Abundance of Digital Info Could Signal End of Newspapers
As major news organizations raced to publish stories on the latest Wikileaks documents about prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, they were competing yet again against websites uploading raw data.
Andrew Rossi, who made the documentary "Page One: A Year Inside The New York Times," looks at the media and warns that the tsunami of digital information could spell the end of even the most respected newspapers.
"And particularly the threat is to traditional investigative reporting and journalism which takes place in institutions like The New York Times,
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But Amy Eisman, professor of journalism at American University, disagrees."Look at what happened in Japan. You have this devastation. In fact,
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Eisman believes regardless of what happens to newspapers, good reporting will live on."You're gonna see many more journalists that will be sort of independent freelancers. And they may get a lot of people to give them money to go to Iraq,
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Paul Sparrow,
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"You have to pay a journalist to go into a war zone. You have to pay a journalist to cover the city council or the zoning board meetings. That's the struggle news organizations face right now: to support the newsroom, journalists who are on the ground doing the work, as the revenue stream continues to decline."
Sparrow says, until now, brands like the New York Times have been competing not only against the massive flow of digital information but also against free-of-charge information online.
Recently,
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"The question about Paywall, is the brand valuable enough to make you want to pay for that information? Because you know that if you’re getting it from that source,
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onitsuka tiger, or accuracy but are we gonna be able to break through that habit of ‘I want that information for free?’"