Selasa, 31 Oktober 2017

CNN’s three month-old daily Snapchat show The Update avoids the “bells and whistles and flashes”: The latest from Nieman Lab

Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

CNN’s three month-old daily Snapchat show The Update avoids the “bells and whistles and flashes”

“We’re telling great stories on the platforms where they live. They’re getting to know those three red and white letters for what it stands for: great news and information.” By Christine Schmidt.

A snap election (and global worries over fake news) spur fact-checking collaborations in Japan

“We looked at First Draft News' guide and realized in Japan, we have very little understanding of where false information originates or how it spreads.” By Masato Kajimoto.
What We’re Reading
Columbia Journalism Review / Pete Vernon
Behind the success of Dirty John, The LA Times’ hit true-crime thriller podcast →
“Dirty John, a psychological-thriller-slash-true-crime story told in six installments by the Times’ Christopher Goffard, has already been downloaded more than seven million times (and grabbed more than one million unique visitors to the print version) since its debut at the start of the month.”
Digiday / Max Willens
In the hunt for reader revenue, publishers give micropayments another look →
Another look, yes. But, said one executive who participated in Blendle’s U.S. launch: “There's been no action there. We went into it as a test, thinking maybe it helps us get some data points for our strategy when it comes to paywalls or metering, but nothing is happening.”
MediaNama / Shashidhar KJ
HuffPost’s partnership with the Times of India Group collapses →
“A HuffPost source told MediaNama that the company is planning to make new offers to existing employees, but they will be coming from New York directly. The source said that members of the global team, including Lydia Polgreen, will be meeting the staff on November 22: ‘The idea is that Huffington Post will be relaunching in India.'”
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism / Silvia Majo-Vazquez and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen
News audience attention and engagement on Twitter during the German federal election →
“This study shows that coinciding with increased popular support for far-right parties in Germany, some news outlets with a clear national-conservative political position, including several digital-born brands and one newspaper, generated much more engagement than their posting activity and generally limited audience reach would suggest.”
The Guardian / Emily Bell
Silicon Valley helped Russia sway the US election. So now what? →
“Social media has made a practice – and a fortune – out of erasing traditional boundaries between different types of material. Where once we had propaganda, press releases, journalism and advertising, we now have ‘content.’ Where once we had direct marketing, display advertising and promotions, now we have ‘monetization.’ Where we once had media owners, ad agencies and clients, now we have ‘partners.’ Who could possibly object to partners monetizing their content? It sounds so mutually beneficial and efficient. On the other hand neo-Nazis paying to target pensioners with racist propaganda has a less wholesome ring to it.”
The New York Times / Megan Specia and Paul Mozur
A war of words puts Facebook at the center of Myanmar’s Rohingya crisis →
“In Myanmar, Facebook is so dominant that to many people it is the internet itself. And the stakes of what appears on the site are exceptionally high because misinformation, as well as explicitly hostile language, is widening longstanding ethnic divides and stoking the violence against the Rohingya ethnic group.”
Journalism.co.uk / Madalina Ciobanu
Dutch startup The Playwall is giving readers the option to pay for online content by answering questions →
“From those 40,000 people, only 0.3 per cent wanted to pay with money, and 13.5 per cent wanted to pay with their answers, and the two groups don’t overlap so it’s not like the people who used to pay with money now pay with data.”
Medium / Heather Bryant
Talking about journalism's class problem →
“A few months ago I wrote a small post about my husband and my frustrations with my own industry. And it blew up. Which is a weird feeling when what I published was an early morning rant with most of the snark taken out. In the post I shared an example of a weird interaction with another journalist in which they were put off by my husband's occupation, as a trash truck driver.”
Medium / Filip Struhárik
What Facebook taught us when it destroyed our organic reach →
“So what do we need reach for if it can swing up or down by 50% in a day, while actual traffic isn't affected?”
BuzzFeed
How Myspace and GateHouse Media became pawns in an ad fraud scheme →
“Consulting firm Social Puncher recorded more than 200 hours of video of ads being fraudulently displayed on the Myspace and GateHouse subdomains. This footage often shows multiple video players playing at once on a single page, redirects happening between different websites without any user action, and/or editorial content being cut off by automated page refreshes in order to display more ads.”

