The Rise of Independent Media Centers 12
An Anonymous Coward writes: "The Online Journalism Review has a thoughtful piece that looks at the intersection of mass media, democracy, and technology. The Independent Media Centers are the nodes where this all happens. It's interesting that this article is written from the point of view of the journalism profession. I wonder what bloggers would say? Or the social activists who are making the news thanks to this and similar new media. See Modern Day Muckrakers: The Rise of the Independent Media Center Movement."
from the article (Score:4, Insightful)
This is the problem with the mainstream media today; exchanging one form of bias for another doesn't exactly sound like an advance.
Re:from the article (Score:4, Informative)
All journalists, and all journals, are inherently biased. No single reporter or editor can hope to compile even an approximation of "truth," in its totality, for her or his readers.
Due to its ownership, most mass media around the world has either a corporate bias (the global big-6 media monopolies [mediachannel.org] are more beholden to their shareholders and advertisers than to the public interest) or government bias (totalitarian nations and state-sponsored media outlets). Even non-profit and non-commercial media outlets suffer from the whims of their donors and owners.
The philosophies behind the IMC network is that technology and the open-publishing model are expanding media-access for everyone: the poor, the under-educated, activists, advocacy groups, fringe dissidents, working people - anyone. Meanwhile, the "consensus" process allows each IMC editorial collective to put together featured content that all participants endorse and stand behind (or, at least, stand aside). This still-experimental paradigm is radically different from the hierarchical editorial structure of corporate and government media.
Re:from the article (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:from the article (Score:2)
Once upon a time however, you *knew* the bias of a particular paper. This one was Democratic, that one Republican, etc..
speaking of which, (Score:4, Interesting)
open publishing (Score:2)
featured article includes a link
to another document entitled
open publishing is the same as free software [cat.org.au]
this piece is a little bit fluffy (ok a lot), and gets some details wrong (equating free software to open source for example) but has some interesting rhetoric, vis :
not news to us :(
the rise of indy-media (Score:1)
Learning takes hard work. (Score:2)
And that's fine. That's a valid choice.
Although, dealing with people of this nature can be frustrating as hell! Still, it's pointless to argue such matters with those who are more interested in maintaining comfortable illusions than they are in struggling for real knowledge.
For those, however, who do find themselves on the path of personal growth, independant news sources can provide a slice of un-polished data which, while often unprofessional, poorly researched, (or plain raving mad), when cross examined, can prove to be very useful for gleaning new facts and ideas.
-Fantastic Lad