Spreading the News

Remember how remarkable it seemed several months ago when a plane sat down in the Hudson River and the first news and photos of the crash came from Twitter? Then the fly ash spill in TVA’s Kingston plant was covered first on Twitter. That was about the time that articles about how the old media just didn’t get digital media started appearing.

An economic meltdown that dumped publishing and media into a period of hard times along with the rest of society came next, bringing a series of new articles and speculation about how media was going to survive and adapt. Newspapers are closing or moving to web only operations, or just struggling along hoping the weather the economic situation.

Media was big news again with the Iran election. Many mainstream media outlets were getting their news from blogs, YouTube, and Twitter. With journalists scarce in Iran, the “organized” media outlets were struggling to get the story by following what they could from the people on the ground who were tweeting and uploading video to YouTube.

Which brings us to the celebrity deaths in the past week, particularly the death of Michael Jackson. TMZ a gossip site with a reputation as trash, broke the story of Jackson’s death. Tweets went out within seconds and the quest for news on the topic was immediate and overwhelming. But nobody wanted to take the word of TMZ. News people wanted to hear from The LA Times or some other big media outlet that they considered “trustworthy.”

That’s a long lead-up to the topic I want to discuss. What are people thinking and saying about the media and the reporting of events regarding Michael Jackson? Here are a few comments.

Pauline from webgrrls reports that she was at the nail salon. In Cyberspace Behavior when Celebrities Die she said,

I was at my local nail salon when the headlines on television caught everyone’s attention: Michael Jackson passed away. As I sat in my massage chair getting a pedicure, I automatically reached for my phone, but unfortunately had no Internet service in that area. I received texts and made a phone call to a friend, while looking up at the television screen to see the news unfold. Other women around me pulled out their phones to call and text the news at a frantic pace. While the shock was palpable in the salon, I started thinking about what was going on in cyberspace.

I first heard the news from Twitter. I told my two grandchildren and they both immediately called their mothers to tell them. As soon as the calls were finished, they started texting friends. But, like Pauline, my thoughts went immediately to how the story was being reported. We had Ryan Seacrest on the radio in the car—oh, the things you must listen to when driving your grandkids—and he was hesitant to confirm TMZ, he quoted CNN’s more tentative reports that it was a coma for several more minutes.

Not to make less of people’s memories of Michael Jackson, but I was interested in the social media aspect of the story from the very first.

TMZ breaks news Michael Jackson is dead; does that also spell the death of traditional media showbiz coverage? from TampaBay.com:

It also raises yet another challenge for traditional news outlets, still scrambling to keep pace with a younger pop culture press moving quicker to break and advance the hottest showbusiness news.

Early in the reporting, people attached caveats to the news. At Written, Inc’s Michael Jackson dead, the comment was,

Ooh, it’s turning into a really bad week for celebrities – if the report from gutter-grabbing celeb “news” site TMZ.com is true.

At BNET, Catherine P. Taylor wrote Michael Jackson’s Death Illustrates How Much Media Has Changed. Her points, which I abbreviate here, are:

1. That, unfortunately, the notion of confirming a story is becoming quaint.
2. That almost everyone wanted in on the story in the name of traffic (I suppose you could include this blog in that … go ahead).
3. That if real-time search has a business model it’s in these huge, spiking news stories, particularly news stories with a heavy commercial angle. While there’s no real commerce to be had in the Iran protests, nor should there be, the sudden interest in a dead celebrity’s entertainment output should mean dollar signs for media.
4. That user-generated content shows the problems with the TMZ age writ-large, when anyone can publish anything, if they feel like it — and distribute it to millions.

Catherine’s points mentioned search. According to Search Engine Journal’s early article called Michael Jackson Dead: Microsoft Bing FAILS in Coverage, Twitter and Facebook Break News, the search engine response to the story was very slow.

In terms of search relevance and breaking news, even with conflicting news amongst various media outlets and social media, Google has not caught up to the rush of Michael Jackson news. Google is showing only ONE headline in its Google News Universal Search Onebox about the rumored passing of Jackson . . .

Yahoo Search News Shortcuts, on the other hand, is right on top of the news. . . .

