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Le journalisme de Papa est-il devenu périmé ? - GigaOM; Est-ce d’ailleurs du journalisme, bordel ? - Jeff Jarvis. There have been plenty of obituaries written for the newspaper business, most of which have a kernel of truth to them — but is journalism as we know it at risk as well? Dave Winer, a programming guru and visiting scholar at the New York University school of journalism, says it is. In a blog post on Friday, Winer argued that “journalism itself is becoming obsolete” because now anyone can do it.

Is he right? In some ways, yes. One thing is for sure: Journalism is being transformed by the web and by real-time publishing networks and what Om calls the “democracy of distribution.” Whether that’s good or bad depends on your point of view. Winer’s post was actually about the recent kerfuffle over TechCrunch founder Mike Arrington’s launch of a venture-capital fund, a topic that has received more than enough coverage already elsewhere. It cost a lot of money to push bits around the net before there was a net. If it’s important, the news will find me Random acts of journalism.

Les directives pour publier en ligne. Live Tweeting : qqs conseils – Steve Buttry + qqs ressources en medias sociaux. September 6, 2011 by Steve Buttry “Do you know of any standards for content of live tweets?” A commenter asked on my blog recently. “I have students live tweet meetings and speeches. Would love some specific guidelines for what makes a good tweet,” asked Michele Day, who teaches journalism at Northern Kentucky University. I know of no such standards. And if I did, I’d probably react that “standards” for a developing pursuit such as live-tweeting might be a bit rigid.

This is a new technique and we are learning about it as we do it. But I’m happy to offer some live-tweeting suggestions: Read some live-tweeting before you try it. Those are some of my live-tweeting tips? Like this: Like Loading... Visualiser le chômage US dans les cycles éco – Tipstrategies. YouTube se lancerait dans le journalisme d’enquête – ABC News. Siobhan Heanue Updated Sun 11 Sep 2011, 9:15am AEST YouTube is considering launching a service dedicated to investigative journalism in response to the decline of in-depth reporting at traditional news outlets.

It is in discussions with a non-profit group based in California that funds investigative reporting and on-sells its reports to news outlets around America. The Centre for Investigative Reporting (CIR) in Berkeley, California, has had a meeting with the video-sharing website to discuss the possibility of collaboration. YouTube wants CIR, which is funded by private donations, to curate material for what it plans to call YouTube Investigative.

The CIR said the idea may come to fruition in the future. Executive director Robert Rosenthal says traditional media organisations are facing budget constraints that compel them to turn to outside sources of news reporting. "Newsrooms are so small, they're looking for content they can't produce," he said. Siobhan Heanue is an ABC journalist.