Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

Oops I accidentally the whole civil society...

  • 14-02-2012 9:13am
    #1
    Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators Posts: 32,387 Mod ✭✭✭✭


    I thought I'd post my thoughts on the recent spate between "new" and "old" media.

    In the last 2 weeks we've seen an unprecedented level of attacks on "New Media" from politicians and newspapers. Seems fair enough you might say, we've orchestrated unprecedented levels of protest of against them after all.
    But facetious humour aside, there is an important discussion here which is being lost in the bun fight.

    There are two issues here, both are complex and multidimensional. In this piece I will try to address the current "Old Media" vs "New Media" row. Later I'll write about the political issue.

    "Old Media" (read: Printed newspapers) are suffering financially. They are increasingly bought by fewer people and consequently command less advertising revenues, not to mention less income from direct sales. The largest circulation newspapers in the state reach a couple of hundred thousand people by their accounting (which is arrived at by multiplying sales by 2.5 readers per copy they estimate.. hmmm). Compare this with an ABC certified 2.2 Million unique readers of Boards per day and advertisers, keenly focused on "bang for buck" these days, are voting with their budgets.

    There is price pressure from online competition, which doesnt have to create a physical product and so has less production overheads. Online cuts into this advertising 'pie' and it is a pie which has shrunk recently due to recession. Add these together and you can see its a real squeeze. I could almost feel sorry for them.
    But I dont. I'm not inclined to have any sympathy for "old media". You might say "well you wouldn't, would you!" but that does me a disservice.

    You see, I love journalism. I'm a big fan. My grandfather was head printer for the Irish Times and when he lived with us the Irish Times would arrive, wrapped tight as a drum and we'd all read it voraciously. I would sit and wait for the post man to be the first to it before my father would assert patriarchal priority. I gorged myself on information until my young finger was black from tracing lines of text. The Times was spoken of with reverence in our house. It was "The paper of record". But its unfair to lay all of print media's faults at its door and just as unfair to accord all of its successes to its industry as a whole. My point is, I'm not an enemy of good journalism. In fact, given my history with Boards, you could say that honest civil communication is kinda my thing.

    So why no sympathy for their plight? Because they abandoned us first. In the last decade I have watched newspapers be derelict in their duty in my opinion. Alan Crosbie recently said that "New Media" has the "capacity to destroy civil society and cause unimaginable suffering". Dreadful hyperbole and in the height of irony it was quoted by lots of Old Media out of context. http://www.rte.ie/news/2012/0206/media.html

    Alan Crosbie makes some interesting points in his speech, a speech which Tom Crosbie exhorts everyone to read in full. (The irony continues in that the only way to do so is with ease is online). If you are interested in his point of view on modern journalism, I recommend you do read it.
    I agree with several of his general points about the health of a society being tied to a free and questioning media. Where I begin to diverge from him is when he rather loosely draws the conclusion that that function is being performed by the current crop of dead tree peddlers. And that we should support this via taxes! It isnt. We shouldn't.

    Our current media is not questioning anything by and large. There is an illness in modern media, an illness everyone is happy to suffer from. It is one of easy comfortable alliance. If you are a work-a-day journalist you dont bite the hand that drip-feeds you. Where was the incisive, brave reporting during the FF years? During the "boom"? During the bailout? NoW??? This malaise has been refined by modern PR companies into a viral epidemic. "Journalism" has drifted too far from its role of seeking the truth, publishing it and being damned. No one wants to be damned after all, do they?

    Not all journalists should be tarred with this brush. It must be bloody hard to do anything approaching journalism in an environment which is not aligned to support a writer searching for the truth. "Hey boss, I just discovered a juicy story which implicates our biggest advertiser along with a politician who regularly gives us the inside line (when it suits him to do so)". Yeah... not a fantastic career move.

    Could Woodward and Bernstein report on Watergate in today's "Old Media" environment? To steal a phrase from the Haughey years... could they ****!
    One of the primary reasons people are turning from Old Media is because it isn't servicing their needs any longer. Newspapers are supposed to be The Watchmen. The whistle blowers alerting us all to danger, keeping the corridors of power honest. They've failed in that duty and they are suffering now because we no longer see them as relevant enough to be worth the asking price. Worse, many feel they have been bought and sold, such is their unwillingness to so much as tweak a nose.

    It would be unfair to them to leave it at that. Education has failed us too. How many boys sit waiting for the paper to be delivered these days? Hell, how many people read anything to do with current affairs? You cannot consider anything relating to X-Factor or Madonnas latest child-acquisition to qualify... How many people are engaged by the political landscape enough to sit and read about it? You can hardly blame "Old Media" in playing to its paying audience! The people who are interested in Celebrity News don't read, they look at. In this regard Alan Crosbie is right. Sometimes what a society needs is not what a society wants or is willing to pay for.
    But I champion a different solution than his suggestion that we shore up a medium which has failed us with explicit financial support from those they should be questioning. How he feels that will lead to anything but a worsening of the situation I cannot see and it smacks to me of "I want a bailout for my media empire". I prefer to democratise the ability to discuss, broadcast and publish. Believe me I feel Newspapers pain when faced with our common enemy of the defamation laws in Ireland. An enemy we should join forces and fight together.

