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1
History of
Online Journalism
By
Vishnu Achutha Menon
2
1963
• Ted Nelson, Harvard
sociology student
• Formulates the
concept of hypertext
3
1965
• Nelson, now a sociology prof at Vassar College in upstate
New York
• Gives a lecture which is covered in the student newspaper.
The first print reference of “hypertext” appears, Feb. 3,
1965
4
1969
• ARPANET computer network created by the
U.S. Defense Department
• The forerunner of today’s Internet
• Their goal: Design a computer network to
withstand nuclear attack
5
1969
• Decentralized system created under the basic
assumption that parts of the network will fail
• Building the network this way lays the
foundation for the Internet as a medium that
is controlled by no single entity
• 1972: The organization in charge is now
called DARPA (Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency)
6
1971
• The BBC files for
a patent on
“Teledata,” the
first teletext
system
• Called a
"Rolodex in the
sky”
At the same time, a
parallel technology …
7
1971
• A loop of “pages”
broadcast on TV
• Not interactive
• Service is limited
to a few hundred
available pages
• Slow
Teletext:
8
1974
The British Post Office’s Research
Laboratory demonstrates
“Viewdata” (later “Prestel”) the
first Videotext service
• It’s truly interactive, supporting
two-way communication
• You use your TV, hooked up to
cable and a phone line
• You make entries using a
keyboard, dedicated terminal or
computer
• Menu-driven systems allow users
to browse
• Better graphics than teletext;
even photo display.
9
1974
Snapshot: Three competing technologies …
• Not
interactive
• Slow
• But all you
need is a TV
and a decoder
box
Videotext
Teletext
• Interactive
• You need
cable TV
and an
expensive
subscription
• Interactive
• Very
expensive
• Poorly
networked
• Almost no
one has one
Computers
10
1975
• Canada begins
development of
Telidon, an
advanced
videotext system.
Goes into operation
in 1979 and is
considered a world
leader with
advanced graphics
technology
11
1975
12
1981-82
First computer-based
online dial-up services
emerge Eg.:
• Compuserve
• The Source
• Prodigy
These are closed
systems -- only
subscribers have
access
13
1983-1985
• 1983: Time Magazine names the
computer “Machine of the Year”
• 1984: Apple introduces the Macintosh
computer. Cost: $2,495 US with built-in
B&W monitor. Within 75 days, 50,000 are
sold
• 1985: Worldwide 22 nations are said to
be involved in videotext and teletext
14
1986-1988
• 1986: Computers readily available in university
computer labs, offices
Computers becoming cheaper and more powerful;
first personal printers appear; ($7,000 US for an
Apple LaserWriter)
• 1988: Internet Relay Chat (IRC, a forebearer to
instant messaging) is developed by Finnish
graduate student Jarkko Oikarinen
DARPA makes the Internet public
15
1990
• Hypertext Markup
Language is invented
by Tim Berners-Lee,
an Englishman, and
colleagues at CERN,
the European Particle
Physics Laboratory
16
1992
• July: Lynx, a non-graphical Web and Gopher
(FTP) “browser” is released by the University
of Kansas
• November: There are 26 “reasonably reliable”
servers exist on the World Wide Web,
according to CERN
17
1993
• August: Mosaic, first
graphical Web browser
for Windows, is released
by the University of
Illinois. It causes the
web to grow at a
341,634% annual rate
of service traffic
• Sept. 25: CompuServe, Prodigy and AOL have a
combined 3.9 million U.S. subscribers
18
1993
• October: First journalism site on the Web is
launched at the University of Florida. There
now are about 200 web servers in the world
• Dec. 8: First article about the web appears in
the New York Times
19
1994
• Jan. 19: The first newspaper
to regularly publish on the
Web, the Palo Alto Weekly in
California, begins twice-
weekly postings of its full
content
• April: The Yahoo “Internet
index” is started by Stanford
PhD candidates David Filo
and Jerry Yang
20
1994
• June:
the first
Canadian
newspaper,
the Halifax
Daily News
goes online
21
1995
April 19: Oklahoma
City Bombing
The first major event
in which people turn
to the Internet for
current information
22
1995
