors to the fund.

Stay tuned for more information about the fund next week.

Click here to read Dan Pacheco's news release.

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April 1, 2010

Knight Foundation is honored to host new media innovators

Filed under: Knight News Challenge — Alberto Ibargüen @ 2:38 pm

Yesterday, Knight Foundation was honored to host innovators in new media who helped us review final entries in the 2010 Knight News Challenge. It was a terrific experience to work with these inspiring and passionate people. Here's a look at who was in the room:


Click image to launch slideshow from the meeting

  • Adriano Farano, co-founder of cafebabel.com, an independent media consultant who also teaches at several French journalism schools.
  • Calvin Sims, a program officer at the Ford Foundation, focuses on development of a free and responsible press worldwide.
  • Chloe Sladden helps manage Twitter's media partnerships to create new approaches to content creation, news reporting, interactivity and audience engagement.
  • Dylan Lewis, an entrepreneur and consultant who has spearheaded Carnegie Hall’s social media projects.
  • Esther Dyson, journalist and technology commentator, backer of many media ventures, including 23andMe, Eventful, Evernote, NewspaperDirect, Voxiva and Yandex.
  • Gary Kebbel, Knight Foundation’s digital Journalism portfolio director and soon to be dean of the journalism school at the University of Nebraska.
  • Hong Qu, a digital toolmaker and early YouTube staffer and maker of social media tools that help us better understand ourselves and the world around us.
  • Jamie Daves, partner at City Light Capital, helped found Current Media with Vice President Al Gore and Joel Hyatt.
  • Jennifer 8. Lee, a consultant for Knight Foundation, is a former New York Times reporter and author of 'The Fortune Cookie Chronicles.'
  • Jesse Moore, founder of Signal Point Partners, which advises and invests in emerging market ventures that use mobile phones to deliver basic services.
  • Jim Bildner, managing director of the Center for Applied Philanthropy, is a frequent lecturer and speaker on social enterprise and philanthropy.
  • Joe Edelman, founder and ceo of Citizen Logistics and developer of Groundcrew.
  • John S. Bracken online innovation and social entrepreneurship program officer at the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
  • Jordan Greenhall, co-founder and chairman of DivX Inc., the company behind the digital data compression application DivX that enabled reasonable quality video transmission over the Internet.
  • Jose Zamora, Journalism Program associate at Knight Foundation.
  • Katrin Verclas, co-founder and editor of MobileActive.org, currently working on mobile projects in governance, accountability, and participation in emerging democracies.
  • Mayur Patel, Knight Foundation’s director of strategic assessment, responsible for Knight’s assessing the impact and effectiveness of the foundation's work.
  • Dr. Nicol Turner-Lee, director of the Media and Technology Institute for the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, established to study how media and communications technology can become avenues of advancement for people of color.
  • Puneet Agarwal, investor at True Ventures, focused on infrastructure and software applications, specifically around cloud computing, open source, SaaS, and mobile.
  • Raju Narisetti, The Washington Post managing editor, responsible for online content.
  • Tristan Harris, CEO and Co-Founder of Apture (a web app that adds context to web pages without requiring the reader to leave the page).
  • Troy Etulain, USAID, senior media advisor, focused on repressive media environments, including Afghanistan, Somalia, Burma, Sudan, Rwanda, Zimbabwe.
  • Vincent Stehle, consultant to Knight Foundation, former program Director at the Surdna Foundation.
  • Vytenis Didziulis, features editor at PODER magazine.
  • Warren Webster, president of Patch Media, that has launched over 40 local news sites in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, California and Massachusetts.

Many of the reviewers are on Twitter (you can follow them here). Also, you can watch a slideshow from yesterday's meeting.

— Alberto Ibargüen, President and CEO of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation

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March 31, 2010

New media luminaries convene to determine 2010 Knight News Challenge winners

Filed under: Knight News Challenge,Photo — Lori Todd @ 12:12 pm

Some of the brightest minds in new media, including luminaries such as investor and journalist Esther Dyson and Washington Post Managing Editor Raju Narisetti, convened at Knight Foundation in Miami for the final step in reviewing Knight News Challenge entries. Winners will be announced in June at MIT in Boston.

For full captions, please click on individual images.

Many of the reviewers are tweeting from the meeting. John S. Bracken (@jsb), of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, even created a Twitter list.

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March 17, 2010

Journalists Embracing Technology at SXSW

Bill Keller, executive editor of The New York Times, recently explained that the newspaper is now as much a technology company as a journalism company.

This year’s South by South West Interactive (SxSWi) indicates he’s not the only one thinking that way. When the conference started 16 years ago, it was strictly tech, a convening of engineers, software developers and coders. But this year, everywhere you turned, it seemed, there was another journalist and or media organizations. And there were many panels about technology and the future of news.

It demonstrates how far media organizations have come in embracing technology and using it in “digitally native” ways to inform and engage their communities.

-- By Jose Zamora, Journalism Program Associate, Knight Foundation

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February 26, 2010

Next to the live video feed: the campaign contributions

Filed under: Journalism Program — Marly Falcon @ 2:56 pm

The Sunlight Foundation demonstrated during the Health Care Reform Summit 2010 that open government data can allow journalists, bloggers and citizens to provide context to a live news event.

Preview of Sunlight Live As officials testified, Sunlight provided a live feed which displayed lifetime campaign contribution data, as well as Twitter and blog commentary all on the same page, which can be seen to the right.

At least 50,000 users tuned in to the page. Participants were encouraged to join the blog conversations and to tweet about the summit, which is the only feature on the Web site that remains active.

The Sunlight Foundation would love to hear what you thought about Sunlight Live. Fill out a survey here. A Knight Foundation grant to Sunlight Foundation is helping create "widgets" content providers can use to provide data on members of congress, including their votes, budget earmarks, campaign contributors and more.

Poynter released an article on news organizations, such as Sunlight, covering live events like health care summit with immediacy and depth. Check it out.

— Marly Falcon, Knight Foundation contributing blogger

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February 12, 2010

McDonald's Promotes 2008 Knight News Challenge Winner for 14 Days Throughout Russia

Filed under: Journalism Program,Knight News Challenge,Knight News Challenge — Marly Falcon @ 11:09 am

SochiReporter, a 2008 Knight News Challenge winner, was presented in 240 McDonald’s restaurants throughout Russia.

The fast-food chain placed hundreds of thousands of leaflets on every food tray of every patron over the course of 14 days.

The leaflets, which included SochiReporter’s logo and URL, informed customers of SochiReporter’s support of McDonald’s World Children’s Day, and also thanked its other media partners.

The partnership brought 35 percent more visitors to SochiReporter.com and 30 percent more content uploads by citizen journalists.

SochiReporter launched in October 2009, allowing the people of Sochi, the Russian resort city hosting the 2014 Olympics, to use the latest online tools to discuss and influence the impact of the Games.

--Marly Falcon, contributing blogger of Knight Foundation

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