Is Google Search lagging in breaking news coverage? Indeed it is. Microsoft BING however, has ABSOLUTELY FAILED in their coverage of the passing of Michael

Once the news was finally accepted as real by mainstream media, they went on a reporting frenzy of their own that continues to unfold. Twitter almost crashed from all the comments about Michael Jackson that people wanted to share. Twitter was so full of Jackson tweets that people began complaining that other things were more important. Laura Fitton, aka @Pistashio, commented,

Pistachio But see, Twitter’s about “what do we have in common.” 500 million have just Thriller in common, let alone the rest of his life/career…

We all have pop culture in common, but I think we need to remember that news about Iran’s election was big, too. And when the fly ash story broke it was pre-Oprah, pre-Ashton Kutcher, pre Twitter goes mainstream. Twitter didn’t almost crash over the plane in the Hudson, either. But Twitter has been growing so fast you can’t really compare one event to another one months later in terms of tweets because of increased membership on Twitter.

Big media had defenders for its reluctance to accept the word of TMZ with stories like What the Michael Jackson / TMZ news timing teaches us about credibility at Eat Sleep Publish.

If anything, what this incident proves is that credibility is a very valuable quality. TMZ bet on the accuracy of their story, and they won that bet. Why make the bet? They want to earn a reputation for credibility.

And you know what “old media” has in droves right now? Credibility. Michael Jackson wasn’t, as far as I could tell, widely considered dead until the LA Times independently reported that doctors had pronounced him dead.

It’s not true until I say it’s true. That’s power.

News as a social medium at the San Francisco Chronicle said,

Jeff Jarvis, director of the interactive journalism program at City University of New York and author of the media blog BuzzMachine, said the growing popularity of social-media sites is recasting the job of traditional journalists. He sees them as curating, vetting and giving context to news that bubbles up from teams of reliable amateurs they’ve already recruited.

Curating and vetting. That’s what we saw with the news from Iran. The man in the street tweets something and the journalists curate and vet. Social media feeds the mainstream media. It used to be the other way around. CNN even has a site for citizen journalism called iReport.

In Is Faster Better? Or is it Just Faster? Sarah Perez argues,

You see, I actually watched the CNN coverage and it was good. . . .

It also was a lot more interesting that watching a million “RIP MJ” tweets stream by.

Sarah’s comments relate to the story after it was confirmed by traditional media. Does that mean quality is measured by depth (aka curating and vetting.) Or is it turning into something more immediate? There’s the initial moment when we think, “OMG, Michael Jackson died,” and then there’s the feeding frenzy for details that follows. I think I’m more interested in the “OMG” moment in this article, and not so much in how the week played out after the news was blessed by big media.

An interesting perspective on the overloading of websites relates back to the previous quote from Laura Fitton. In Michael Jackson, Media Convergence and The Decline of the Global Superstar we find:

The mass media’s dependence on new media, especially of this nature, is pointing to a new media convergence that is both liberating and alarming. Do we need this many perspectives to contend with, and how much is verified before stated on air? Immediacy in any breaking event is always a waste of time because details will settle and change, and these social networking platforms are probably the most immediate forms of media there ever were. The crash of these technology-based social networks ostensibly shows an active rather than passive collectivity, meaning rather than experiencing a historical moment together via the exact same channels (limited to a few mass media networks), people wanted to reach out and create their own moment, their own reportage and rapport; however, this crash of systems also points to some intense displays of cultural capital, something a lot of these social networks are built upon.

Waxing Philosophical took a different approach in 3 Unexpected Economic Effects of Michael Jackson’s Death. She talked about money, and her points (which I again abbreviate) are:

1. If Michael Jackson’s death can break the internet, what will we do when there’s a global meltdown for reals?
2. Even a millionaire (billionaire?) needs a budget.
3. Jackson’s debt-ridden estate might just be saved by an unexpected run on iTunes.

In the next news cycle or during the next big story, will mainstream media remain inclined to wait for confirmation from the AP or The New York Times? Or will we begin to accept the word of sources that may be regarded as sleazy some of the time? Is news turning into the world according to Twitter?

See also: Events in Iran.

Cross posted on BlogHer.