Sabtu, 28 Oktober 2017

How Medium is attracting premium publishers to its partner program (hint: money up front): The latest from Nieman Lab

Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

How Medium is attracting premium publishers to its partner program (hint: money up front)

Unlike other Medium partners, they’re not paid per clap: “Medium has derisked it for us by providing financial value while creating opportunities for us to establish direct relationships with readers.” By Laura Hazard Owen.

When fake news is funny (or “funny”), is it harder to get people to stop sharing it?

Plus: Platforms scramble to do something about shady political ads before Congressional hearings start, and is fake news better thought of as “disinformation advertising”? By Laura Hazard Owen.
What We’re Reading
Facebook / Rob Goldman
Facebook announces greater transparency on all (not just political) ads →
“Starting next month, people will be able to click ‘View Ads’ on a Page and view ads a Page is running, whether or not the person viewing is in the intended target audience for the ad…As Joel Kaplan mentioned, we're going to require more thorough documentation from advertisers who want to run election-related ads…Once verified, these advertisers will have to include a disclosure in their election-related ads, which reads: ‘Paid for by.'”
The Verge / Casey Newton, Nick Statt, and Michael Zelenko
Most Americans think news on Facebook is about as accurate as news found elsewhere →
Also more than 60% of Americans think Facebook should either warn about or block entirely “news stories that are likely biased.”
MisinfoCon / Phillip Smith
Here are the sessions tackling online misinformation at MozFest 2017 →
“Can we build a 'nutrition label' for assessing content on the web?; Saving Journalism from Fake News and Fake Records; Mozilla Information Trust Initiative: Tracking the indicators of online misinformation; Weaponized Disinformation and Electoral Impact,” and more.
Twitter / Gabriel Stein
“You want proof FB doesn’t just ‘show people what they want?’ I’ll give it to you.” →
“[Facebook] has decided over and over again what’s good for users based on the opinion of execs. Now we’re asking them to think about what’s good for society and suddenly, magically, that capability has vanished! Ironically, in some ways I think that shows growth. It was crazy that Chris Cox had the power to decide what quality of news people needed.”
Recode / Peter Kafka
BuzzFeed wants to sell your gadget, and keep a cut of the sales →
“The publisher is telling gadget-makers and inventors it will make ads for their inventions, in exchange for a cut of their product's sales. This one comes out of BuzzFeed's newish Product Labs group, which has made a splash selling BuzzFeed-branded cookbooks, fidget spinners, and bluetooth-connected hotplates.”
Digiday / Lucinda Southern
How Die Welt has grown to nearly 80,000 digital subscribers →
“Die Welt has created six customer groups that it uses to figure out the best way to counteract signs that people are about to cancel their subscription. The groups are based on about 25 metrics, including how often people visit the site and how many times they visit before subscribing and what types of articles they favor. Algorithms decide how they are contacted if they look like they will cancel their subscription.”
Medium / Freia Nahser
For WikiTribune, launching next week, rebuilding trust is a matter of trusting the audience →
“We will be getting pieces written by the Wellcome Trust media team, for instance, on medical discoveries and they will be going up on the site and open to edit from the audience as well', completely flattening the editorial hierarchy, leaving experts open to challenges from the WikiTribune community.”
The Guardian
The Guardian says it now has half a million regular paying supporters →
Approximately 80 percent of its regular supporters take digital subscriptions or memberships. The remaining 20 percent subscribe to Guardian News and Media's print publications. (In addition, the Guardian received than 300,000 individual one-off contributions this past year.)
Digiday / Max Willens
A day in the life of The Economist’s Snapchat editor →
“8:30 a.m.: Our Snapchat team is based in Bucharest, Romania, and London, so I spend much of my morning in New York online with them before they log off. Today, I spend an hour or so fine-tuning Snaps with our animators and then speak with Charlie Wells, our Snapchat deputy, about a script on e-commerce that he's working on. I check in with our designer and tell him I've decided to nix an edition we were thinking of doing on coal. We discuss what he'll be working on instead.”
Recode / Peter Kafka
More and more people are watching YouTube videos on actual TVs →
“The video service says viewers are watching 100 million hours of its clips a day on actual television sets. And it says that number has shot up 70 percent in the last year…For context: Earlier this year, YouTube said people were watching a billion hours of its videos per day. And YouTube has previously said that the majority of its viewing takes place on mobile devices.”
Global Investigative Journalism Network / Siran Liang
Can in-depth journalism make Taiwan’s next generation believe? →
“For decades, Taiwan's journalism was politically polarized, split between pro-Mainland China and pro-Taiwan factions. Financial constraints and rapidly shifting technologies, plus growing political influence from the Communist Party of China across the strait, posed new challenges in what was an already divided and vulnerable journalism environment.”
Bloomberg.com / Max Chafkin
How Snapchat has managed to keep itself free of fake news →
“But rather than post the clip widely, a Snapchat producer spent hours comparing its time and location data with other users' footage of the attack, and repeatedly called and texted Charlottesville Police Department officers in an attempt to verify the arrest.”

