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Thursday, March 15, 2007
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Welcome. We're covering a story:
How the Web makes it possible for the crowd to be the source of good
ideas. But instead of one journalist reporting, we've created a site
where many people can work on the story, with editors as guides. You are now in the Newsroom, where you can find an overview and learn what others are doing. The Assignment Desk is where you can see what we're covering in detail, and get an assignment. The Exchange is a place to offer new ideas. Check the day's developments with The Scoop. Ready? Join up.
3:36:39 PM
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Welcome to Assignment Zero. It's pro-am journalism in the open style
made possible by the web. This is a collaboration among
NewAssignment.Net, Wired and those who choose to participate.
I hope you will. Because we're trying to figure something out here.
Can large groups of widely scattered people, working together
voluntarily on the net, report on something happening in their world
right now, and by dividing the work wisely tell the story more
completely, while hitting high standards in truth, accuracy and free
expression?
If they can, this would matter.
It's called Assignment Zero
because we needed to jump start our site somehow, and this project with
Wired turned out to be it. We're trying to create a pro-am,
open-platform reporting tool that we can improve and modify later, for
use in bigger, more sprawling and difficult stories down the road.
Maybe about the environment. Or the schools. Or -- who knows? -- the
war.
3:35:07 PM
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Assignment Zero Tests Pro-Am Journalism Jay Rosen writes "Assignment Zero
is a pro-am, open-platform reporting project. The investigation: crowd
sourcing and peer production are a social trend growing well beyond
tech. Why is this happening? Partners: NewAssignment.Net and Wired.com, with Newsvine. From the Wired essay:
'We're trying to figure something out here. Can large groups of widely
scattered people, working together voluntarily on the net, report on
something happening in their world right now, and by dividing the work
wisely tell the story more completely, while hitting high standards in
truth, accuracy and free expression?' Wired.com: 'We want out readers
and our sources to be one and the same. We think it will make for
better journalism.'" [Slashdot]
3:32:28 PM
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© Copyright 2007 Paul Hardwick.
Last update: 3/18/07; 8:07:12 PM.
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