the battle over blogs rachel beermanaddison montague hillary harperwhitney player

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THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel Beerman Addison Montague Hillary Harper Whitney Player

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Page 1: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

THE BATTLEOVER

BLOGS

Rachel BeermanAddison Montague

Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Page 2: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Blogs In General• Blogs… Making News Personal

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NN2I1pWXjXI

• Different Mediums– Text, Video (vlog), Photographs (photoblog), Music (MP3

blog), audio (podcasting), etc.

• Categories Covered– News, Political, Sports, Celebrities, Personal, etc.

• Anyone can start a blog!

Page 3: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

The History Of Blogs

• Modern blogs evolved as online diaries– First started by a student at Swarthmore College (1994)

• The name was originally weblogs– Jorn Barger shortened this name to “blogs” – Blogging seemed to really take off around 1999-2000

• Which leads us to blogs today . . .

Page 4: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Fun Facts• 14.2 million Web logs and more than 1.3 billion links

• The blogosphere continues to double about every 5 ½ months

• New blog every second; more than 80,000 created each day

• About 900,000 blog posts created everyday

or 10.4 blog posts per second on average

• Only 46% blog under their own name

Page 5: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player
Page 6: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Transparency

• Tells how a reporter got his or her information

• Crucial in determining credibility

• Provides access to a materials origin

• Ethical responsibility to hold yourself accountable

Page 7: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Rebuttal

• Its unrealistic to believe that every blog is going to state its author

• Part of the allure of blogging is being anonymous

• According to freedom of speech, it is not required for the author to state his name

Page 8: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Transparency

• Authors should have the right to choose anonymity

• Reader’s responsibility to determine whether the information is legitimate

– 53% of the population doesn’t trust everything they hear on the news

– Americans should be able to judge the information provided in a blog

Page 9: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Rebuttal

• It’s not the responsibility if you don’t give them any basis upon which to make that decision

• Informed decisions rely on knowing all of the facts– Example: Anonymous Posters

• Journalistic credibility

Page 10: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Popular vs. Credible

• Bloggers shouldn’t be held to journalistic standards

• Blogging encourages higher standards in journalism

• Celebrity gossip and personal blogs should be evaluated within their category

Page 11: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Rebuttal

• They can still be interesting while being factual!

• Need to take blogs with a grain of salt• Perezhilton.com versus CNN.com• “I would rather not see a web overcome with

rumors, half-truths and falsehoods” – “ethical dilemma of blogging”

Page 12: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Popular vs. Credible

• Audience size doesn’t make it accurate– People’s own voices rather than through

institutional go-betweens

– “If free expression is a natural human craving, so is authority. When the world is as lost as it seems to be right now, you want to know whom you can trust” – William Powers, National Journal

Page 13: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Rebuttal

• Blogs venture where journalists hesitate to journey

• Blogs can be more interesting but they come with higher risks

• Inaccuracy often “provides a much-needed new layer of checks on the accuracy of the mainstream media.” (Brown, p. 42)

Page 14: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

The lawsuits will come. . .Code of Ethics

• “One day we’ll have a libel suit based on a newspaper’s blog that wasn’t edited. It just hasn’t happened yet. To think there’s less risk just because there’s a blog is not a good strategy” – Blogging Between the Lines

•Blogs are a “developing landscape”

•Who needs a code of ethics? Why?

•Ex: John Doe vs. Patrick Cahill

Page 15: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player
Page 16: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Rebuttal

• A code of ethics might inhibit the very nature of blogging

• Difficult implementation due to fact that technology is almost constantly changing

• How do you regulate or grasp something with that much information?

Page 17: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Code of Ethics

• The First Amendment should be applicable to bloggers

• There should be no censorship or code of ethics instated.

– Reno vs. ACLU ruling

Page 18: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Code of Ethics

• Up to bloggers to hold themselves to a higher standard– Joining the Media Bloggers Association (MBA)

• Readers should investigate credibility before taking that information as fact – Readers should be held responsible

Page 19: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Rebuttal

• “Responsible bloggers should recognize that they are publishing words publicly, and therefore have certain ethical obligations to their readers, the people they write about and society in general,” – Ethical Dilemma of Blogging– Not everything is going to follow the same standard, but some

transparency is necessary– The need to be responsible for your actions – The need to be responsible for who you stand for

» Exp- blogging for the New York Post – We do acknowledge that it is a challenge!

» Internet is an “endless frontier”

Page 20: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Where Do You Stand?

Look at the following blogs and decide where you stand.

Page 21: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player
Page 22: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player
Page 23: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player
Page 24: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Community Blog from Barack Obama’s Website

Page 25: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Blog Hosted by Pat McCrory’s Campaign

Page 26: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player
Page 27: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player
Page 28: THE BATTLE OVER BLOGS Rachel BeermanAddison Montague Hillary HarperWhitney Player

Finding a Happy Medium…

The debate lies in the controversy defining the difference between

journalism and blogging.