    Recently "Old Media" has been bemoaning the practise of "New Media" stealing their news and reheating it. This is the lie which hides in plain sight. Last night I watched twitter and uServe and Boards and blogs of the Greek parliament inside and riots outside. I was fed links and sources of information from a wide variety of places. The my inner "young lad" gorged again. I now know more then I ever thought possible about the inner workings of Greek political life. I watched live feeds and read honest on the ground accounts of real time news from people who were there. Sure, some had their own agendas, but you cant stop the signal. When there are so many sources of news, the blur bubbles up the truth more objectively than any editor possibly can.

    And I sat there and thought "Tomorrow, who will steal from whom"?


    (also on my blog: constainstracesofnut dot com)


«1

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 746 ✭✭✭skregs


    This just in: guy advertising his blog says newspapers now less important than blogs


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,528 ✭✭✭cml387


    Old media is of course too pally with the establishment.
    This is because ( at the moment ) old media is considered authoritative.

    Once some new media (think Huffington Post, Guido Fawkes, etc.) become
    authoritative, don't you think they'll be subject to the same blandishments from the establishment and the same temptations?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,758 ✭✭✭✭TeddyTedson


    skregs wrote: »
    This just in: guy advertising his blog says newspapers now less important than blogs
    He eludes to the fact that he is going to be seen as being biased, but backs everything up very well.
    I personally think "new media" is an obvious and undeniable replacement of old media as we continue into the "digital revolution".
    Who wants to read the opinions of a delusional journalist like John Walters when they can read multiple opinions from real people who aren't trying to "sell" a story.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 34,809 ✭✭✭✭smash


    That was too long. Can you re-write it in txt spk please! :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,172 ✭✭✭✭kmart6


    I think as a younger generation we do have an interest in current affairs, but why wait for a paper carrying day old news when it can be got online as soon as its known! The dawn of twitter for instance allows for breaking news to travel quicker than other form of media....even dedicated news channels!


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 724 ✭✭✭Park Royal


    Reads like old news to me......

    Scales fall from peoples eyes at different times ......welcome !


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,332 ✭✭✭Guill


    Wow, new modern, faster way of delivery news replaces old slower version.


    What is the world comin to?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,028 ✭✭✭✭SEPT 23 1989


    The new media can see straight through the spin the governments try to put on news stories

    thus rendering the spin doctors and their old media mouthpieces obsolete


  • Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators Posts: 32,387 Mod ✭✭✭✭DeVore


    skregs wrote: »
    This just in: guy advertising his blog says newspapers now less important than blogs
    Which is why I didn't link up the blog.... Knew someone would be a smarty pants :p
    I posted it here because discussions on blogs always seem asymmetrical whereas Boards is more a conversation between equals.

    (I also suspect that since you think I'm advertising my blog you don't really understand that Boards is kinda my site :):p )


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,647 ✭✭✭✭El Weirdo


    DeVore wrote: »
    I thought I'd post my thoughts on the recent spate between "new" and "old" media.

    In the last 2 weeks we've seen an unprecedented level of attacks on "New Media" from politicians and newspapers. Seems fair enough you might say, we've orchestrated unprecedented levels of protest of against them after all.
    But facetious humour aside, there is an important discussion here which is being lost in the bun fight... blah, blah, blah...
    Mmmmmmmmmmm, buns...


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,395 ✭✭✭✭mikemac1


    Mark Little left RTÉ to setup his own company

    Made a lot of same points as you Dev

    Just adding the video about The Future of News which I thought was interesting
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSYp0rtKTLM

    Some don't like him, I just read this thread and thought of the video

    Some further viewing maybe


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,899 ✭✭✭✭BBDBB


    Newspapers have been acting like Nero while Rome burned

    Their corruption, bias and sensationalism to fight a circulation war was the wrong tactic against the inveitable. The Internet has outgrown them, their day is done, its just a question of time before they become a history footnote.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,395 ✭✭✭✭mikemac1


    BBDBB wrote: »

    Their corruption, bias and sensationalism to fight a circulation war was the wrong tactic against the inveitable. The Internet has outgrown them, their day is done, its just a question of time before they become a history footnote.

    Some have adapted

    Daily Mail may be a rag but their website is superb and one of the most widely read newspaper websites in the world

    Lots and lots of advertising on it and it's updated constantly every hour and there is a team of moderators for the comments.
    They've found something that works.

    Just a pity about the lies, mistakes and everything else wrong with the DM :P
    But their business and internet team and doing their jobs better then most


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,412 ✭✭✭✭Ghost Train


    News and media forum is that way -> http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/forumdisplay.php?f=444


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,388 ✭✭✭gbee


    The Cork Media wear rose coloured glasses and it's always sunny. Despite empty houses at opening nights, empty halls for protests the following days headlines or sub heading "Crowds Flock to ...."

    But somewhere online will be a report with the truth. The GAA also has enjoyed a special place, no photos of injuries or fights or blood. Well that seems to have changed recently or else that photographer never got the memo.