• May: More than 150
news outlets in North
America now have
online editions
• October: The Boston
Globe launches
Boston.com on the
Web, a unique site
bringing many local
services together
23
1997
• March 26: “Heaven’s
Gate” Suicides
The Internet becomes
part of a major news
story when members
of the Heaven’s Gate
cult create a website
before committing
suicide. Journalists
point readers to their
source material
24
1997
• March: False reports emerge
online that TWA Flight 800,
which crashes off Long Island in
1996 was brought down by a
U.S. navy missile
• The power of the medium
becomes apparent as readers
pressure investigators to reveal
the “truth”
25
1997
• The Smoking
Gun debuts -- it
publishes entire
court
documents and
other primary
sources online
26
1997
• The Dallas Morning News
online edition gets an
exclusive that Timothy
McVeigh has claimed
responsibility for the
Oklahoma City Bombing
• First time a mainstream news
organization breaks a major
story on its website -- not in
its newspaper
27
1998
• Jan. 19 -- Early reports of
U.S. President Clinton’s
involvement with White
House intern Monica
Lewinsky demonstrate
how a small independent
news site can seize a
national news
agenda
28
1998
• A media frenzy
follows in both
the online and
traditional
press
29
1998
• September: Starr
Report
A new relationship
between politicians
and the public –
Starr bypasses the
press and
distributes a major
political document
online first
Kenneth Starr
30
2000
Mainstream news
sites begin to involve
their audience
• Death of Pierre Trudeau:
Thousands of Canadians
tell their stories on news
websites
31
2001
• Sept. 11:
Online news
operations
stumble …
32
2001
… then recover …
33
2003
Classified listings
flee print ... and
take money with
them
34
2003
• Canada.com
moves to paid
subscription
model
• Breaking news
is free
• Other content
requires $$
35
2003
• The dawn of
citizen
journalism
• Blogging
software makes
web publishing
easy and
eliminates the
need to know
HTML
• The “Baghdad Blogger” captivates the world
36
2004
• Bloggers
lead the
way in
forcing CBS
to retract
its story on
George W.
Bush’s
military
service
37
• Bloggers
beat the
mainstream
media to
tsunami-
ravaged
South-East
Asia …
2004
38
… bringing
home the
reality of the
event with
amateur
video
2004
39
2005
Mainstream
media starts
harnessing
user-generated
video
40
News sites
rush to
establish
citizen
communitie
s
2005
41
2005
Major trend: “A growing number of news
outlets are chasing relatively static or even
shrinking audiences for news. One result of this
is that most sectors of the news media are losing
audience.
The only sectors seeing general audience
growth today are online, ethnic and
alternative media.”
42
2006
Katrina
Bloggers win
protections in
the U.S. …
43
2006
… and
acceptance in
Canada
44
Participatory
journalism advocate
Dan Gillmor tries
(and fails) to put
his emerging
philosophy into
practice
2006
45
2006
Time
Magazine
Person
of the
Year
46
“More sites were becoming profitable … [but] rivals
on the Web that offer classified listings or aggregate
other people’s work -- but produce very little
journalistic content of their own -- were continuing to
steal revenues away. There still appears no clear
path for transferring to this new medium all the
wealth that has long financed journalism for the
good of civil society.”
2006
47
2007
Bloggers face
greater legal
scrutiny
48
2007
Citizen media grows in importance
49
2007
50
2007
New attempts at models for citizen journalism
51
2007
52
2007
53
2007
“Practicing journalism has become far more difficult and
demands new vision. Journalism is becoming a
smaller part of people’s information mix …
“Journalists have reacted relatively slowly … There are
signs that government, corporations and activists have
reacted more quickly. Politicians, interest groups and
corporate public relations people tell us they have
bloggers now on secret retainer — and they are
delighted with the results.”
54
“The evidence is mounting that the news industry must
become more aggressive about developing a new
economic model. The signs are clearer that advertising
works differently online than in older media.
