Posts Tagged blogs

What MSM Can Learn From Blogs

Blogs can’t replace the full range of MSM, but blogs have demonstrated that they can do certain things, like fact check, much better than MSM. RatherGate is a prime example.

The guys at Powerline are bright guys, Charles Johnson is a bright guy, same goes for Bill at INDC Journal, Donald Sensing, Pacetown, and all the rest. But two things sets them, and bloggers in general, apart from MSM (OK, more than that, but I’m only going to focus on two things. So keep Pajama cracks to yourself).

Number one is that they are happy to credit the people who send them information. You want your name mentioned, they’ll do anything short of the blink tag. When a reader sends them good info, they use it and credit the sender (or withhold the name if desired). They don’t act like they’re figuring out everything on their own or that they discovered all the info on their own. This is a huge multiplier effect – they are giants on the shoulders of thousands of other giants, people who may be experts in a given field, people who may be talented amateurs in a given field, people who might have just had a great idea or key insight. The point is, for MSM, I’m sure they have to rely on people giving them info, but they always act like somehow as good journalists they did all this on their own. They seem to actively discourage the notion that any part of what they present was even influenced by non-MSM participation. Yes, they get outside experts on occasion, but the experts come from MSMs rolodex, not the other way around. But for whatever reason, MSM thinks any whiff off non-MSM participation dilutes their authority. 

The other difference is that bloggers don’t try to be “exclusive”; that is they link to other bloggers. No blogger pretends to be a one stop shop. This is a big help because on something like the CBS forgery story nobody has the complete picture all by themselves; a bunch of people contribute various amounts but by linking the reader can get a full picture. It’s no skin off of Powerline’s nose to link to a INDC Journal post that makes a good point if it helps the reader. Actually, its better than that because Powerline doesn’t have to worry about all the angles, it just works its angle on the story and links to the other angles. MSM doesnt work that way. MSM wants you to stay with them or a “partner” – usually another media entity with common ownership. Now don’t get me wrong, I’m not claiming the blogosphere is one great big love-in where nobody cares about traffic. It isn’t, they do. But competition takes a different form – if you don’t link where appropriate, traffic goes down. It’s that simple. Part of your importance as a blogger isn’t just original content, but putting it into context.

Jeff at Caerdroia and The Daily Pundit also have thoughts on differences between blogs and MSM.

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It’s All About Collaboration

I’ve written before that some people don’t like blogs and really don’t like how highly they rate with Google. Well, Tim O’Reilly (of O’Reilly the computer book publisher) writes approvingly:


“Robert Scoble just told a great story that vividly explains how users help to build Google’s product. He describes discovering a new Iranian restaurant in Redmond, WA, and linking to their website. He notes that the site doesn’t now show up in google, but that, because of his weblog, it will now: “Oh, did you just realize that this weblog is nothing more than metadata for Google to use? Yeah, you’d be right. Google figured out how to get people like me to go around and look at websites and add meta data about those websites. How did Google do that? By giving us power. Think about it. That’s how Google pays us back for the work we’re doing to improve its index.”


There’s a dark side to this story. Scoble told it in the context of rumors that advertisers are lobbying Google to de-emphasize blogs in calculating its page ranks. I trust Google to do the right thing because of their relentless focus on the user. If they adjust the impact of blogs, it will be to get a truer result for users rather than for advertisers. But you can’t underestimate the short-sightedness of many big players. Asking Google to take blogs out of the input is like asking EBay to stop taking product from small players and only take it from an approved vendor list, or asking Amazon to take reviews only from publishers and approved journalists! It’s the essence of the new paradigm that users help to build the product. “

So maybe it’s not love, but at least it puts the whole shebang into perspective. As a blogger, I’m not engaged in a selfish narcisistic hobby, I’m engaged in a giant collaborative venture that brings value to others. Yeah baby, how very yeah!

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