    On-line is not as great a media as people think, advertising is often counted as click through but the real effect is in sales. Also onliine advertising can be killed by ad-blockers and filters and such.

    I was once banned from a site for using an ad-blocker so that was circumvented by coming in from another country and running ad-blocker there. There is a huge groundswell of protest against online ads, there are invasive and delay the distribution of stories and news so people use other sources to get the feeds they want instantly, some site reload the ads on every refresh ~ ads or on the phone too, so it's really a bridge too far, far too invasive, in the end it's the print media and possibly the good old glossy magazine that will return a better deal long run.

    The trick is to get people to go looking for your site or looking for you newspaper. The success of two free newspapers in Cork alone could suggest that some issues that are mentioned in the article are in error as to the cause.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,462 ✭✭✭✭WoollyRedHat


    skregs wrote: »
    This just in: guy advertising his blog says newspapers now less important than blogs


    Stop the press!!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,420 ✭✭✭✭LuckyLloyd


    DeVore wrote: »
    Recently "Old Media" has been bemoaning the practise of "New Media" stealing their news and reheating it. This is the lie which hides in plain sight. Last night I watched twitter and uServe and Boards and blogs of the Greek parliament inside and riots outside. I was fed links and sources of information from a wide variety of places. The my inner "young lad" gorged again. I now know more then I ever thought possible about the inner workings of Greek political life. I watched live feeds and read honest on the ground accounts of real time news from people who were there. Sure, some had their own agendas, but you cant stop the signal. When there are so many sources of news, the blur bubbles up the truth more objectively than any editor possibly can.
    And I sat there and thought "Tomorrow, who will steal from whom"?


    (also on my blog: constainstraceofnut dot com)

    Hmm, prove it? :)

    Tom, what you describe above is definitely exciting. If you want to get stuck into a topic there is such a wealth of information (good, bad and indifferent) a few clicks away. But is it really "better" than the true papers of record that existed decades ago?

    Bad information has always existed, so you could argue that biased bloggers who will play fast and loose with the facts are merely a modern version of a tabloid journalist. And sections of the public have always been willing to take bad information at face value. But when you remove the existence of the accepted score keeper (i.e. a respected Irish Times type paper), then it becomes harder for everyone to be sure what is really going on.

    To put it another way - someone like yourself, a self confessed lover of journalism who was in on the ground floor of an ever growing new media platform is going to be far better placed to sift through the wealth of information and disseminate the good from the bad from the downright ugly. You are well placed to become your own journalist. In my view, it is dangerous to assume that everyone has such ability. And I know that's an unpopular thing to say - everyone thinks they are smarter than they are, sharper than they are, etc. But that isn't the case, and the elimination of professional journalists and structured fact checking processes is far from ideal.

    It is true that 'old media' is a pale shadow of what it once was. But, as far as I can see, the void it has left has yet to be adequately filled.


  • Moderators, Arts Moderators Posts: 35,556 Mod ✭✭✭✭pickarooney


    BBDBB wrote: »
    Newspapers have been acting like Nero while Rome burned

    The premise of which, of course, is a myth. Lies and character defamations have been around a lot longer than the printing press.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,899 ✭✭✭✭BBDBB


    mikemac1 wrote: »
    Some have adapted

    Daily Mail may be a rag but their website is superb and one of the most widely read newspaper websites in the world

    Lots and lots of advertising on it and it's updated constantly every hour and there is a team of moderators for the comments.
    They've found something that works.

    Just a pity about the lies, mistakes and everything else wrong with the DM :P
    But their business and internet team and doing their jobs better then most


    fair enough, I have no doubt you are right about the Daily Mail, I dont read it so can accept your view.


    I dont buy newspapers anymore, I havent done for years now, I pick one up in the queue at the barbers once every 6 weeks or so and have become increasingly disenfranchised by the contents. I think there are a few reasons for that

    * Its not "news" when its its showbiz gossip about a group of nobodies with little talent on TV shows that I dont watch are seen falling out of nightclubs.
    *The love lives of celebs doesnt interest me, its no ones business.
    * Opinions are not facts.
    *Lies are peddaled as truth.
    *Language used is for sensational effect to make a headline rather than tell a story
    *Sports news is about creating stories not reporting them



    As far as I am concerned the printed media is in the death throes.The generations to come wont walk down to the papershop to get a paper everyday when its 24 hours behind the internet. More costly, less convenient etc etc

    BUT

    The tragic loss of good journalism is a significant casualty and Im not convinced from the little I do read that the New Media is showing that much of a return to good journalism whilst it resides in the control of the Old Media


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,899 ✭✭✭✭BBDBB


    The premise of which, of course, is a myth. Lies and character defamations have been around a lot longer than the printing press.


    a good point, I was trying to illustrate that newspapers have been guilty of inaction and ineffectual action whilst their industry went down the pan and the analogy seemed apt from its popular understanding rather than its historical accuracy. But point conceded


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,163 ✭✭✭✭Liam Byrne


    Is this a "guess the thread title's missing word" game ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,041 ✭✭✭Seachmall


    Liam Byrne wrote: »
    Is this a "guess the thread title's missing word" game ?