“Finding out about goods and services on the Web is an
activity unto itself, like using the yellow pages, and less
a byproduct of getting news, such as seeing a car ad
during a newscast. The consequence is that
advertisers may not need journalism as they once
did, particularly online.”
2007
55
2007
• September:
Journalism sites
move away from
subscription-based
news
• Advertising is seen
as the only
workable funding
model
56
2008
“As a category, news Web sites appear to be falling
behind financially. They are not growing in advertising
revenue as quickly as other kinds of Internet
destinations. And these figures do not include the most
important revenue source, search, where news is a
relatively small player.
The questions of who will pay and how they will do it
seem more pressing than ever.”
57
2008
58
2008
59
59
What is the Internet?
The Internet is
a network of computers
60
60
What is the World Wide
Web?
• Created in 1990 when
Englishman Tim Berners-Lee
and colleagues at the
European Center for Particle
Physics developed a
computer language that
enabled users to navigate
by clicking on underlined
words called links.
Tim Berners-Lee
61
61
What is the World Wide
Web?
• The language:
Hypertext Markup Language.
62
62
What is the World Wide
Web?
• The Web is a place where people do
things
– buy airline tickets
– search for recipes
– read about disease
– read and interact with the news
– buy computers
– listen to the radio
– other things?
63
63
What makes the Web
different?
• Capacity
– Nearly unlimited space, limited only by human decisions
and high-capacity servers
• Flexibility
– words, pictures, audio, video, graphics
• Immediacy
– Information as events unfold
– Sept. 11, tsunami, hurricanes
– Breadth, or expansion (several angles to the same topic)
– Depth (quality and depth of information about an
individual story)
• Permanence
– Nothing need be lost
• Interactivity
– Immediate feedback channel
– email links, forums, polls
64
64
Lessons learned
• Online services must be personally useful
– Popularity of email and search engines
• Interactivity is a key element
– weakness of traditional media, but not online
journalism
• Content must be free unless it is very
specialized
– Wall Street Journal sells subscriptions
– Ebay makes commissions
– Second layer (page 2) to espn.com
– Adult sites make money
• Real money is not in the technology but in the
programming
– Advertisers will pay money if the audience is there
for the content
65
65
Summary
• Roots of the WWW go back three
decades
• Like most inventions, the WWW was
more like an evolution than an
invention
• Teletext  Videotext  BBS  WWW
• WWW gives journalists a new, unique
and interactive way to tell the story.

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Web Journalism History.ppt

  • 2. 2 1963 • Ted Nelson, Harvard sociology student • Formulates the concept of hypertext
  • 3. 3 1965 • Nelson, now a sociology prof at Vassar College in upstate New York • Gives a lecture which is covered in the student newspaper. The first print reference of “hypertext” appears, Feb. 3, 1965
  • 4. 4 1969 • ARPANET computer network created by the U.S. Defense Department • The forerunner of today’s Internet • Their goal: Design a computer network to withstand nuclear attack
  • 5. 5 1969 • Decentralized system created under the basic assumption that parts of the network will fail • Building the network this way lays the foundation for the Internet as a medium that is controlled by no single entity • 1972: The organization in charge is now called DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency)
  • 6. 6 1971 • The BBC files for a patent on “Teledata,” the first teletext system • Called a "Rolodex in the sky” At the same time, a parallel technology …
  • 7. 7 1971 • A loop of “pages” broadcast on TV • Not interactive • Service is limited to a few hundred available pages • Slow Teletext:
  • 8. 8 1974 The British Post Office’s Research Laboratory demonstrates “Viewdata” (later “Prestel”) the first Videotext service • It’s truly interactive, supporting two-way communication • You use your TV, hooked up to cable and a phone line • You make entries using a keyboard, dedicated terminal or computer • Menu-driven systems allow users to browse • Better graphics than teletext; even photo display.