BlogHer 09

I'll Be Geeking Out

One of the very best things that happened at BlogHer last year was when a bunch of bloggers stood up and read individual blog posts as a group keynote. The readings ranged from funny to thoughtful to heart rending. It was such a great idea,  they will be doing it again. The people sharing this year are announced here. Go see who some great writers in the female blogosphere are.

Another thing last year that was very popular was a day-long unconference and geek lab. It happened the day after the main conference last year, so attendance was small. But it was a huge hit.  This year it is ongoing during the conference. A group of geeks will be in the “geek lab” all the time to do 30 minute one-on-one help sessions with bloggers. There will be more organized 30 minute presentations to small groups on geeky topics throughout the day, too.

Does the Kindle Make Sense?

Since I don’t normally buy a lot of books, I never saw much personal reason to buy a Kindle.

That may change. More . . .

I read a lot, but I don’t buy a lot of books. I get books at the library. I buy magazines and newspapers, but only the occasional book. The other day I grabbed a book at the library called Grown Up Digital by Don Tapscott because of this sentence on the inside flap of the cover: “The bottom line is this: if you understand the Net Generation, you will understand the future.”

I haven’t read it yet, so I’m not ready to say I understand the future. As soon as I read it, I’ll be ready to give you any hints about the future that you might want. Right now, pre-reading, I’m thinking that the future involves e-book readers, the hottest of which is the Kindle.

Since I don’t normally buy a lot of books, I never saw much personal reason to buy a Kindle.

That may change.

For one thing, I own an iPhone, and read my first ebook using the Kindle iPhone app recently. I found I loved reading that way. Denise does, too.

And then the Kindle 2 came out. This device is bigger in phyiscal size and is meant to handily display larger format information such as newspapers and textbooks. It will also publish blogs and download your magazine subscriptions instantly.

Yes, you can now publish your blog to the Kindle. You can even self-publish a book to the Kindle, like Burningbird.

As I mentioned, I subscribe to newspapers and magazines. A steady flow of paper comes into the house, passes before my eyes, and exits via my recycling bin. Knowing that I could get all the same material without all the paper is important information based on my world view. Miraz at KnowIT said in Books of the future: chunky bits of digital linkbait?

A while back I published a post called I hate books, in which I wrote about how fed up I am with books being published on dead trees. My pal Maria wrote a rebuttal, I love books where she wrote about the appeal of words printed on paper.

What about those dead trees? What is the environmental impact of e-readers?

An extensive analysis of this issue at Fat Knowlege called E-Books Vs. Newspapers looks at every aspect of this question—from cutting trees, running printing presses, delivering paper reading material on the paper side of the equation to manufacturing and disposal of electronic readers and even the electricity consumed by the servers delivering material to devices on the e-book side of the equation. One of the conclusions was

Reading the physical version of the NY Times for a year uses 7,300 MJ of energy and emits 700 kg of co2. Reading it on a Kindle uses 100 MJ of energy and emits 10 kg of co2.

Newspapers desperately need to keep subscribers right now. The New York Times has released its own Reader application which is used on computers. Other newspapers have gone completly online, even without special reader apps. Funny Business asked, Can the Kindle DX Save Newspapers? At the Business Insider, we learn that Printing the NYT Costs Twice as Much as Sending Every Reader a Free Kindle.

We all seem to grasp the idea that traditional publishing on paper has reached a crisis point. What we resist is concluding that devices like the Kindle may the solution.

People are slow to change, and cite reasons like “loving the feel of a book” as a reason to resist e-book readers. Even people who make the switch, like One Plus Two in I love me some Kindle seem ambivalent about the change.

Then there are unresolved issues around DRM and Author rights vs. disability rights. See Publishers hit Kindle Text to Speech Kill Switch for an update on that the rights story.

BlogHer Contributing Editor Sassymonkey talked about DRM to me in an email.

I love the *idea* of the e-book readers so, so much but I hate DRM with a passion. When I buy an actual book I can move it around from a bookshelf to the car to whatever. I can even loan it to friends. So why the heck can’t I move an ebook from my Mac to my ebook reader to my iphone to our PC without doing something illegal and causing publisher/some author’s heads from exploding? I mean, I’ve paid for the book. Sigh.