    It's a Meme.

    Dev is all hip and stuff.:pac:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23,246 ✭✭✭✭Dyr


    But when you remove the existence of the accepted score keeper (i.e. a respected Irish Times type paper), then it becomes harder for everyone to be sure what is really going on.

    You think the IT is a paper of record? has'nt been for a long time. They have theor own agenda and they like to push it :eek:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,388 ✭✭✭gbee


    Seachmall wrote: »
    It's a Meme.

    Dev is all hip and stuff.:pac:

    Thanks for that, I did not question the title, I'm very old media, but I did think it was related to the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, so not that far off.


  • Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators Posts: 32,387 Mod ✭✭✭✭DeVore


    Seachmall wrote: »
    It's a Meme.

    Dev is all hip and stuff.:pac:
    Heheh, actually I'm being a bit post-ironic (ooh danger of being a hipster now). I'm old and I tend not to write in slang or in sound bites. I like the old way of writing I guess... So I'm somewhat taking the mick out of myself by using dem nu-fangled meme tings.

    Lloyd, you might be right but as someone put it earlier, the void has yet to be filled... My point is that it will be! The talent for critical analysis is a crucial one in today's "spun" world. Everything from news-as-entertainment through to advertising and product-placement needs a much more critical and some would say cynical outlook. It's the new reading and writing really.

    But look at BBC... They have translated their brand loyalty and more importantly brand TRUST to online very successfully. Anything writing on a BBC branded channel gets lots more trust from me then joe randoms blog. I take probably 10 sources for any news story I'm interested but when I could show my father a live feed from Occupy Wall Street while they were being evicted his only comment was ... "why isn't this on the news???".

    When I can watch the riots for myself in real time...l what need have I of a product which only *tells* me about it 12 hours... Spun in some unknown way...

    There is an answer to that but the newspapers have to make it work and I don't have time to write it all on this iPad now :)


  • Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators Posts: 32,387 Mod ✭✭✭✭DeVore


    Seachmall wrote: »
    It's a Meme.

    Dev is all hip and stuff.:pac:
    Heheh, actually I'm being a bit post-ironic (ooh danger of being a hipster now). I'm old and I tend not to write in slang or in sound bites. I like the old way of writing I guess... So I'm somewhat taking the mick out of myself by using dem nu-fangled meme tings.

    Lloyd, you might be right but as someone put it earlier, the void has yet to be filled... My point is that it will be! The talent for critical analysis is a crucial one in today's "spun" world. Everything from news-as-entertainment through to advertising and product-placement needs a much more critical and some would say cynical outlook. It's the new reading and writing really.

    But look at BBC... They have translated their brand loyalty and more importantly brand TRUST to online very successfully. Anything writing on a BBC branded channel gets lots more trust from me then joe randoms blog. I take probably 10 sources for any news story I'm interested but when I could show my father a live feed from Occupy Wall Street while they were being evicted his only comment was ... "why isn't this on the news???".

    When I can watch the riots for myself in real time...l what need have I of a product which only *tells* me about it 12 hours... Spun in some unknown way...

    There is an answer to that but the newspapers have to make it work and I don't have time to write it all on this iPad now :)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,582 ✭✭✭✭TheZohanS



    > News and Media forum.


    don't ban me


  • Moderators, Music Moderators Posts: 25,871 Mod ✭✭✭✭Doctor DooM


    It basically boils down to the old money makers trying to kill the people they think will replace them. Which, again, is a story way older than old media.

    Tangentally, I wonder how many people first delved into piracy because they wanted to see something when it was released in America, but Europe/ wherever was supposed to sit and wait. Retention of old business models when it's time to move on will always cause this type of conflict.

    There's only so long they're going to be able to fight those fires. Hopefully they don't manage to wreck the internet on the way (Mr. Sherlock).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,041 ✭✭✭Seachmall


    DeVore wrote: »
    Heheh, actually I'm being a bit post-ironic (ooh danger of being a hipster now). I'm old and I tend not to write in slang or in sound bites. I like the old way of writing I guess... So I'm somewhat taking the mick out of myself by using dem nu-fangled meme tings.

    I hate myself for this but it had to be done.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,736 ✭✭✭✭kylith


    OP: you misspelled your blog in your first post. Methinks you could use an editor.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,420 ✭✭✭✭LuckyLloyd


    Bambi wrote: »
    You think the IT is a paper of record? has'nt been for a long time. They have theor own agenda and they like to push it :eek:

    It certainly used to be, but the merits of an individual paper are a side issue in many ways as far as this debate goes. I wrote "Irish Times type paper" for a reason. Whether it be the Irish, New York, LA, whatever Times - the existence of a respected newspaper capable of producing objective, thoroughly sourced and well fact checked articles is a very important component of a healthy society. The current absence of same is a terrible shame, and I don't believe Tom (or anyone really) has addressed how that problem will be solved by the coming media landscape.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,182 ✭✭✭nyarlothothep