Jumat, 27 Oktober 2017

When a Facebook test moves news stories to a separate feed, traffic — and public discourse — are at stake: The latest from Nieman Lab

Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

When a Facebook test moves news stories to a separate feed, traffic — and public discourse — are at stake

“It's important politically how this is going to play out.” By Shan Wang.

Reading the news on Trump: Are we empty vessels or active filters?

Fake news and misinformation should be understood as a series of societal challenges long in the making. No algorithm will solve them, because no algorithm created them. By Pablo Boczkowski.

The Guardian Mobile Lab’s latest experiment targets public transit commuters with an offline news app

“The app is a really good first step for gathering information, using it in a respectful way, and seeing how people feel about that.” By Christine Schmidt.
What We’re Reading
Taylor & Francis / T. Franklin Waddell
Telling people a robot wrote a news story makes them believe it less →
“But not all news readers were negatively influenced by the perception of machine automation, as those readers able to freely recall a robot portrayal from past media were less influenced by variations of anthropomorphism than those unable to recall any media exemplars of robotics. Popular media, and the portrayals of robotics they offer, may thus play a role in the acceptance of robotics in traditionally non-automated domains, such as journalism.”
Twitter
Twitter is killing off all advertising from RT and Sputnik →
“This decision was based on the retrospective work we’ve been doing around the 2016 U.S. election and the U.S. intelligence community's conclusion that both RT and Sputnik attempted to interfere with the election on behalf of the Russian government.”
Digiday / Lucia Moses
To get to 10 million subscribers, The New York Times is focusing on churn →
“This falls to Clay Fisher, svp of consumer revenue, who oversees a team of 100 people. Since he arrived at the Times two years ago, Fisher has tripled the number of people working on retention to 25, hiring consumer marketing experts from industries outside of newspapers, such as banking and retail. He said turnover and retention have improved, but wouldn't say by how much.”
The Membership Puzzle Project / Emily Goligoski
Want to launch membership? First, ask these four questions →
Spolier alert: “Why membership? How did you decide membership was an approach worth trying? What assumptions did you make about who would support you and why? How much time are you planning for the program launch and/or redesign? What are your biggest unsolved questions and challenges?”
MediaPost / Wayne Friedman
TV networks are adding even more live TV programming →
“Exclamation marks at the end of these live show titles are an obvious marketing ingredient — all to make the impression of seeming more immediate!”
MediaShift / Jason Alcorn
Artificial intelligence is coming for publishers’ analytics →
“There is simply too much data, even if newsrooms were filled with trained statisticians. ‘A human can't keep up, a machine has to.'”
Poynter / Kristen Hare
How has digital journalism changed your workday? →
“This week I spoke with Tyler, whose 125-year-old newsroom refashioned itself to think like a startup, and Ryan, who has a background in alt-weeklies. While we spoke, one was headed to class and the other was driving to work. I was immobile at the time.”
WGBH / Dan Kennedy
In defense of neutrality: Why news organizations are right to crack down on social media →
“Now, [Mathew] Ingram is among our sharpest media observers, and he makes some strong points in favor of being transparent about our biases rather than trying to pretend they don't exist. And yet at the risk of coming off as an old fogey, I have to disagree with him.”
MLK50
MLK50 receives a $100,000 grant from the Surdna Foundation →
“The Surdna grant supports efforts of the yearlong nonprofit reporting project timed to coincide with the 50th anniversary of King's death. MLK50 uses journalism to engage Memphis and the broader community with Dr. King's vision of economic inclusion.”
HuffPost / Wendell Potter
The new reader-funded investigative nonprofit Tarbell is crowdfunding →
“We'll explain how and why the wrong-doers get away with it, and we'll connect the dots to show readers how political corruption financed by moneyed interests affects their lives. We'll also go the additional and essential mile of spotlighting solutions and helping our community of readers figure out how they can make a difference.”
Online News Association
All the notes from ONA’s Table Talks →
From chatbots to “We’re f*cked if we don’t fix out the revenue problem,” the notes from all the ONA17 Table Talks are now online.

