The first in the series is Benoît Raphaël, editor-in-chief of LePost.fr, a pro-am news website and subsidiary of Le Monde. The original article written by Marek Miller, who will be blogging from the conference, can be read on the forum4editors site. You can follow Marek on Twitter on @Marek_Miller and @forum4editors.
[forum4editors] LePost.fr is a sub-brand of Le Monde. What differentiates this project from others based on citizen journalism? What is Le Post all about?
At Le Post, a journalist is, at the same time, a news producer, an aggregator and a community organiser. Because of the way he approaches information, he is first a network journalist. He checks first what has been said and published in other media. He aggregates the best content from different sources, including blogs, Twitter, YouTube and traditional media.
The information is a permanent conversation that is built step-by-step by the community and the journalists.
Each journalist is also in charge of a small group of active amateurs. He is their coach and teaches them the basics of the journalist's job; he tries to encourage them and even meets them in person. He understands that information is a conversation. He does not produce an article, but more a process.
How popular is Le Post in France?
After two years, its traffic is about 2.5 million unique visitors (according to Nielsen) a month.
All the content is filtered, a posteriori, by a team of moderators. We want to make sure that there is no illegal content, that amateurs follow our guidelines and that they are not propagating rumors. Then, the newsroom also looks at it. Each journalist is specialised and manages a small community of amateurs that he trusts. So each interesting item that we receive is checked according to our techniques of 'fast fact checking' that we have developed.
The problem with Twitter and social media services is that there is a very low percentage of users actually producing content. It is said that from 100 Twitter users, only one creates content, 10 reply and the rest follow in silence.We're more 'popular' than Le Monde [in terms of what subjects are covered], with more politics, crime and accidents, web/buzz subjects, montages and collages of news content - it's not exactly the type of news that LeMonde's readers are used to reading.
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With a communications qualification, experience of working with partner organisations and dispersed groups of people and some knowledge of agriculture for the NFU's Campaign for the Farmed Environment ...more
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