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Open door: The readers' editor on ... open and organic journalism

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  • Open door: The readers' editor on ... open and organic journalism

    Open door: The readers' editor on ... the open and organic business of
    journalism
    SIOBHAIN BUTTERWORTH

    The Guardian - United Kingdom
    Published: May 28, 2007

    Journalism can mean different things depending on where and how you
    access it. News may be spun, biased, censored, truthful, incomplete
    and life-threatening. These issues were discussed at Harvard last week
    at a gathering of ombudsmen (assume throughout that I mean women
    too). There are not many of us - the Organisation of News Ombudsmen
    has under 100 members - and the annual conference was an opportunity
    to compare notes.

    Accounts from Turkey and Russia were gloomy. Yavuz Baydar, readers'
    representative for the Sabah newspaper in Istanbul, talked about the
    murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink who, before his death
    in January, was charged three times under article 301 of the Turkish
    Code with the offence of insulting Turkishness. Today in Turkey 15
    journalists need bodyguards.

    Russian journalism was already in trouble before the murder of Anna
    Politkovskaya, said Andrei Richter, the director of the Moscow Media
    Law and Policy Institute, but her death accelerated some trends in
    Russian journalism. "A uniform approach to content" has developed -
    which means stories about Putin's hard work, anti-western rhetoric and
    the ridiculing of Belarus, Estonia and other countries that have
    fallen out with the Kremlin. The government says it doesn't control
    the media but the authorities can make life difficult. Editors may be
    subjected to repeated tax checks and one newspaper couldn't operate
    when its computers were confiscated - the police claimed they'd been
    tipped off that its software was illegal. Richter told the group that
    self-censorship sends publications downmarket - they turn into "yellow
    newspapers" filled with sensational stories and gossip.

    As a result, journalism becomes discredited and this plays into the
    government's hands. Newspapers are an important source of news in
    Russia, where TV channels are state-owned and the internet has a low
    penetration. Only 10-12 million people, out of a population of 150
    million, are online.

    Elsewhere, the web is front of mind and ONO invited the Guardian's
    editor, Alan Rusbridger and BuzzMachine blogger, Jeff Jarvis, to share
    their thoughts about online journalism. On the subject of news
    organisations' reluctance to appoint ombudsmen, Rusbridger said he
    realised it is "a very radical move to place even a few inches of your
    paper out of your control" but there is a conflict in an editor
    commissioning journalism and sitting in judgment on it.
    The web challenges ideas about editorial responsibility. "It's
    impossible now for editors to monitor even a quarter of the
    content. The editor can't read everything in advance or even after
    publication," he said. "Access to information is no longer the
    exclusive preserve of journalists, readers can check journalism
    against publicly available information. That means millions of
    fact-checkers."

    Many sites include user-generated content; it is difficult to say what
    journalism is and easier to say what it isn't. "It is not about the
    tablet of stone", Rusbridger said. "Journalism becomes a never-ending
    organic business of placing material in the public domain, of adding
    to it, clarifying it, correcting it . . . everything we do will be
    more contestable, more open to challenge and alternative
    interpretation."

    Journalists pursuing truth incrementally rather than delivering it
    pre-packaged was something of a leitmotif. Jeff Jarvis told us "the
    architecture of news is changing and it would be better to see stories
    as a process and not a product. It's not finished, we can add to it."

    Listening to this it occurred to me that ombudsmen should expect what
    they write to be corrected, analysed and added to, like any other
    information that finds its way into the online world. Ombudsmen may
    not be in the business of handing down tablets of stone either, but
    what we can do is hold journalism up to sunlight (the best
    disinfectant, as US Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis said) and
    under a microscope.

    Jarvis urged us to "jump into the blogging pool, the water is
    fine". With this encouragement I plan to experiment with a Thursday
    blog about issues for the Guardian and its readers.

    We had a number of complaints about the lead story published on May 22
    with the headline, "Iran's secret plan for summer offensive to force
    US out of Iraq". I will be writing about that next week.

    [email protected]
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