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A few days ago they announced they’d sell newspaper ads, now Google says Its efforts in radio advertising could grow to include 1,000 employees–and not just in ad sales.
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Blogs that contain legal discussions and background information are challenging traditional practices on attorney advertising (Chicago Tribune)
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Actually he was talking about trust: Hundreds of millions of digitally literate ‘ordinary people’ are writing blogs and making podcasts every day… and telling very good stories in the process.
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You upload the photos, it tags them for you. Might be useful for news and media orgs.
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Adam gives overview of blogging, then Amy ties that back into the bigger picture of conversational media, and why that’s becoming important to media, communities — and to journalists who hope to keep making a living
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But not in the UK, which has invested heavily in the inferior, and ageing, MP2 format
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Two new companies help people find and erase their online past
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Sulzberger said one could argue The New York Times has been slow to integrate content from bloggers and other citizen journalists.
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We don’t need gatekeepers to web based content, we just need help finding it – and that’s where curators come in
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Hi Robin – you’ve picked up on Nancy White chatting about The Big Questions raised at our recent community informatics conference on community memory.
http://ccnr.webstylus.net/wiki/index.php?n=Main.TheBigQuestions
I’d encourage everybody to take a look, and feel free to add their own comments, musings, maybe some answers :-)
Email me for the password to edit: m.b.gaved -.at.- open.ac.uk … alas we’ve found wide open wikis or putting the password online results in too much wikispam, but I’m happy for you to give the password to all and sundry, the more people thinking about these questions and chatting with each other the better!
cheers, Mark