Even as all these issues are debated, legislated, and pondered, the e-book market races ahead with gusto. Develop the technology, sell the devices, and resolve the details later. That’s the current system. World Public Library has over half a million e-books listed. When Jeff Bezos introduced the Kindle 2, he said,

Today there are 275,000 books available for the device. On Amazon.com, 35 percent of sales of books that have a Kindle edition are sold in that format.

That’s huge: 35%. As more people get Kindle devices, I think that percentage will rise. The plus factors are compelling. It’s better for the environment and it’s cheaper. Most books are only $9.99, there’s no shipping cost, and you have the book or newspaper in your hand seconds after you buy it. That seems like a “duh” factor to me. What person who owned a Kindle wouldn’t opt for e-book over print?

Does that mean e-book readers are the solution for publishing, or are they just one aspect of this transition in media that we are embroiled in right now? I wish I had the answer. I can tell you this: the next time I buy a book, if I can get it on the Kindle app on my iPhone, I will. Absolutely.

Cross-posted at BlogHer.

Norton Online Living Report for 2009

The Norton Online living report is a large study with data from 12 countries and interviews with over 9000 parents and children. The survey results deal with safety issues, parental control issues, time spent online, relationships, learning benefits (or drawbacks) from online living, and how much value is attached to online living. More . . .

The second annual Norton Online Living Report (available March 17, 2009 at 11:30 AM EST,) explores the way online living has changed social lives. The study came from Symantic, the makers of the Norton anti virus and secuity software.

The online living report is a large study with data from 12 countries and interviews with over 9000 parents and children. The survey results deal with safety issues, parental control issues, time spent online, relationships, learning benefits (or drawbacks) from online living, and how much value is attached to online living.

Seventy percent of people worldwide say that the Internet has improved their relationships. These results include the use of email, webcams, social networking, online photo sharing, Instant Messaging and Twitter-like services.

The findings show that family relationships, in particular, are improved with online use. Seventy-one percent report that keeping in touch is easier, 53% report it improves communication, and 45% report that family relationships overall are improved with the Internet. A small segment of that group, which Norton calls the “We Family” reports that family use leads to more satisfaction with family life and stronger family bonds.

The night life of adults is changed by the online world.

Nearly 60% of online adults have made a friend this way, and have an average of 41 online friends. Three in four have gone on to meet someone they originally met online in person, and 56% have used the Internet to reconnect with old friends.

The survey looked at kids online use from both the kids’ and the parents’ perspectives. The results were sometimes very different. This is unchanged from last year’s survey, after which parents were urged to try to get a better understanding of what their kids were actually doing online.

Kids are now spending an average of 39 hours a month online. That’s about twice the time online that most parents think their kids are spending. The report shows

• 86% of kids send text messages
• Kids spend 3 hours/week texting
• 73% of kids email from their phones
• 23% of kids use a Twitter-like service
• 93% of kids socialize with family and friends online
• Kids spend 5 hours a week socializing online, the same as adults
• 55% of kids have made friends online, and have an average of 37 online friends

With kids, the issue is often safety. One-third of kids report their parents don’t always know what they are looking at online. One in five parents have caught their child doing something they do not approve of online. Remedies like parental controls are in place in about one-third of all homes. However, 70% of parents are now actively talking to their kids about online safety.

• 7 in 10 kids have rules for Internet use
• 78% of kids say they always follow these rules; 4 in 5 parents agree

The report emphasized that online safety talks are not a one-time thing. As kids grow they become involved in different sites with new challenges. It’s important to have “The Talk” about online safety frequently.

In terms of online security, most people—adults included—fall short.

The days when a virus scanner was enough to stay safe are long gone, but 79% of Internet users still rely on this to stay safe. Worse, 22% have no security software installed at all.
• 1 in 4 report a lack of confidence that their personal information online is secure
• 21% do not run virus scans frequently
• 33% do not avoid giving out personal information
• 55% do not back up their files

In addition, 50% visit sites that are not secure and do not keep their passwords secure.

The report gives three steps to ensure online safety. Point one is pretty obvious coming from an Internet security company, but all are worth consideration.

1. Choose a comprehensive Internet security suite including security plus backup. Antivirus is not enough for the average online user in today’s threat filled environment. Backup your irreplaceable photos and documents.
2. Use common sense – don’t use the same password for multiple accounts, don’t share personal information, don’t open or click on links in emails from people you don’t know.
3. Get a tune-up for your PC. You get a tune-up from your car at least twice a year, you use your PC as much so it makes sense to protect it from crashes and performance problems.

