NewsWorks gets it

19 Feb 2012

When WHYY launched NewsWorks a year and some months ago, I was a skeptic. While they were using the right tools, their terms of service agreement looked like it was designed to stifle any real community engagement. The ToS still reads like it was crafted by an RIAA lawyer who’d sooner hug a panhandler than give $40 to public broadcasting. But I was dead wrong about NewsWorks’ ability to engage its community.

In the year or so since they launched, the folks at WHYY have attracted and engaged people in civil and informative conversations. If that sounds easy to you, head on over to Philly.com and troll their comment sections for a minute. I don’t know the ins-and-outs of NewsWorks’ moderation process. I do know that good moderation requires more people, time and thought than most organizations are willing to budget for. Doing it well on a public broadcasting budget — that’s commendable.  Keep reading…

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One of Philly’s public radio stations, WHYY, has launched a crowd-sourced website newsroom to CPR an otherwise moribund pool of local journalism. It’s called Newsworks ~ a Joomla install with a new template and Community Builder.

As an effort in community journalism, I wish them well.

Their site, though, flies in the face of their mission. Everything about the site is built on community effort, yet they don’t acknowledge open source anywhere. their ToS contains language that probably violates the GPL (the license on which their site is built).

And if one truly wanted to crowdsource journalism, isn’t using a Creative Commons license a natch? Between the ToS and the Discussion Agreement, I don’t see much potential for growing community engagement.

I don’t have a problem with community conduct; I’ve signed the Ubuntu code of conduct. But I have a nagging feeling that the folks that put Newsworks together — the back-end and the content — are newbies to online communities.

Tip to my friends at WHYY: It’s not that hard to reach out to Lessig or Bacon, and they’d be happy to share what they know (being community-oriented and all).

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Buzzkill

12 Feb 2010

Only a colossal miscalculation could make Facebook look like it cared about privacy.

Google is certainly a colossus. The roll-out of Buzz was uncharacteristically miscalculated.

While Buzz itself is pretty cool, the first reaction to the launch was downright cold. Nothing to do with the service or its features — folks were seriously peeved when they logged into Gmail to discover that people they don’t know or like were suddenly “following” them.

Google seriously misread a chunk of its users — that’s not like them — and it’s important to understand what they got wrong and why they might not be able to correct it. Keep reading…

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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
This work by Dale Wilcox is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported.