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Election '08: Cyber-Watchdogs
Seattle Times and Citizen Journalism
Using the public
Here is an example of the way the Seattle Times embraced citizen journalism.
By Lilly Fowler, 04/25/08 at 11:37 am
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Bakersfield Californian
Databases
As Vikki Porter says, the motto for the Bakersfield Californian: blogging first and print later. They also have a 10 years worth of state and district campaign contributions database. Click here.
By Chiara Canzi, 04/25/08 at 11:05 am
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Begin with visualization in mind
Do you want to spice up your online reporting? Think visualization.
During Matthew Waite’s presentation on visualizing your reporting, he urged reporters and editors to do something that sounds simple - think visual. Yet, he warned that it’s not easy. His advice: think about interactive elements first. This wisdom boils down to starting backwards for most print journalists. Don’t wait until the story is done to figure out how to visually present it. You’ll frustrate yourself and your graphics department. Begin with the end in mind. Think interactive first.
By Brooke-Sidney Gavins, 04/25/08 at 10:47 am
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Newspapers and “Citizen Journalists”
Should newspapers turn to free hires for help?
Marc Cooper, when talking about The Huffington’s “Off the Bus” project, said he didn’t see why more traditional media outlets couldn’t turn to “regular folk” for reporting and then have trained editors churn out a story from the information gathered. This suggestion raised quite a commotion. Unfortunately, the conversation was cut short. So let’s continue it here on-line. What do folks think? Will citizen journalism continue to grow? And what does that mean for the future of reporters? And what of Marc’s suggestion? Why aren’t newspapers doing more projects like “Off the Bus”?
By Lilly Fowler, 04/25/08 at 09:59 am
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Citizen journalism in political reporting creates more questions
Hey I thought we were going to get answers to this online media world not more questions.
During Marc Cooper’s discussion of citizen journalism today, he asked, “Why aren’t mainstream newspapers taking advantage of citizen journalists or cyber sourcing for national political stories?” To many newspaper professionals, his question may have sounded like, “Hey, why not get free labor to help your reporting team?” This statement prompted a discussion that was cut short. Yet, it made me think about a couple of things. If newspapers hire free writers to cover political campaigns, where does that leave staff reporters? And if stories from citizen journalists like Mayhill Fowler of HuffingtonPost.com’s Off the Bus (who broke the story about Obama’s use of the word “bitter” and more) become more popular, do you have to be a “professional” journalist to have a “credible” story? Hey, by the way, what part does credibility play in this new and evolving world of modern journalism? I thought we were going to get some answers to this shifting online media world not more questions. Interested in provoking yourself even more? Cooper reminded the audience to take a look at Jay Rosen’s blog entry on ”The Unchartered”
By Brooke-Sidney Gavins, 04/25/08 at 09:50 am
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MAPLight.org
The Numbers are Ready
Political reporting is getting easier and easier thanks to supporting digital novelty sites that group statistics and numbers, and list interest groups’ involvement in legislature. MAPLight.org is non-profit organization whose idea behind the technology is to connect the inputs and outputs, that is to say, to publicly post politician’s every move from fund raising, to campaign contribution to lobbying contributions. This is heaven for an investigative journalist. Dan Newman, co-founder and executive director of MAPLight.org said that the staff and research interns (free hire?) collect and put together the numbers for us, journalists, to interpret. Journalists, in turn, can utilize these resources to craft complex reports, stories, exposes in the spirit of the true watchdog journalist.
By Chiara Canzi, 04/25/08 at 09:49 am
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Value of transparency?
Transparency vs. illusion of truth
Marc Cooper has said that what the public and what he personally values is transparency rather than this illusion of “truth” presented by the media. Is this the direction media is heading? Openly bias?
By Lilly Fowler, 04/25/08 at 09:38 am
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Go Deep
“Googling” does not count for online research. You must go deep.
During today’s session on “Cyber Sleuthing” led by Margot Williams from The New York Times, I realized that I must “go deep.” No, I am not referring to a psychology state, being reflective or even improving my meditation abilities. And “going deep” doesn’t refer to thinking deeper philosophically. Williams advised journalists that a Google search for story research isn’t enough. And we must use various online sources to mine the internet and discover the real nuggets we’ll need for our stories. According to Williams, Google only indexes about 10 percent of the web and “doesn’t give us a leg up on anybody.” There is a whole world of information out there on the world wide web (pun intended) because the it has multiple layers: surface and deep. Williams provided some helpful information to access the “deep web” and several valuable web sites to find information on just about anything. Stay tuned because Knight Digital promised to post the information to help our online research and stories go deeper.