    Every paper has line, just like a person it has its own set of values which it will promote. When someone talks about objective reporting I feel that they're talking about how much that paper conforms to their values, if it didn't then it would be biased or whatever. I love the current chaos of the internet. Its so full of bias and agendas which aren't backed up with the "authority" of tradition and institutionalisation that it should in theory encourage people to make their own minds up and generally distrust what comes from the mouths of others. The interactivity factor also facilitates this, you hear different opinions, disagreements with the author in the comment section and so forth. There are degrees of objectivity (Fox news is in fictional lala land) but everything reported by someone or an organisation made up of people should be approached with bs detectors on full standby.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,174 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    LuckyLloyd wrote: »
    To put it another way - someone like yourself, a self confessed lover of journalism who was in on the ground floor of an ever growing new media platform is going to be far better placed to sift through the wealth of information and disseminate the good from the bad from the downright ugly. You are well placed to become your own journalist.../... But that isn't the case, and the elimination of professional journalists and structured fact checking processes is far from ideal.
    Get out of my head you bollix! :) Especially the above. The problem isn't the information, it's the sifting and editing of that information. Indeed the apparent overload of that information just adds to the problem and people being people will tend to look for someone who as already done the work for them. The new editors as it were. And who will they be? I suspect people being people again we may end up with more of an echo of old media than we might expect. The fact that the Daily Mail website is the most read/visited newspaper site in the world is food for thought.

    Not wishing to sound old and such :) but I have also noticed a difference in my peers compared to younger generations. Though I've a couple of years on you D, we're vaguely in the same generation. Kinda the last generation that grew up on slower print and other media. More to the point a generation that grew up alongside the interweb and are a little more discerning about information that may flow from it. It would be my humble and obviously a generalisation, that those following generations can often be less discerning. They've not had to be as it's apparently at their fingertips, a google click away(and who's googling google?) and popularity counts. The higher the position on a search page, the more it seems accepted as fact. Many won't bother their bottoms clicking to page two. So the editors in this "new media" are already here, just not so obviously.

    Like LL said
    In my view, it is dangerous to assume that everyone has such ability. And I know that's an unpopular thing to say - everyone thinks they are smarter than they are, sharper than they are, etc.
    Or as one wag commented, everyone thinks they have a book in them, but that's where it should stay. For me 90%+ of blogs fit into this category.

    Another trend I've noted overall on discussion sites (and even here on Boards), is a drop off in the "links or GTFO" response when another poster is stating "facts". That used to be almost a constant. Now if the poster has enough gravitas, by dint of post count or authority it's usually just taken as read. I certainly see more dubious "facts" than I used to. More opinion dressed up as fact. Blogs are a charm for this stuff and it seems no barrier to popularity or click stats.

    As for exposing wrongdoing in the world, that's gonna get interesting. If I have actual evidence of wrongdoing by an individual, business or political entity and I tried to post it on Boards, how long would it last as a post? Rightfully too as Boards would be right in the legal firing line and the costs involved are too much to take such a risk, even if it turns out to be provable and truthful. Lawyers pockets would be lined along that path to truth. Blogs have been successfully sued and bloggers ruined financially.

    This is an even bigger worry in Ireland where traditionally the media was in thrall to vested interests more than it wasn't. The new media is really in the firing line and is in danger of being declawed. Just look at Mr Sherlock and his little bit of legislation. I'll be genuinely shocked if it doesn't go through, in spite of the valid protests. It's a done deal and always has been IMHO. How this and other moves by various vested interests will affect the landscape is up in the air. Hopefully not too much.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,166 ✭✭✭✭Zzippy


    gbee wrote: »
    The Cork Media wear rose coloured glasses and it's always sunny. Despite empty houses at opening nights, empty halls for protests the following days headlines or sub heading "Crowds Flock to ...."

    But somewhere online will be a report with the truth. The GAA also has enjoyed a special place, no photos of injuries or fights or blood. Well that seems to have changed recently or else that photographer never got the memo.

    On-line is not as great a media as people think, advertising is often counted as click through but the real effect is in sales. Also onliine advertising can be killed by ad-blockers and filters and such.

    I was once banned from a site for using an ad-blocker so that was circumvented by coming in from another country and running ad-blocker there. There is a huge groundswell of protest against online ads, there are invasive and delay the distribution of stories and news so people use other sources to get the feeds they want instantly, some site reload the ads on every refresh ~ ads or on the phone too, so it's really a bridge too far, far too invasive, in the end it's the print media and possibly the good old glossy magazine that will return a better deal long run.

    The trick is to get people to go looking for your site or looking for you newspaper. The success of two free newspapers in Cork alone could suggest that some issues that are mentioned in the article are in error as to the cause.

    There will always be a market for local news - many people are more interested in what goes on in their own locality than in international or national news. Court reports, sports reports, local gossip which are too small or mundane for national media will be covered in local media and attract a fairly loyal readership. Especially if its free. Doesn't matter if its a few days old. Advertisers also realise this, hence the success of free papers, not just in Cork - look at the Advertiser group around the country for another example.
    National media, on the other hand... :confused:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,273 ✭✭✭Morlar


    It has been a very long time since I had the feeling that established media in Ireland were meeting their responsibilities. Not so sure that 'new' digital media is filling that gap to be honest.


