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Topic: Media |
4:24 am EST, Nov 2, 2003 |
] let me just say that, as a slashdot troll, i have a ] firewall which allows me to dynamically modify my o/s ] fingerprint, a highly adaptive cookie manager/poisoner ] that can decode many cookies in realtime (stop using ] urlencode!), a browser plugin that lets me modify my ] entire http header including user agent, a ] database-driven transparent proxy tracker which harvests ] new proxies 24/7, scripts to generate free email accounts ] by the 100's, good web scripting skills, and on a good ] day around 500 moderation points on slashdot from over ] 1,000 monitored accounts. This is a really great discussion between a troll and a sysop. It really speaks to the fact that governance of an internet community is a very complex problem that shares many of the social dynamics of governance of a IRL community. Trolls vs. Sysops... |
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TV's Tipping Point: Why The Digital Revolution Is Only Just Beginning: PaidContent.org |
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Topic: Media |
12:02 am EDT, Oct 10, 2003 |
] No -- future TV will may be unrecognisable from today, ] defined not just by linear TV channels, packaged and ] scheduled by television executives, but instead will ] resemble more of a kaleidoscope, thousands of streams of ] content, some indistinguishable as actual channels. These ] streams will mix together broadcasters' content and ] programmes, and our viewers' contributions. At the ] simplest level -- audiences will want to organize and ] re-order content the way they want it. They'll add ] comments to our programmes,programmes, vote on them and ] generally mess about with them. But at another level, ] audiences will want to create these streams of video ] themselves from scratch, with or without our help. At ] this end of the spectrum, the traditional "monologue ] broadcaster" to "grateful viewer" relationship will break ] down, and traditional advertising and subscription models ] will no longer be viable. The director of BBC New Media on why MemeStreams is the future of Television. :) TV's Tipping Point: Why The Digital Revolution Is Only Just Beginning: PaidContent.org |
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OJR article: Interview with Google News Creator |
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Topic: Media |
4:48 pm EDT, Oct 4, 2003 |
] After Sept. 11, when all the newspapers were recording ] who, what, when, where -- there was a big question of ] why. Why did this happen? What's going to happen in the ] future? A lot of people were spending a lot of time ] looking for news, and I was one of them. All the servers ] were slow and it took a long time to find the content. ] Fundamentally, I wanted to build a tool that would ] automate this: Here's a new development, let's find all ] the articles that talk about this development. OJR article: Interview with Google News Creator |
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Japan Media Review -- OhmyNews Makes Every Citizen a Reporter |
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Topic: Media |
4:48 pm EDT, Oct 4, 2003 |
Now professional journalists have to survive not only competition among themselves, but also from that with ordinary netizens. The only way to compete now is through the quality of their articles. That means that the age of competing through the name card "I am a New York Times reporter" has gone. When a New York Times reporter writes an article and an ordinary citizen -- whether he is a professor or a neighbor -- writes an article criticizing it splendidly, then the citizen becomes the winner. Good interview with the creator of OhmyNews Japan Media Review -- OhmyNews Makes Every Citizen a Reporter |
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