Ronda Hauben on Mon, 10 Jan 2005 01:01:49 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Working on article about the need for a progressive press in US |
Some thoughts and questions about the US and online News Media and the recent election in the US I am working on an article about the ferment in media in the US and whether it can help to challenge the conservative media that has been the support for the manipulation of public opinion in the US, as for example, with mainstream US media promoting the notion of WMD as the basis to invade Iraq. I wondered if anyone on this list has suggestions of where there might be some help in understanding the concern of media people, of journalists, of progressive people, etc. that there be a media that is less easy to manipulate in the US. Recently there was a conference at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard in early December 2004. Jay Rosen posted on his blog, that the director of the Berkman Center, John Palfrey, told him: "We want to ask hard questions that get past the hype and to what's real in this story -- if anything," Palfrey wrote. "We are interested, to the greatest exten t we can, in uncovering, together, the truth about whether the internet." "Is the Internet really is changing politics, not just in the US but around the world, for the better." Also that the question being raised for the conference was Has "citizenship" really changed in the online era? Was anyone on this mailing list at the conference? The reports I saw of what happened at the conference seemed very narrow and counter to the stated purpose It didn't seem, for example, that the essential question of how there could only be a real challenge to the Bush administration if there had been a challenge to the conservative press by a more progressive, and broad ranging press in the US was even raised at the conference. There are example like OhmyNews in South Korea, or Telepolis in Germany, which show that a broader and more netizen oriented press is possible. Articles written for these focus on encouraging discussion rather than providing information that no one cares about. Also if there were such a press in the US, then it would be the basis to provide a pressure on the more conservative news media to allow their journalists to report in a way that it serves a public interest and purpose. Also it seemed that the Republican online director was welcomed. Did those holding the conference consider that what the Republican Party did in the election was part of "changing politics...for the better."? That's a hard pill to swollow if that was the rationale for inviting him. Also there was an interview with Dan Gilmor in Ohmynews (the English edition) shortly after the conference. Gilmor talks about how he doesn't want to challenge capitalism and how the conservative people in S Korea should form their own form of an OhmyNews. This is hard to understand as Ohmynews in S. Korea was formed to challenge the domination of politics by the conservative media. In the US as well, the conservative media has much funding and ability to promote capitalism. What is needed is a way to critique capitalism, and to develop a progressive challenge to the conservative media in the US. Unbridled capitalism running rampant and without having the eyes of any media challenging it doesn't represent any regard for capitalism nor for the public purpose that journalism is commonly claimed as the goal. Thus it is hard to understand how Gilmor can equate "grassroots" journalism with a support for broader access to a media for those with procapitalism and conservative viewpoints. Now there is a new conference planned at the Harvard Berkman School. Blogging, Journalism & Credibility by invitation only. http://cyber.law.harvard.edu:8080/webcred/index.php?p=5 One of the papers they propose that people read for the conference is about a blog that criticized the North Korean government. While the North Korean government may not be the ideal government form, journalists who joined the condemnation of the Iraq government in the run up to the Iraq war, helped to prepare the groundwork for the illegal US invasion of Iraq. Since the US govt and the neocons are currently targeting North Korea as they did Iraq, it would seem that US journalists need to learn how they were used to wage an invasion in violation of international law against Iraq, by their support of the US governments phony claims of WMD in Iraq. Proposing a blog that targets the North Korean government as an example of credible journalism is another hard pill to swollow. It is hard to understand what the purpose of these conferences at the Berkman Center are for, except to help to discourage a more progressive media effort on the part of people who realize the problem that exists in the US at the moment. It would be good to know of current efforts to consider how to challenge the conservative media's power in the US. Are there any online papers that are welcoming of input and articles, and discussion toward a progressive viewpoint? About 10 years ago, Michael Hauben wrote an article that then became a chapter in our book "Netizens: On the History and Impact of Usenet and the Internet". The chapter was "The Effect of the Net on the Professional News Media" http://www.columbia.edu/~rh120/ch106.x13 Though he spoke about Usenet as the dominant online media at the time, one could now substitute newsgroups, blogs, mailing lists etc and draw similar conclusions. Michael also considered the professional news media and what they would need to do to maintain any credibility, i.e. how they would have to change. Is this what the Berkman conferences are about, ie. a concern that the netizen form of online media may replace the established news media? Those who have such a concern, and who feel there is a place for professional journalists and journalism in the future, along with the netizen reporters, would seem to do well to look at OhmyNews and Telepolis as examples of a more progressive form of journalism that supports a certain number of professional journalists, but also welcomes netizen contributions. Yet none of this seems to be on the agenda for discussion at the Berkman Center at Harvard. Is it on the agenda for discussion anywhere that anyone knows of? Thanks for any comments on the issues and questions my efforts to work on this article are raising. Ronda ronda@panix.com Some articles and contributions considering these issues are online at: Netizens News Online http://www.ais.org/~jrh/netizens.news/ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net