  • Advertisement
  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I get all my news from AH and chicken gut readings.


    I dont need some fancy schmancy "Bleurgh" or sitch to keep me in knowledge.

    Now, if anyone wants me I will be in your ma's bedroom.


    *drops mic and leaves stage with one fist in the air*


  • Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators Posts: 32,387 Mod ✭✭✭✭DeVore


    Morlar wrote: »
    It has been a very long time since I had the feeling that established media in Ireland were meeting their responsibilities. Not so sure that 'new' digital media is filling that gap to be honest.

    And that's a very valid point... The old is dying before the new has grown up sufficiently to replace it. But that's a matter of time and in part, education of the reader I feel.

    For Lloyd, I offer the counter point of the Independents MAGDA story and the Times' pieces on Sherlocks law (Sherlock vs the teenager) and their disgrace handling of Kate Fitzgeralds last piece. Is this what you want me to put my trust in?

    Yes Karlin Lillington did an excellent piece on Sherlock yesterday, one I commented on and retweeted. But stab me with a 6 inch blade and pull it out 3 inches, don't expect me to thank you :)

    Those piece of blather (I won't call them journalism. That's an insult to real journos) were exposed/corrected by online commentators.

    Newspapers need to give up on the adrenaline rush of "the scoop" ... How can they possibly compete with an organisation with millions of citizen reporters all over the world, arm with the latest tech and broadcasting to everyone on the spot. You can't hope to beat it to the punch. So the alternative is to go deeper into the story. Get quality analysis a day or two later but higher value. I'll buy that for a dollar! Get investigative journalists back out hunting down big news that blogs and websites can't cover for lack of time and money... They are mostly amateurs after all.

    Storyful is Mark Littles baby and we had a really good long chat before he launched when he explained the idea to me. At the time I thought it was a great idea but hard to pull off... He's done it with aplomb IMHO. It's a good model!

    The new models need to mature though. It's not there yet but it will get there when the money shifts dramatically and the trusted brands arise. Already Maman Poulet is considered a very good source in some quarters of Irish politics. More like her will arise. The BBC and The Guardian have both transferred the trust in their brands to their online presences...


  • Administrators, Entertainment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 18,753 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭hullaballoo


    The progression from "old" to "new" media has been envisaged by the "old" media for a long time. There are lots of films, novels etc. that clearly point to a future where technology and 'puters are a mainstay of civil society. So there's no shock here.

    What the traditional media hadn't thought of is that they would be unable to capitalise as readily as they had expected on the move to electronic news sources. They essentially overestimated the public's respect for journalism and never thought that we might actually trust other sources to relay current affairs.

    Personally, I've witnessed events that have subsequently become the subjects of articles in even reputable newspapers. In many of those cases, the reports did not reflect the actual events as they happened. This is commonplace, and as a result, people are more inclined to take a number of views on board and try and discern the truth for themselves. That's what I do anyway.

    The other side of the coin is that the people who are speaking out so vociferously against the Internet simply don't understand what's happening. The offline view of the Internet is outdated: people who use the Internet are a minority of tech nerds and loners who want to protect their isolated bubble. Eternal September began in 1993. The days of Internet users being an elite group of hackers (black or white hats) are gone. There are now generations of people who use the Internet all the time.

    The difficulty seems to be that politicians, traditional journalists and even traditional industry leaders across a gamut of sectors are predominantly outside of the online generations. They unfalteringly maintain an entitlement to privacy and other "rights" that are incompatible with what is clearly becoming modernity. They refuse to adapt. They want to try and control this space because it looks like it's affecting the world they live in.

    I don't worry about this in the long term because eventually, it will be the online generations who call the shots. At some point, traditional media outlets will realise that they cannot dictate to the public what the public's demands are. The supply has to shift, or the price has to shift.

    They can battle on with their outmoded views and they can fight their one-sided war against technology. It's a bit like maintaining the point of view that the world was created 4,000 years ago. Good luck.


  • Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators Posts: 32,387 Mod ✭✭✭✭DeVore


    kylith wrote: »
    OP: you misspelled your blog in your first post. Methinks you could use an editor.
    An error I have corrected now... Thank you for making another point for me in passing :):p


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,956 ✭✭✭Doc Ruby


    LuckyLloyd wrote: »
    It is true that 'old media' is a pale shadow of what it once was.
    Old media was always a biased and one sided platform though, right from its beginnings, I don't think it ever had a golden age. The Irish Times and Irish Independent for example both had their foundation as platforms for their owners' religion and politics, as did most newspapers.

    The democratisation of the news may have made grammar and spelling a casualty, but for the first time ever both sides of the picture can be seen clearly and easily by anyone that cares to look.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23,246 ✭✭✭✭Dyr



    Personally, I've witnessed events that have subsequently become the subjects of articles in even reputable newspapers. In many of those cases, the reports did not reflect the actual events as they happened.

    Likewise, which is why I find it bizarre when people are so willing to accept "papers of record" or respected broadcasters versions of events. Every time that I've been close to something that made headlines I found that what happened and what was reported were very different creatures.


