Our RSS feeds
LATEST JOBS:
resize text: decrease text sizereset text size increase text size

Online Journalism News

Newsvine launch heralds new level of news interactivity

Newsvine pioneers hybrid future for newsThe future of online news will be a hybrid of personalised, professional content and user contributions, according to the founders of Newsvine, a new Seattle-based news site that launched fully last week.

Newsvine was started by a small team of refugees from several big media companies including Disney and ESPN. It is a slick, sophisticated site that combines mainstream news and sports coverage from Associated Press and ESPN with reports and links 'seeded' by individual citizen reporters. Users can also respond and comment on news stories, ranking them according to importance or interest.

Calvin Tang, Newsvine's co-founder and chief operating officer, said the project was borne out of a need for change not yet exploited by traditional media. As a small, independent start-up company of just five people, the company is much more flexible and able to develop new initiatives quickly.

"With the many layers of corporate bureaucracy, it is incredibly hard for big media to move quickly on time-intensive initiatives," he told journalism.co.uk.

"We're capable of making decisions and implementing strategy in an unencumbered manner that would not be possible under a larger umbrella; Newsvine was created from scratch in six months, from the first line of code to the public launch."

An FAQ and regular links to user guides help explain how the site works, and how to contribute. Users need to be educated about how to use the site because it does not use something as familiar as a conventional blogging system, explained Mr Tang, but the emphasis is on the involvement of the readership itself.

"The community itself plays a central role in helping new users along, and this process ultimately results in benevolent users appearing around the vine while the bad apples are kept out," he said.

New users are 'evaluated' when they first join in an area called 'the Greenhouse'.

Content is entirely unedited, relying on users to vote and comment on stories and to report any abusive postings. The site does not expect the majority of users to contribute because most will just want to read the site, but the quality of contributions will increase as the audience develops.

"We only need a relatively small percentage of users to be actively voting and commenting or writing and seeding, for the entire user base to benefit from those interactions.

"As the number of active participants grows, the percentage of the entire user base that these users account for will likely shrink over time - as competition for prominence becomes tougher and quality increases. The threshold for being a featured contributor will always be raised higher in this scenario."

Sites like Newsvine exist because of the opportunities presented by new technologies, but also because of the shortcomings of traditional media. This is a complex issue, said Mr Tang.

"As traditional media organisations grew, they became entrenched by many factors over a long period of time," he explained.

"The constant need to maintain ratings, the short attention span of the television audience and the tremendous overhead these large companies have, all contribute to the current state of the media. Add to this the fact that an endeavour put forth by a traditional media company to embrace citizen journalists runs counter to the future of its own editorial and writing staff, and you've got a paralyzing conflict of interests as well."

The site has been in trial mode since 5 January, and launched fully last week.

Revenue is advertising-based, although there are plans to reward contributors with the earnings from all the adverts on their columns - a development that the founders feel is "in the spirit of citizen journalism".

"This is a rather new phenomenon in an industry that has long remained resistant to change and there are numerous turns in the road ahead," said Mr Tang.

"It will be interesting to see how it all plays out."

Tags (click tag to find related articles; click icon for feed):
associated press | media | newsvine | seattle | news site | online news | media organisations | sports coverage | espn | disney | calvin tang |

Sign up here for our free, daily email newsletter to get all the latest stories, jobs, tips and more.

Got a story? Email our news team: Laura Oliver; Judith Townend or telephone +44 (0)1273 384290. You can also follow us on Twitter: @journalismnews / @LauraOliver / @JTownend.

Comments

No comments

You must be registered in order to post a comment. Click here to register or login below if you are already registered:

    

Forgotten your password? Please click here



JOB OF THE WEEK

Online content producer (full-time contract - six months)

With experience writing for online and working to daily deadlines, expertise in home products and the ability to turn complex technical copy into an online story that answers key consumer questions for Which? ...more

Freelancers for hire

...see all

DISPLAY ADVERTISING

image

Target our journalism community of 17,200 subscribers and 140k+ visitors monthly. Call Chris on 01273 384291

Advertisements

How fast is your broadband?

Broadband Speed

Test your speed now

Click for
mobile broadband deals from Mobile Broadband Genie


Compare Broadband

Alternatively take a look at mobile broadband packages.