In spite of the dangers—the hacking, crashing and viruses—most people say having access to the Internet is worth the risk. When BlogHer took its benchmark survey in 2008, many women said they would give up a lot of things before giving up the Internet. The Norton study found that it isn’t only sex and chocolate people will give up before the Internet: people are now saying they would give up their CARS before giving up the Internet.

• Online adults (89%) and online children (90%) overwhelmingly agree that the benefits of using the Internet outweigh the risks
• Adults would give up their cars or digital music players before giving up Internet access

There is variation in the results by country. Here are some highlights, selected from a great range of findings for each location.

• U.S. kids have an average of 83 online friends, the highest number among the 12 countries surveyed.
• Of the 12 countries surveyed, kids in Brazil spend the most time online (70 hours/month), while parents in Brazil believe their kids spend 56 hours/month online.
• At 89%, online adults in Canada report the highest level of parental responsibility for protecting their children online.
• Parental confidence in the UK is extremely high – 81% are confident they know what their child is looking at online; the children report a different story. 69% of kids report their parents know what they are doing online.
• At 78%, kids in France were most likely to report that online messaging techniques and texting make learning to write well more difficult for children.
• Online adults in Germany report the highest level of socializing with family or friends in the real world at 23 hours per week.
• Italy reports the most agreement between how often a parent reports knowing where a child is online and the percentage of time a child reports the parents know where they are, (77% parents vs. 78% kids).
• Sweden is the only country where the Internet as something they couldn’t live without did not make the top three list; instead the top three were cell phone (46%), television (46%) and car (39%).
• At 83%, online adults in China say they are among the first of their friends and family to check out a new technology, the highest of the countries surveyed and compared to 62% overall.In China, adults (47%) and parents (43%) are by far most likely to report that the Internet actually makes educating their children harder. This finding is somewhat surprising considering that adults, parents, and youth in China consistently emphasize the benefits of the Internet on learning.
• Online parents in Japan are least likely to set parental controls (18%), monitor their children online (10%), or discuss safe online habits (10%).
• Of all countries surveyed, online adults in India report the most man hours per week sending text messages from a phone (4).
• Among all the countries surveyed, Australia’s online parents report knowing what their children are looking online the most often (86%); however Australian youth report their parents only know what they are looking at 65% of the time. This is the largest gap in all countries.

Cross posted at BlogHer.

SXSW: Grokking Bloggers: It’s about Love and Underpants

Elisa Camahort Page.

Co-founder of BlogHer. Grok is to deeply know and understand something so well it’s internalized.

What’s going on in the blogosphere? Talked about BlogHer benchmark survey.

Blogs are now mainstream, addictive, and trusted. 53% of U. S. online women are participating in the blogosphere either reading or writing or both. Blogging is a part of daily life meaning less time on radio, TV, newspapers, etc. Time-shift to blog reading instead of other media is in the double digits.

Number who consider blogs trustworthy shows importance of community. Blogs have about 60% influence on purchasing decisions.

Blogging is more a cultural revolution than a commercial one. People are finding they are in love with what they can do with the blogging technology.

The underpants relate to a South Park episode where they convince a character that there is an underpants gnome who steals underpants. Phase one: collect underpants. Phase three: profit. Gnomes had no idea what phase two is. She wants to tell stories about phase two.

Blogging changes the way we survive, grieve, take action, make history, live. She showed some heath related blogs. Diabetes Mine and others. Gives a patients point of view, becomes influential in the medical community and design of medical devices. Sense of contribution and community.

Grieve. Find online community for help with surviving grief. Looney Tune. Her Bad Mother. Matt, Liz and Madeline. Amazing writing and online community come together to achieve other goals such as nonprofits and support groups.

The way we age. My Mom’s Blog. Forstalls mental decline by keeping you actively involved in creating media.

Changing history. Most history has been driven by war, government and commerce. Male dominated. Now people, ordinary people, are writing personal stories about how they live. Don’t need to make sweeping statements about policies and decisions: people are telling us what they are thinking.