  • Registered Users Posts: 280 ✭✭texidub


    There is no inherent reason why an old media journo should be considered more authoritative than an online journalist.

    The debate over quality and trust is a bit false (I believe it was started by old media in an attempt to distinguish themselves as 'professionals' rather than 'citizens'.. such pomp! lol)

    But getting away from that debate new media delivers faster and is *way* more info-packed. Newspaper technology just can't compete with interactive multimedia. And they shouldn't want to! If they were really concerned about getting as much information out to their readers as possible, they would be going to every effort to integrate new media technologies into their processes. But no.. that would be a step to far for some aul stick-in-the-muds.

    Also, on the Net it's possible to find live streams and other data sources that are unbiased and unmediated by any journalist ('professional' or merely 'citizen': D ).

    When it all settles down, new media is going to be blend of old media reinvented (because people still trust entities like the Grauniad and The Times and the NYT etc... they just want more of the same content quicker and in more depth) and new media sites doing pretty much what old media is/was/and will be doing (HuffPost, Wired, Gawker, Gizmodo etc.)

    The two sides are fighting each other, wrestling for dominance, but I honestly think these are merely teething pains as new media gets used to having some responsibility and old media gets used to losing some of its' responsibility.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23,246 ✭✭✭✭Dyr


    texidub wrote: »
    There is no inherent reason why an old media journo should be considered more authoritative than an online journalist.

    How about if the old media journo has a long standing and mutually beneficial relationship with many TD's...surely that makes him more authorative :confused:

    I think thats what minister rabbite was on about...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,163 ✭✭✭✭Liam Byrne


    Seachmall wrote: »
    It's a Meme.

    Dev is all hip and stuff.:pac:
    "I Accidentally…" is a catchphrase, internet slang, and trolling mechanism

    Are we meant to report DeVore ? :eek:


  • Registered Users Posts: 280 ✭✭texidub


    Bambi wrote: »
    How about if the old media journo has a long standing and mutually beneficial relationship with many TD's...surely that makes him more authorative :confused:

    I think thats what minister rabbite was on about...

    Over the long term a mutually beneficial relationship may evolve, but the language involved sounds very like the antithesis of good journalism to me.

    Anyway, I think that stuff can be overblown. A good journalist can arrive into town and get in most anywhere. It's part of the job.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,073 ✭✭✭Xios


    Bump for some effort, more people should read this before it get's lost in page 2.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,273 ✭✭✭Morlar


    Bambi wrote: »
    How about if the old media journo has a long standing and mutually beneficial relationship with many TD's...surely that makes him more authorative :confused:

    I think thats what minister rabbite was on about...

    The contribution of an army of 'citizen reporters' posting on the internet can't fairly be compared with the value of a skilled journalist.

    To give an example of what I mean, (random) R.Fisk would be a reporter onsite, observing events, attending briefings, interviewing govt. personnel and then comparing that version to the reality on the ground by interviewing non-govt and opposition people, citizens and any relevant informed individuals.

    This is from a perspective of aiming for the historical truth which is not necessarily politically convenient.

    It is a requirement that this is done with an awareness of the history of the place and the cultural context to the story (which can be complex).

    Compare all of that (admittedly idealised version of reality) to ill educated, misinformed, non-politically neutral, in fact often politically-aligned 'citizen army' posting on blogs or twitter etc.

    I am able to think for myself, most people are, however there is not the time to invest in each ongoing news development either in Ireland or around the globe.

    There is a similarity here to the way wikipedia is open to systematic abuse and has become an alternative to actual, substantive reading in many cases.

    You need capable, trustworthy, intelligent, impartial, skilled journalists on the ground who are not afraid of lobby / advocacy groups / political interests to post the truth as they see it. Behind them you need trustworthy independent media organisations with deep pockets to fund all of this whether through advertising or licence fees.

    I think the direction things are developing towards (as regards traditional media vs new media in the foreign news context) is a place where there is an increasing shortfall, a missing stage in the processing of information.

    In one (idealised) scenario above you have a professional experienced Journalist who has worked their way up from local paper reporting supermarket openings to a foreign correspondent for a serious media outlet. In the other scenario you have a random yahoo posting 'I can hear gunshots up the street !!!! ' type of white noise which is of limited value. What we could end up with out of all of this is a myriad of digital information sources which will spring up around any given story being selectively filtered by freshly graduated-never-been-abroad correspondents sitting in studios in london.

    There is an inbetween between 'citizen reporters' and correspondents. For example the blog of someone like Constantin Gurdgiyev, who is free to post informed economic analysis. I really think those kinds of potentially valuable sources are very rare. Consumers of information are then left with the task of gravitating towards random disconnected sources of information.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,420 ✭✭✭✭LuckyLloyd


    DeVore wrote: »
    For Lloyd, I offer the counter point of the Independents MAGDA story and the Times' pieces on Sherlocks law (Sherlock vs the teenager) and their disgrace handling of Kate Fitzgeralds last piece. Is this what you want me to put my trust in?