By Brooke-Sidney Gavins, 04/25/08 at 08:42 am
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Clinton Cash
Clinton Cash, Campaign Money
Sitting here listening to Margot Williams talk about how she and other reporters have tracked the Clintons’ finances brings to mind the recent reports about the couples’ tax filing. No matter how the media might attempt to detail just how much money the Clintons make, how they get it and the way they are spending it, questions always remain. This is due in part, I think, to the Clintons’ shrewd maneuvering of their financial records. But it’s also due to the limited amount of information available to the public, even when one does know all the ins and outs of the kind of web stalking we’ve been learning about in the seminar. This information, however, is important. And now especially. Clinton has taken the role of the underdog, repeatedly referring to Obama’s more abundant campaign funds but one continues to wonder, is her campaign really in as much financial trouble as she is claiming?
By Lilly Fowler, 04/25/08 at 08:35 am
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Citizen Journalism
Citizen Journalism and the Issue of Transparency
Citizen journalism is what the future is all about. Yet the question remains: how do we know if what we get is legitimate? The Huffington Post’s Off the Bus project directed by Marc Cooper is trying to break out of the illegitimacy mold. The simple purpose of the project is to cover politics in the digital age. And that’s no easy task. “What we are finding is that we can do journalism with crowd sourcing,” said Cooper. The Post distributed research among crowds of users in ‘loosely defined communities,’ in an efforts to get to the real people. Old rules are broken in this new era of online journalism. In essence, everyone can be a journalist, but, as Cooper points out, the importance of having bodies on the ground transcends the slightly anxious task of editing self-defined citizen reports. Heated discussions ensue on the point of the traditional values of journalism. Are the strict guidelines and standard structure of current mainstream journalism hurting the core of reporting?
The Post prides itself with an understated notion of transparency as opposed to the claim of solid and inalienable truth. What is, then, the level of transparency? Open bias?
By Chiara Canzi, 04/25/08 at 07:31 am
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Follow the seminar on Twitter
Follow the seminar using Russ Walker’s comments on the social messaging tool, Twitter.
- 4/24/2008 11:04: Online in a room full of journalists who are all online. What's next?
- 4/24/2008 11:09: Our first speaker: http://tinyurl.com/5rngnz
- 4/24/2008 11:11: Hilarious: http://www.congressionalbad...
- 4/24/2008 11:22: 2nd Speaker: Karen Jagoda. http://evoterinstitute.com/...
- 4/24/2008 11:30: Jagoda: In 2008, most voters have access to the Internet.
- 4/24/2008 11:36: Jagoda: Not all online activists are actually qualified/able to vote.
- 4/24/2008 11:45: Jagoda: campaign pros are not taking advantage of the Web or adjusting to the changes in the media landscape.
- 4/24/2008 11:48: 3rd speaker: Colin Delaney, http://tinyurl.com/6b5k24
- 4/24/2008 12:00: Delaney recommends: http://blog.wired.com/27bst...
- 4/24/2008 12:02: 4th speaker: Morra Aarons-Mele, http://womenandwork.org/abo...
- 4/24/2008 12:08: Aarons-Mele: too early to tell if candidates' use of Internet pays off on mobilization side of things.
- 4/24/2008 12:11: A state-level blog to watch: http://www.calitics.com/
- 4/24/2008 12:22: Dennis Johnson doing study of presidential campaign emails. Planning to do a paper on it. Has collected database of 7000 messages.
- 4/24/2008 12:33: Pamela Gentry from BET says Obama is so good online b/c he was forced to hire unknown consultants -- b/c edwards and hrc had hired the pros
- 4/24/2008 12:48: Next speaker is matthew Waite of PolitiFact. Then there's NYT's Pilhofer, the man who stole Derek Willis from us. Argh!
- 4/24/2008 12:55: Aron Pilhofer's blog: http://www.frozenhellscape....
- 4/24/2008 12:58: Pilhofer says we didn't make our HRC schedule docs searchable. We did, I say. He notes we were a day behind him. I slink off...
- 4/24/2008 13:01: Bart vs. Lisa Web users. Barts are drive-by surfers. Lisas are loyal, spending more time on site.
- 4/24/2008 13:10: NYT is partnering with manyeyes: http://blog.many-eyes.com/
- 4/24/2008 13:15: CBC created discussion groups for all 300 parliamentary districts for the 2006 national election.
- 4/24/2008 13:20: Aron says there are 25 positions at NYT.com for moderating user comments. Mostly part-timers working from home. wow
- 4/24/2008 13:21: Aron: "Within the next few months, we are going to be API-izing our site."
- 4/24/2008 13:26: Aron: "At the Times, the engine for innovation is on the newspaper side, not the Web side."
- 4/24/2008 13:31: Matt Waite talking now about how PolitiFact got started.
