Streaming Media

Description

Technologically driven changes in media presentation have changed the way high-profile court cases are presented to the public. Traditional news institutions strive to keep pace with bloggers without sacrificing established quality control methods, and the proliferation of cable news outlets has added to the din surrounding these cases.

In Panel # 2: The Role and Responsibility of New Media, Professor James Salzman, the Samuel Fox Mordecai Professor of Law at Duke University School of Law, discusses the issues surrounding the emergence of new media with bloggers Marcy Wheeler and KC Johnson, and USA Today Executive Editor Kinsey Wilson.

Questions/themes/discussion topics
  • The role of document analysis, as opposed to reliance on human sources, in the new media
  • Genre fluidity in the blogosphere
  • Open source investigation
  • Quality-control and accuracy in the non-institutional media
  • Pseudonymity and anonymity among online bloggers and commentors
  • Blogs as traditional media watchdogs
  • Online outing of alleged sexual assault victims
  • Will new media change media consumption habits?

Date

9-28-2007 10:50 AM

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Sep 28th, 10:50 AM

The Role and Responsibility of New Media

Technologically driven changes in media presentation have changed the way high-profile court cases are presented to the public. Traditional news institutions strive to keep pace with bloggers without sacrificing established quality control methods, and the proliferation of cable news outlets has added to the din surrounding these cases.

In Panel # 2: The Role and Responsibility of New Media, Professor James Salzman, the Samuel Fox Mordecai Professor of Law at Duke University School of Law, discusses the issues surrounding the emergence of new media with bloggers Marcy Wheeler and KC Johnson, and USA Today Executive Editor Kinsey Wilson.

Questions/themes/discussion topics
  • The role of document analysis, as opposed to reliance on human sources, in the new media
  • Genre fluidity in the blogosphere
  • Open source investigation
  • Quality-control and accuracy in the non-institutional media
  • Pseudonymity and anonymity among online bloggers and commentors
  • Blogs as traditional media watchdogs
  • Online outing of alleged sexual assault victims
  • Will new media change media consumption habits?