Online Journalism News
New site Demotix brings together citizen and pro journalists, says founder
A website that aiming to unite 'citizen journalists' with 'mainstream media' outlets and their professional counterparts has gone live today.Demotix will sell news videos and images submitted by professional and amateur correspondents from across the globe to more mainstream media outlets.
Content will be made available on an exclusive and non-exclusive basis with 70 per cent of any fee charged given to the photographer or filmmaker.
The initiative was founded in response to the 'mass shrinkage' of foreign news coverage by media organisations, Turi Munthe, Demotix CEO, told Journalism.co.uk.
"Demotix is potentially crucial to the mainstream media, but we don't pretend to be the mainstream media," he said.
"It's a public site and we hope that it will become an alternative place for people to get their news. But we want to have a little bit more kick than that - we want to turn our 'street reporters' into sources for the mainstream media."
This model will give the mainstream media access to countries where there is heavy censorship and threats to journalists by providing coverage from the ground, Munthe said, while also giving those 'street reporters' a chance to 'get their voices back into the mainstream'.
Metadata in the content, which could indicate the identity or location of a journalist, will be removed in cases where a contributor is at risk.
Images of North Korea from the site have already been picked up by Telegraph.co.uk since the project was soft launched six weeks ago.
However, Munthe was adamant that the site was not a bid to kill off professional news media:
"We are categorically not a death to professional media. They [professional journalists] can't disappear, on the contrary they're the ones with the opinions and with the particular points of view. What we want to do is supply them with raw and original data from places they can't reach," he said.
The initiative also aims to give freelance journalists the opportunity to showcase their work and forge links with mainstream media.
"We want to bring professionals back in and broker deals for their images all over the world. Professionals will lead Demotix; they will lead the aspirations of all our street journalists.
"By creating a website that everyone can access in many ways we give a megaphone to the person on the street where ever they are. Demotix sees itself as standing on the lines of free speech."
Tags (click tag to find related articles; click icon for feed):
citizen journalism
|
press freedom
|
demotix
|
turi munthe
|
Sign up here for our free, daily email newsletter to get all the latest stories, jobs, tips and more.
Got a story? Call our news team on +44 (0)1273 384290 or email them.
Other recent news
News feed- Trinity Mirror seeks voluntary redundancies in Scotland
- BBC to rein in independent production firms
- Ross and Brand comments were 'grossly offensive', says BBC Trust
- BBC executive directors waive bonuses
- NUJ slams BBC Trust rejection of local plans while regionals celebrate
- >> more news
Related news
- Editorial integrity will save news organisations from 'electronic mob rule', says Reuters' multimedia head
- Regional newspapers: Why the UK's north east press is getting it right online
- Shortlist announced for Deutsche Welle's blogging competition
- 'A multimedia newsroom to boast about, but costly in terms of job cuts, sickness and stress'
- Reuters using mobile journalism for US political coverage
Recent blog posts
Editors' blog feed- Eric Ulken’s next assignment: the online world, from around the world
- Recession timelines… Media job cuts plotted / credit crunch in North East Wales
- Swedish Journalism Awards winner… for YouTube Rock
- Risky business: BBC must take risks, says Lyons, but creates ‘high risk’ programme register
- 10,000Words.Net: Best photojournalism on the net
- >> more blog posts
Features
Features feed- What rights now for photographers under the Terrorism Act 2000?
- Knight News Challenge 2008: Paul Bradshaw's Help Me Investigate.com
- Photographer's nightmare: 'friend' claimed Burmese images as his own
- Between the covers: women's magazines through history
- 'Insane' traffic for the NYTimes.com election dashboard, says head of newsroom interactive technologies
- >> more features
JOB OF THE WEEK
Content manager
Reporting to the head of communications, this exciting, newly created role will involve working closely with NFU policy teams to identify writing opportunities for various internal and external media ...more
Freelancers for hire
...see allDISPLAY ADVERTISING
Target our journalism community of 16,000 subscribers and 100k+ visitors monthly. Call Ellie on 01273 384291


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