AUDIO: Four editors discuss future of newspapers; danger of controlling pipes and content



SEARCH GIRAFFE PROSPECTS | MISSION | AUDIO/VIDEO RESOURCES | >MGP-FORUM | KEY QUOTES | HOME PAGE | ABOUT US | COLLABORATORS | BLOG RESOURCE SITE | BLOG NEWS SITE | MGP2006 ALUMNI NEWS | SUMMIT WIKI | CONTACT US | SUPPORT US | SPONSORS | REPORT A SIGHTING | Google News Search
Last Updated: Oct 12th, 2007 - 21:58:21 


Newshare.net
NEWS/RESEARCH TOPICS 
 
 A-About MGP
 
 A-CONFERENCE
 
 A-AUDIO/VIDEO resources
 
 A-Blogs
 
 A-Business Models
 
 A-Citizen journalism
 
 A-Democracy Futures
 
 A-Education & Training
 
 A-Ethics and Standards
 
 A-First Amendment / Free Speech / Press
 
 A-Giraffes at Work?
 
 A-Ideas-Trends-Innovation
 
 A-Journalism Futures
 
 A-KEY ESSAYS
 
 A-KEY QUOTATIONS
 
 A-Multimedia & Video Innovation
 
 A-Ownership, governance & management
 
 A-Podcasting & Audio
 
 A-VERBATIM-Interview Q&As
 
 Broadcasting/ Low Power FM
 
 Cable Local Access (PEG)
 
 Community wireless
 
 Conferences / Events
 
 Entertainment Industry
 
 Internet-Advertising
 
 Internet-Privacy-Online
 
 Internet-Technology
 
 Music-Future
 
 Online News Services
 
 Regulation: FCC and the courts
 
 Research / Demographics
 
 Resources
 
 Trackbacks/MGP in the news



Newshare.net
A-Podcasting & Audio
Newshare.net
AUDIO: Four editors discuss future of newspapers; danger of controlling pipes and content
By MGP Project
May 20, 2005, 09:04

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
In December, four editors spent a half hour on a San Francisco public radio station discussing the future of newspapers and how they are economically challenged by the Internet. DOWNLOAD MP3 HERE.

FOUND AT:

http://parmedia.org/feature/display/227/index.php


The program was broadcast Dec. 13, 2004 on KALW in San Francisco, 91.7 on the program, "City Visions Radio," hosted weekly by Rose Levon.

The session covered citizen media, blogging, self-publishing, and how these will affect traditional newspaper publishing. With Dan Gillmor, former business and echnology columnist for the San Jose Mercury News (now founder of Grass Roots Media Inc.; Kevin Keane, vice president and executive editor of ANG Newspapers (including the Oakland Tribune); Robert Rosenthal, managing editor of the San Francisco Chronicle; and John McManus, director, Grade the News.
In an explicit warning, Gillmor warns that cable companies should be forbidden by law to change the quality of service their provide to information providers based on their content. Here is what Gillmor said:
"... The providers of broadband, which will be, in effect, over time the way that a lot of people if not most get most of the information that they use. It is utterly dangerous that the broadband providers are being permitted to control not just the pipes but the information that flows on the pipes. We are in real trouble, if that goes on and if they start discriminating on the basis of content, as they would be able to do . . . they say they are not going to do that and we have to trust them.
". . . They policy is quite vague, and it doesn't say that they must have what amounts to open architecture where the user can have control over what's coming down. If they decided for example to deliver information or entertainment from one source at a faster rate than from another and slow up someone else's that may be completely legal. There certainly gonna' be regulatory if they tried. But what I am saying is the current consolidation of mass media will look tame compared to what these guys can do if they are not utterly prevented from doing it. Or if, what is the one outside hope, if wireless doesn't come along and save us from this. but this is a very big deal and one which people should be up at arms about."

Newshare.net


© Copyright 2006/2007. All rights reserved by original source.

This page may contain copyrighted material, the use of which may not have specifically authorized by the copyright owner. The material is made available in the The Media Giraffe Project's efforts to advance understanding of political, economic, democracy, First Amendment, technology, journalism, community and justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' as provided by Section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Chapter 1, Section 107, the material above is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. The Media Giraffe Project has no affiliation with the originator of this article, nor is the project endorsed or sponsored by the article's originator. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

"The Media Giraffe Project was launched with the collaboration of The Giraffe Heroes Project, a separate organization that since 1982 has been moving people to stick their necks out for the common good." Top of Page


A-Podcasting & Audio
Latest Postings
Some 80% of students have device capable of playing downloaded audio files
AUDIO: Four editors discuss future of newspapers; danger of controlling pipes and content
Get Ready for Podcasting
Newshare.net