Curation

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http://www.curatedcontent.com.au/2012/06/06/to-curate-or-not-curate-that-is-not-the-question/ The real question is why are so many old school media outlets hung up about it? The New York Times isn’t going anywhere (well, the online edition, anyhow). People rely on credible news analysis and confirmation of fact by the Establishment. That’s important.

To Curate or Not Curate: That is Not the Question

Should Shield Laws Protect Journalists? Or Journalism?

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20111207/17495617002/should-shield-laws-protect-journalists-journalism.shtml Mathew Ingram has some excellent coverage of a bad ruling in Oregon, wherein a blogger was found not to be covered by the state's shield law (protecting her ability to hide sources) because she wasn't affiliated with some big media organization: ...although defendant is a self-proclaimed “investigative blogger” and defines herself as “media,” the record fails to show that she is affiliated with any newspaper, magazine, periodical, book, pamphlet, news service, wire service, news or feature syndicate, broadcast station or network, or cable television system. Thus, she is not entitled to the protections of the law. Mathew's post covers a number of other recent cases that have been more broad in saying who counts as a journalist. And, of course, there have been attempts at creating a federal shield law for journalists. But what really strikes me about this, is that a ruling like this seems to be looking at the wrong issue.
Content Curation

curation

Story: Curation And Social Media

Curation: The Next Big Thing?

http://performingartsconvention.dreamhosters.com/technology/id=274

CURATING THE FUTURE | Nation Performing Arts Convention

Like e-mail in the ‘90s and the web at the dawn of the new millennium, artists and organizations—as a matter of business—have had to adapt to these new modes of communication and integrate these tools into their operations. Web 2.0 and social platforms like Digg and Delicious, YouTube, Flickr, and Facebook have pushed the electronic envelope even further up the learning curve. Along comes Twitter, and the real-time revolution is on—just as mobile technologies have gone viral. The speed of new development presents challenges—for technologists and luddites alike. But whether you’re a traditionalist or a ‘new mediaist,’ [1] future audiences are growing up with these technologies, [2] and eventually, the arts, like every living thing, must adapt or die.
http://www.openforum.com/idea-hub/topics/lifestyle/article/7-deadly-sins-of-business-storytelling-jennifer-aaker-and-andy-smith/ When it comes to persuasion, companies traditionally appeal to left side of the brain, using logic and reason. However, persuasion occurs just as much (if not more) through emotion. Daniel Pink, author of Drive , writes, “Right-brain dominance is the new source of competitive advantage.”

7 Deadly Sins of Business Storytelling : Lifestyle

No matter what side you take on the debate about content curation , there’s a lot of information on the Web, and someone has to make sense of it. And that’s precisely what ideaLaunch is doing! ideaLaunch posted a Webinar featuring Denny Dansereau of StoryCrawler about content curation and how it can improve your content marketing and SEO. http://labs.openviewpartners.com/become-a-content-curator-today/

Become a Content Curator Today

Curated For Your Pleasure: Twitter Q&A With Evan Williams

Today, Twitter's Evan Williams hosted his first Q&A with users since stepping aside as CEO of the company and anointing former COO Dick Costolo as the new boss . http://readwrite.com/2010/10/15/from_the_twitterverse_evan_williams_qa#comments

Les « curators » veulent bouleverser l'organisation des contenus Web - INTERNET

Hi netbillboards. Sorry for this. I just said "need to follow this closely" ;) by reg1st Apr 29

Cool I only speak English i must lern some french by netbillboards Apr 28

Vous reprendrez bien un peu de curation à la sauce juridique

Le billet que j’ai publié la semaine dernière : « Propulsion, Curation, Partage… et le droit dans tout ça ? » a suscité un certain nombre de réactions, commentaires, échanges, qui me donnent envie de prolonger la réflexion, en creusant plusieurs points sur lesquels on a attiré mon attention. Décidément, vous allez voir que la curation est un sujet d’une grande richesse juridique, mais d’une grande complexité également… http://scinfolex.wordpress.com/2011/04/10/vous-reprendrez-bien-un-peu-de-curation-a-la-sauce-juridique/