    Yes Karlin Lillington did an excellent piece on Sherlock yesterday, one I commented on and retweeted. But stab me with a 6 inch blade and pull it out 3 inches, don't expect me to thank you :)

    Those piece of blather (I won't call them journalism. That's an insult to real journos) were exposed/corrected by online commentators

    A) I have no interest in defending the indefensible. In 2011 I happened to have first hand knowledge of two national stories and what ended up in the Times and Independent (and other places) was riddled with basic factual errors that a journalist who had spent half a day on either making phonecalls could have clarified. There is no media source in the country at present that could be considered a definitive record of the day;
    B) Blogging or "new media" ideally would play that very role. People with niche interests, qualifications and passion delving into areas that they have indepth feeling for and using the new communication platforms to broadcast superior detail / clarification / etc. But you need a starting point, some place responsible for doing the grunt work on everything and trying to attain a standard of sorts. 'New media' (hate that term :)) should be a compliment to a quality fourth estate, not a replacement for it. Or if it is to replace it - it needs to be something very, very different to what it is right now;


    As it happens, I totally agree with you in terms of delayed analysis being well worth paying for. I still buy the Economist for that reason, I don't need to know about something happening three seconds after it takes place. The vast majority of things are still news five days later, and it may very well take five days to put together a proper indepth summation of an issue. I'll wait (and I'll pay!!) that few days or weeks for quality information.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,582 ✭✭✭✭TheZohanS


    I recently had the fortunate experience of being enlightened (or educated) as to what evil Traditional Media is currently conspiring to unleash upon the world. I would now like to share that experience with you. Let's review the errors in Traditional Media's statements in order. First, the confluence of denominationalism and propagandism in Traditional Media's insinuations ensures a swirling river of discontent upon which Traditional Media so peremptorily rides. Sure, the things Traditional Media does are wrong, pushy, contentious, blasphemous—you name it. But someone has to be willing to deal summarily with moonstruck authoritarians. Even if it's not polite to do so. Even if it hurts a lot of people's feelings. Even if everyone else is pretending that space aliens are out to lay eggs in our innards or ooze their alien hell-slime all over us.

    If I am correct that Traditional Media's squibs are saturated with the grumpy rhetoric that will unquestionably marginalize dissident voices, then its behavior might be different if it were told that it is the type of organization that would shoot you just to see if its gun worked. Of course, as far as Traditional Media is concerned, this fact will fall into the category of, "My mind is made up; don't confuse me with the facts." That's why I'm telling you that it never tires of telling us that it is a refined organization with the soundest ethics and morals you can imagine. That's why I feel obligated to respond by reminding everyone that all the deals Traditional Media makes are strictly one-way. Traditional Media gets all the rights, and the other party gets all the obligations.

    When you tell Traditional Media's helots that Traditional Media's apologists compress Traditional Media's epithets into brief, highly reductive, definitive-sounding phrases, easily memorized and easily expressed, they begin to get fidgety and their eyes begin to wander. They really don't care. They have no interest in hearing that it twists every argument into some sort of "struggle" between two parties. Traditional Media unvaryingly constitutes the underdog party, which is what it claims gives it the right to replace our natural soul with an artificial one.

    If there is one truth in this world, it's that Traditional Media plans to peddle fake fears to the public. It has instructed its functionaries not to discuss this or even admit to its plan's existence. Obviously, Traditional Media knows it has something to hide. This in mind, I would like to bear witness to the plain, unvarnished truth. Having endured countless hours of listening to Traditional Media's bad-tempered, manipulative gibber, I can say with confidence that there are few certainties in life. I have counted only three: death, taxes, and Traditional Media announcing some frightful thing every few weeks.

    In many ways, Traditional Media must sense its own irremediable inferiority. That's why it is so desperate to use paid informants and provocateurs to make bargains with the devil; it's the only way for it to distinguish themselves from the herd. It would be a lot nicer, however, if Traditional Media also realized that now that I've been exposed to its scribblings I must admit that I don't completely understand them. Perhaps I need to get out more. Or perhaps if five years ago I had described an organization like Traditional Media to you and told you that in five years it'd devise unenlightened scams to get money for nothing, you'd have thought me fatuous. You'd have laughed at me and told me it couldn't happen. So it is useful now to note that, first, it has happened and, second, to try to understand how it happened and how if you can go more than a minute without hearing it talk about Machiavellianism, you're either deaf, dumb, or in a serious case of denial. To close, let me accentuate that if we hammer out solutions on the anvil of discourse we shall not only survive Traditional Media's attacks; we shall prevail.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,420 ✭✭✭✭LuckyLloyd


    What society likes from its media and what it needs are two very different things.

    Society likes:

    - Instant content
    - Multimedia content
    - Opinion slants on said content
    - An ability to quickly throw their two cents in on an event

    Society Needs:

    - Watchdogs with the tools and time to take politicians and business to task;
    - Access!! (your favourite blogger probably doesn't have this! :))
    - An objective standard;
    - Fact checking and broad sourcing;
    - Journalists with the tenacity to stick on something when it isn't immediately news so that the finer detals are teased out;


  • Advertisement
Advertisement