- 4/24/2008 13:36: What's did Matt say about "jango"? It's this: http://www.djangobook.com/, which was invented by him: http://www.holovaty.com/
- 4/24/2008 13:37: Aron Pilhofer is a Ruby man: http://www.rubyonrails.org/
- 4/24/2008 13:40: Waite on crowdsourcing local politics: Google Docs as source collector; Twine as 'meme watcher'; and Twitter (love/hate).
- 4/24/2008 13:41: Waite: St. Pete Times will Twitter the NFL draft.
- 4/24/2008 13:50: Matt Waite just showed us a very cool Google Docs app that allows you to quickly create a form for gathering info. from other Web users.
- 4/24/2008 15:50: 1st afternoon speaker: Larry Makinson, one of the Founding Fathers of tracking money in politics.
- 4/24/2008 15:51: 203 members of congress have leadership PACs!
- 4/24/2008 15:57: opensecrets.org Web site to be relaunched next month.
- 4/24/2008 16:21: Bill Allison from Sunlight is up next: http://www.sunlightfoundati...
- 4/24/2008 16:24: Wow. Allison shows slide tracking donations from Verizon employees to Sen. Rockefeller -- FISA debate was driver.
- 4/24/2008 16:38: One of The Post's pieces on tariff suspensions: http://tinyurl.com/5wse8p
- 4/24/2008 16:39: Sign up for an account at http://www.opencongress.org
- 4/24/2008 16:43: Paul Singer from Roll Call is up now. Hey Paul, how about free subscriptions to rollcall.com!

- 4/24/2008 16:46: The Lobbying Disclosure Database on senate.gov: http://tinyurl.com/6olawj
- 4/24/2008 16:51: Taxpayers for Common Sense: http://www.taxpayer.net/
- 4/24/2008 17:22: Tooting The Post's own horn here -- an earmarks story http://tinyurl.com/5tzl52
- 4/24/2008 17:36: Sarah Cohen is up next, one washingtonpost.com's good friends in the newsroom.
- 4/24/2008 17:37: One of Sarah's stories: http://tinyurl.com/2jhyey
- 4/24/2008 17:43: The very cool USA Today project on Capitol Hill properties: http://tinyurl.com/2lduqb
- 4/24/2008 18:15: A link to the map in Sarah's presentation: http://tinyurl.com/57ohj8
- 4/24/2008 18:22: Here's the Spheres of Influence graphic: http://tinyurl.com/yu6tr
- 4/24/2008 18:26: The whole 2004 Bush Money Machine package: http://tinyurl.com/6o3cjg
- 4/24/2008 18:38: Here's the FARA site: http://www.justice.gov/crim...
- 4/24/2008 18:43: Who's on Del.icio.us? http://del.icio.us/rhwalker22
- 4/25/2008 1:18: Saw Sharon Stone in a restaurant tonight! Yes, I'm one of THOSE easily-impressed-by-celebrity types... . Oh, and the new Spock was there too
- 4/25/2008 9:33: washingtonpost.com's experiment with Twitter: twitter.com/postpolitics
- 4/25/2008 10:59: Day 2 begins. Margot Williams of the NYT.
- 4/25/2008 11:00: Margot's work on NYT: http://tinyurl.com/6mg9z9
- 4/25/2008 11:05: Library of Congress's Web Capture program: http://www.loc.gov/webcaptu...
- 4/25/2008 11:09: ZoomInfo provides free subscriptions to journalists.
- 4/25/2008 11:12: Contact info. for ZoomInfo is here (over on right side of page): http://www.zoominfo.com/Abo...
- 4/25/2008 11:15: Here is post.com's congress votes db (goes back to 1991, 102nd congress): http://projects.washingtonp...
- 4/25/2008 11:32: Here's The Posts's project on Bill Clinton speeches: http://tinyurl.com/2guzgm
- 4/25/2008 11:41: Federal Audit Clearinghouse: http://harvester.census.gov...
- 4/25/2008 11:45: Next up: Marc Cooper of HuffPost/USC Annenberg
- 4/25/2008 11:47: About Marc Cooper: http://marccooper.com/about...