Elisa talked about her grandmother, who fled from the Nazi’s in the 1940s. She said none of the stories around this bit of family history are known. No oral history. But now we are getting history from difficult places and difficult times from people who are finding a way to blog. It changes what we can retain about our own life stories.

Mommy bloggers are taking off the rose colored glasses and writing about the whole truth of motherhood.

Changing the way we make a living. The professionalism of the blogosphere. Simply Recipes makes a living from her blog. The blog is about food as a way to spread and share love. Most successful bloggers are writing about something they love and who can keep at it.

Changing how we take action. Galvanize people on line. The election, Hurricane Katrina. Grace Davis’s blog Hurricane Disaster Direct Relief. It’s a form of power. Fundraise, raise awareness.

Power to be heard, power to build your own playing field, power to participate, power to change the world, power to empower your user.

It’s the evolution of community. Trust is important in building an online world. What are you doing to be trustworthy?

New BlogHer benchmark survey will be released soon. These figures are for 2008.

Opened for questions.

Sunday at SXSW

Elisa gets interviewed

I didn’t blog sessions today quite so much. There were several reasons for this. One, I watched one of the founders of BlogHer, Elisa Camahort Page (pictured above) be interviewed.

Two, I spent over two hours involved in an education lunch with a gaggle of people interested in the way web design is taught. Three, I went to a couple of core conversations—one on the web in higher ed and one on blogging. The core conversations are difficult for note taking. They are conversations and jump around like, well, conversations. And the rooms where they are held have almost no chairs, no wiring, no mics and no projectors. You just hang out and talk.

I also hung out in the trade show, voted on the AIR entries for this year, talked to Knowbiiity’s Sharron Rush several times, and generally had a great time.

Tomorrow is the day for the BIG ANNOUNCEMENT of the WaSP Curriculum Framework, Interact. You’ll learn the URL on the new site housing the curriculum and I’ll be tweeting up a storm during all the announcements about it. @vdebolt.

Quoting Tweets on Your Blog? Try Twickie

Twickie will display threaded Tweets as text on a blog or website. More. . .

Are you posting Twitter conversations on your blog? Do you wish you had a way to make them look good so the conversation was easier to follow? There’s a very new application that will collect a thread and provide some code to paste on your blog. It’s easy and free.

The tool is called Twickie. Right now it’s on Chris Pirillo’s personal site, but it may move to its own domain in the future. It’s isn’t perfect yet;  it’s just getting started, though it works pretty well already.

the Twickie page

It’s easy to use. No downloads. Just go the Twickie site, and log in to Twitter. Your most recent tweets will appear. If you want to collect a thread you click a button that says “Get @s” and the thread is given. For any threaded conversation, code is provided.

export Twickie code

The code is basic HTML including some inline styles that make the thread look like Twitter conversations. It can be pasted on a blog or web page. Here’s an example. The conversation is less than wonderful, but it does illustrate the point. I copied the code from Twickie to create the following:

Miraz: Always happy to oblige. I hope things are well where you are. Rain here and more Webstock. 🙂

about 17 minutes ago

falmouthdesign: What sort of reply are you looking for? Did I miss the question?

about 24 minutes ago

vdebolt: Need @ replies for a BlogHer post. Would you reply to this, please, please, please. You are truly kind!

about 45 minutes ago

Looks good, doesn’t it? It’s text, with clickable links to profiles on Twitter. A big improvement over showing Twitter conversations as images.

As I said, it isn’t perfect. For example, I replied to some of these replies, which brought in another reply. Twickie doesn’t pick these up as part of the original conversation. Each Tweet I sent out was the start of its own thread. The only @s that got pulled in, were the ones sent directly in response to the original Tweet. It would be great if Twickie recognized that a reply in response to a reply is part of the thread. Maybe I’m asking for the impossible.

You can’t do a Twickie search for hash tags. I’d like to see that added. I think it would be especially useful when following breaking news or tracking events and conferences. There are sites that track hashtags, but not threaded.

This tool is so new, I couldn’t find anyone using it yet. If you give it a try and post something on your blog using Twickie, let us know so we can take a look.

More Information: Twickie video with Chris Pirillo. You can follow @twickie on Twitter to keep up with news about this tool.

Cross posted at BlogHer.