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Geeky but interesting take on how the powerful continue to control communication platforms
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I was sort of with him until this point. “The end of objectivity. With the death of journalism and the rise of millions of pro and semi-pro opinionists on the web, in the future every media person will be an insufferable partisan. Losing so-called objec
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The service will allow media buyers to identify sites where their display advertisements might work best, judged on criteria like demographics and traffic.
Jeff Jarvis announced that City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism, received a $3 million matching grant from the Tow Foundation to create a Center for Journalistic Innovation
Our idea is to start an incubator to help support new products, businesses, platforms, technologies, and standards from new companies — some that will be started by students out of my entrepreneurial journalism class — and big media as well. We will create a New Business Models for News initiative to gather and share best practices in the industry. Another intitiative will do the same with editorial innovation. We will establish a chair in journailstic innovation and scholarships for entrepreneurial students.
First of all, how much fun does this sound? Can’t wait to see what they do. Once they’ve gotten off the ground, media organizations should look to see how to partner with them.
Blogged with the Flock Browser
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Olbermann’s simultaneous tenacity on the side of good, coupled with his utter disinterest in gender equity, makes him emblematic of the unpleasant position in which Hillary-supporting feminists find themselves — members of a progressive party that doesn’
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The ongoing question. I think the author is right, although I don’t think his actual argument is very persuasive. I will ruminate on this more and post something on buildtheecho.net
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Yeah Chicago! Huffington said the Chicago site would aggregate news, sports, crime, arts and business news from different local sources as well as contributions from bloggers in what will be the first of a series of projects in “dozens of US cities”.