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posted by mrpg on Saturday April 15 2017, @03:01AM   Printer-friendly
from the journalism-will-disappear dept.

"Clickbait" is an oft-used epithet on Soylent. Is the practice killing journalism?

In an age overwhelmed with clickbait stories, where clicks mean money, is mainstream journalism losing its relevance? And are there any alternative sustainable business models, which allow professional journalists the freedom to produce meaningful and balanced journalism?

These were some of the questions put to a panel of TV and radio directors from across the globe at the UNESCO's Journalism Under Fire Colloquium, recently held in Paris.

[...]

Jimenez argued that the click business model was poisoning media.

"We are often looking for stupid or irrelevant stories for large amount of clicks to increase our income," he said. "Look right now at the top newspaper websites and you'll find many stories about cats, about the different ways of cooking some meal, or whether Lady Diana was taller than her husband."

Giles Trendle, Al Jazeera's acting managing director, agreed that the media was challenged by the proliferation of new platforms and mediums.

But, he said, engaging with new technologies should not necessarily mean losing one's soul.

"Hold firm to your editorial principles, which is a valid business model in itself. We have to champion what we do as quality, credible, balanced journalism that is factual and comprehensive, and cherish our editorial integrity," Trendle said.

The fundamentals of "quality journalism" will eventually prevail over the low-grade "yellow journalism", he added.

Or is publishing corporate PR press releases as news more responsible?


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  • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Saturday April 15 2017, @03:40AM

    by kaszz (4211) on Saturday April 15 2017, @03:40AM (#494293) Journal

    It's been a long time since mainstream journalism had relevance for input into thinking and decision making. They are irrelevant and largely incompetent or at least that what is allowed to be published. Both relevance and trust is gone and ain't coming back. It's like asking if Kreuger is less rich today, well yeah..

    There are huge structural problems in the media sector where the signal to noise ratio is worthless and in addition it's often misleading. Owner concentration makes it almost impossible to act with independence and thus it all become a grey goo. Depth competence in fields that are treated also lack severely. The corporate owners also simple can't resist the urge to use their media ownership to manipulate their audience. Well don't even try that because it ends with - no confidence. (Hello Turner!)

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