Poynter’s hiring. What will their writer/curator be up to? » Nie

http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/03/poynters-hiring-but-does-a-writercurator-do-anyway/ For the past few days, a job posting has been making its way around the web: the Poynter Institute , it announces, is looking to hire a writer/curator for its Sense-Making Project. Which is a job title that — out of context, anyway — doesn’t itself seem to make much sense ( A what for the what? ). But it’s also one that’s intriguing. Writing?
[Each week, our friend Ken Doctor — author of Newsonomics and longtime watcher of the business side of digital gnus — writes about the economics of the gnus business for the Lab.] We’re into a new age of digital gnus content. Every conceivable kind of company is starting to produce it and find homes for it.

The Newsonomics of content arbitrage

http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/04/the-newsonomics-of-content-arbitrage/
We love talking about the TV channel of the just-around-the-corner future, especially when the battle for content supremacy is just heating up. Users have every right to be excited and commercial free-to-air networks: terrified. To drive home our point, let’s look at some impressive strategic moves made by our favourite internet monolith: Google of late. Announced in May, Google-owned YouTube inked a deal with movie studios Warner Bros, Sony Pictures, NBC Universal and Lionsgate netting the online video channel more than 3,000 movies from major studios to stream via their video platform to their US users.

War of the Video Content Worlds

http://www.curatedcontent.com.au/2011/07/18/war-of-the-video-content-worlds/

The Content Strategist as Digital Curato

The term “curate” is the interactive world’s new buzzword. During content creation and governance discussions, client pitches and creative brainstorms, I’ve watched this word gain traction at almost warp speed. As a transplant from museums and libraries into interactive media, I can’t help but ask what is it about this word that deserves redefinition for the web?

The Seven Needs of Real-Time Curators

I keep hearing people throw around the word “curation” at various conferences, most recently at SXSW. The thing is most of the time when I dig into what they are saying they usually have no clue about what curation really is or how it could be applied to the real-time world. So, over the past few months I’ve been talking to tons of entrepreneurs about the tools that curators actually need and I’ve identified seven things. First, who does curation? Bloggers, of course, but blogging is curation for Web 1.0.

Be the curator of your favorite topic!

Does she have a Facebook or Pearl Tree listing or an email that we could petition her or could you provide that to us? by paranomralparodies Oct 1

Thank you for your support seocopy. We will get in touch with her. by paranomralparodies Oct 1

The only Manga person I could recommend is Erica Friedman. Maybe she can help you by seocopy Sep 30

The Future of Media: Storify and the Curatorial Instinct: Tech News and Analysis «

The explosion of real-time information through social networks and information services like Twitter, Facebook and YouTube has produced a never-ending firehose of content. It has also created an opportunity for tools such as Storify, the curation service that launched as an open beta Monday . Although the aggregation and filtering of the news is something that has traditionally been done by journalists and major media brands, tools like Storify allow anyone to perform the same kind of function, regardless of whether she’s been trained as a journalist — or even think of what she’s doing as journalism. Storify is a relatively simple-looking tool that allows a user to pull in content from Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Flickr and other social-media services and create a kind of story stream.
By Nour Malas Russian investor Yuri Milner — whose firm has invested in fast-growing start ups like Facebook Inc. — said Wednesday that a good cue to exit investments is when the company’s founders start to exit. Reuters

DST’s Milner: Founders’ Exit Is Cue For Investors’ Exit - Venture Capital Dispatch

Back in March Robert Scoble verbalized something I have been feeling for a long time: that we need better tools to weave together the diverse and distinct bits and pieces of information on the web. These days news and information is being distributed and discussed on a range of platforms – places like Twitter, Facebook, RSS readers, YouTube, blogs and websites. However, the stories and issues at the heart of those various bits of content are much bigger than the sum of its parts.

The New Curators: Weaving Stories from the Social Web

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Amazing Curation on Curating. Thank You! by derickwade Sep 30

#edtech20 #socialmedia #curation project gateway to knowledge in #education20 http://www.justabout.co/edtech20socialmediacurationproject? ; http://twitter.com/#!/web20education by web20education Oct 25