- 4/25/2008 12:18: HuffPost's Super Delegates project: http://tinyurl.com/2kofkm
- 4/25/2008 12:20: @WPLauraCochran marc cooper and amanda michel from huffpost -- great presentation on citizen journalism
- 4/25/2008 12:27: Here is Jay Rosen's piece: http://tinyurl.com/5oma7s
- 4/25/2008 12:28: Jarvis's take on the debate: http://tinyurl.com/68mp8b
- 4/25/2008 12:47: A link from Eugene Kiely of USA Today: http://tinyurl.com/5k6r9d
- 4/25/2008 12:47: That link is usatoday.com's Electoral College interactive
- 4/25/2008 12:50: Here's a recent Jay Rosen piece on objectivity: http://tinyurl.com/33z6wp
- 4/25/2008 13:04: Here's is Matt's bookmarks on Del.icio.us: http://del.icio.us/mdwaite
- 4/25/2008 13:04: Next speaker: Matthew Waite of St. Pete Times/PolitiFact
- 4/25/2008 13:05: And here's his personal site: http://www.mattwaite.com/
- 4/25/2008 13:08: HRC travel schedules, on the Post: http://tinyurl.com/3a7mf6
- 4/25/2008 13:09: On NYT.com: http://tinyurl.com/6xl4ls
- 4/25/2008 13:10: and here's the page Matt is showing us: http://www.politifact.com/m...
- 4/25/2008 13:24: St. Pete Times's wetlands project: http://sptimes.com/2006/web...
- 4/25/2008 13:28: Apture: http://www.apture.com/
- 4/25/2008 13:30: Next up is Dan Newman of MapLight.org
- 4/25/2008 13:36: MapLight's widget page: http://www.maplight.org/wid...
- 4/25/2008 13:42: Here's the maplight API page: http://www.maplight.org/wid...
- 4/25/2008 13:44: post.com's prez fundraising section: http://tinyurl.com/2m4onq
- 4/25/2008 13:46: NYT's campaign finance search: http://tinyurl.com/6382l8
- 4/25/2008 14:12: send your maplight email address to
- 4/25/2008 14:24: Here's the post.com widgets collection: http://tinyurl.com/6o7v93
- 4/25/2008 16:30: The group is split up into smaller sections to work on our projects.
- 4/25/2008 18:20: Just accused by NPR reporter of shameless promotion of post.com on this Twitter feed.
- 4/25/2008 18:21: Look at NPR's cool primary/caucus map: http://tinyurl.com/22zwlz/p...
- 4/25/2008 18:22: And here's NPR's "Secret Money" project: http://tinyurl.com/6yek7x
- 4/26/2008 11:23: Good newspaper video essay by Mindy McAdams: http://tinyurl.com/49d5p8
- 4/26/2008 11:58: Here is MSNBC's First Read: http://firstread.msnbc.msn....
- 4/26/2008 12:04: Tooting the Post's own horn: Abramoff coverage -- http://tinyurl.com/8chq6
- 4/26/2008 12:07: Seattle Times's McDermott story: http://tinyurl.com/5hexpj
- 4/26/2008 12:49: Here is the Off The Bus Campaign Field Guide (wiki): http://tinyurl.com/5g8vh3
- 4/26/2008 13:22: My collection of links to sites/features mentioned during the USC Knight Seminar: http://tinyurl.com/5mcxbu
- 4/26/2008 20:40: Walked through L.A.'s Little Tokyo. Who knew? Great, kitschy stuff in the stores.
By Vikki Porter, 04/24/08 at 10:06 am
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Mark Warner on 2nd Life
Read Dana Milbank’s take
Speaking of Mark Warner and 2nd Life, The Post’s Dana Milbank did a hilarious send off on it:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/31/AR2006083101522.html
By Russ Walker, 04/24/08 at 08:38 am
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How do we make money?
Will the sort of work that is being done by nonprofits in this area be taken over by profit-making companies? Should it?
Folks:
As I was thinking about coming to this seminar, I kept coming back to a question that I don’t normally ask myself in this sort of setting: How are we going to make money doing what we are talking about at this event? It is striking that so much of the good work is being done by nonprofits. Certainly, I don’t care who does the work, as long as it gets done. But in the longterm, I think for this work to be sustained it needs to be profitable. Am I wrong? I was telling another fellow that I wonder whether the role of nonprofits is simply a transitional phase. Thoughts?
Bill Theobald
By William Theobald, 04/24/08 at 08:03 am
Posted in Campaign Finance
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Using Internet Tools to Cover Elections
This blog reflects the way a group of USC Annenberg graduate students interpret what they hear during the three-day workshop: Election ‘08: Unleashing the Cyber-Watchdogs.
The 2008 election has seen the internet and online campaigns change the face of political engagement forever. And the need for aggressive reporting and monitoring of campaigns and candidates has never been greater. The Knight Digital Media Center is hosting a seminar for 24 professional journalists focused on how they can use the internet and digital tools to better engage their audiences and expand the impact of their coverage of candidates. We invite you to join the discussion as our fellows, experts and students from Annenberg School of Journalism blog the seminar events.
By Vikki Porter, 04/18/08 at 11:49 am
Posted in News
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