Kamis, 26 Oktober 2017

Newsonomics: Can startup Invisibly be the new revenue stream publishers dream of?: The latest from Nieman Lab

Nieman Lab: The Daily Digest

Civil, the blockchain-based journalism marketplace, is building its first batch of publications

One of the most confusing efforts to fund journalism in recent memory is inching closer to reality. By Ricardo Bilton.

Newsonomics: Can startup Invisibly be the new revenue stream publishers dream of?

Led by the cofounder of Square, Invisibly promises “four-figure CPMs” and a way to make big money off readers who won’t subscribe. It says it has most of the U.S. digital news industry on board. But is it just “an ad network dressed up as a savior for news sites”? By Ken Doctor.
What We’re Reading
Bloomberg Businessweek / Lucas Shaw
Inside Apple’s push into making TV shows and movies →
“Apple isn't trying to compete with Walt Disney Co. or Netflix to become the biggest backer of TV shows and movies on the planet. Instead, the company wants its shows to complement those of other networks and streaming services that consumers already watch on Apple devices.”
Medium / Adam Smith
Which is riskier: engaging with your audience too little or too much? →
“[Readers] want us to challenge and inform them; we cannot do that if we are forever reacting to what they are saying, publishing stories based on what they are consuming, and listening in to the ensuing discussion. This is what some publishers do online. Some digital dogs chase their own tail…for us, the real risk would be to engage too much.”
Wall Street Journal / Benjamin Mullin
In the race to win subscribers, some publishers have a head start →
“Print publications, which have historically built their businesses around attracting and retaining subscribers, have done a better job of getting consumers to pay for content online, said Rande Price, director of research for Digital Content Next.”
Columbia Journalism Review / Chris Clayton
The agriculture beat is a crucial lens on a changing climate →
“In a country full of millennial foodies, middle-aged barbecue enthusiasts, vegans, organic consumers, and paycheck-to-paycheck grocery shoppers, most newsrooms lack a reporter who is dedicated to telling stories about how their food is produced.”
The Guardian / Saeed Kamali Dehghan
BBC appeals to UN over Iran’s crackdown on journalists →
“It has emerged that a criminal investigation has also been launched in Iran, accusing those linked with BBC Persian of ‘conspiracy against national security.’ The corporation said it was the latest ‘sustained campaign of harassment and persecution…designed to pressure journalists against continuing their work for the BBC.'”
Politico / Michael Calderone
The Emerson Collective has killed Leon Wieseltier’s new publication because of his past “misdeeds” →
“Wieseltier, in the statement, acknowledged that he engaged in behavior with female colleagues that left them feeling ‘demeaned,’ and offered an apology…Wieseltier was also accused of ‘workplace harassment’ on an anonymous list circulating called "Sh–ty Media Men" that's having reverberations in the industry. “
Wall Street Journal / Benjamin Mullin
The L.A. Times’s new chief plots changes and woos a beleaguered newsroom →
“Ross Levinsohn plans to invest more in coverage of entertainment and culture, building digital ‘verticals’ that distinguish the Times from competitors, people familiar with his thinking said. He sees digital subscriptions as a major emphasis and is focused on using data to target likely subscribers. He also wants to put more effort into licensing the publisher's intellectual property and is said to be eager to explore, for example, whether ‘Dirty John,’ a series about a deranged stalker that ran in print and has a podcast component, could be developed into a TV show or movie.”
The New York Time / Malachy Browne
How The New York Times used timestamps geolocation and audio clips to reconstruct the Las Vegas shooting →
Investigative video reporting, or video forensics, “can be used wherever there's an abundance of visual evidence,” says the Times’ Malachy Browne.
Digiday / Max Willens
BuzzFeed is testing a Stories-like module in its mobile app →
“The BuzzFeed Stories digest, which appears at 10 a.m. for just 6 percent of the app's audience, features repackaged GIFs, still images and animations that drive readers to BuzzFeed's quizzes, listicles, videos and news articles.”
The Economist
How The Economist adapts its stories for Snapchat Discover →
“A Snapchat script is broken down into at least 14 snaps, with words and visual ideas for each, plus links to the articles that might be added as content that the user swipes up to read. Editors, designers and animators then build all the visuals to produce the edition. Articles are fact-checked by the research department and updated where necessary.”