  • 9. 9 1974 Snapshot: Three competing technologies … • Not interactive • Slow • But all you need is a TV and a decoder box Videotext Teletext • Interactive • You need cable TV and an expensive subscription • Interactive • Very expensive • Poorly networked • Almost no one has one Computers
  • 10. 10 1975 • Canada begins development of Telidon, an advanced videotext system. Goes into operation in 1979 and is considered a world leader with advanced graphics technology
  • 12. 12 1981-82 First computer-based online dial-up services emerge Eg.: • Compuserve • The Source • Prodigy These are closed systems -- only subscribers have access
  • 13. 13 1983-1985 • 1983: Time Magazine names the computer “Machine of the Year” • 1984: Apple introduces the Macintosh computer. Cost: $2,495 US with built-in B&W monitor. Within 75 days, 50,000 are sold • 1985: Worldwide 22 nations are said to be involved in videotext and teletext
  • 14. 14 1986-1988 • 1986: Computers readily available in university computer labs, offices Computers becoming cheaper and more powerful; first personal printers appear; ($7,000 US for an Apple LaserWriter) • 1988: Internet Relay Chat (IRC, a forebearer to instant messaging) is developed by Finnish graduate student Jarkko Oikarinen DARPA makes the Internet public
  • 15. 15 1990 • Hypertext Markup Language is invented by Tim Berners-Lee, an Englishman, and colleagues at CERN, the European Particle Physics Laboratory
  • 16. 16 1992 • July: Lynx, a non-graphical Web and Gopher (FTP) “browser” is released by the University of Kansas • November: There are 26 “reasonably reliable” servers exist on the World Wide Web, according to CERN
  • 17. 17 1993 • August: Mosaic, first graphical Web browser for Windows, is released by the University of Illinois. It causes the web to grow at a 341,634% annual rate of service traffic • Sept. 25: CompuServe, Prodigy and AOL have a combined 3.9 million U.S. subscribers
  • 18. 18 1993 • October: First journalism site on the Web is launched at the University of Florida. There now are about 200 web servers in the world • Dec. 8: First article about the web appears in the New York Times
  • 19. 19 1994 • Jan. 19: The first newspaper to regularly publish on the Web, the Palo Alto Weekly in California, begins twice- weekly postings of its full content • April: The Yahoo “Internet index” is started by Stanford PhD candidates David Filo and Jerry Yang
  • 20. 20 1994 • June: the first Canadian newspaper, the Halifax Daily News goes online
  • 21. 21 1995 April 19: Oklahoma City Bombing The first major event in which people turn to the Internet for current information
  • 22. 22 1995 • May: More than 150 news outlets in North America now have online editions • October: The Boston Globe launches Boston.com on the Web, a unique site bringing many local services together
  • 23. 23 1997 • March 26: “Heaven’s Gate” Suicides The Internet becomes part of a major news story when members of the Heaven’s Gate cult create a website before committing suicide. Journalists point readers to their source material
  • 24. 24 1997 • March: False reports emerge online that TWA Flight 800, which crashes off Long Island in 1996 was brought down by a U.S. navy missile • The power of the medium becomes apparent as readers pressure investigators to reveal the “truth”
  • 25. 25 1997 • The Smoking Gun debuts -- it publishes entire court documents and other primary sources online
  • 26. 26 1997 • The Dallas Morning News online edition gets an exclusive that Timothy McVeigh has claimed responsibility for the Oklahoma City Bombing • First time a mainstream news organization breaks a major story on its website -- not in its newspaper
  • 27. 27 1998 • Jan. 19 -- Early reports of U.S. President Clinton’s involvement with White House intern Monica Lewinsky demonstrate how a small independent news site can seize a national news agenda
  • 28. 28 1998 • A media frenzy follows in both the online and traditional press
  • 29. 29 1998 • September: Starr Report A new relationship between politicians and the public – Starr bypasses the press and distributes a major political document online first Kenneth Starr
  • 30. 30 2000 Mainstream news sites begin to involve their audience • Death of Pierre Trudeau: Thousands of Canadians tell their stories on news websites
  • 31. 31 2001 • Sept. 11: Online news operations stumble …
  • 33. 33 2003 Classified listings flee print ... and take money with them
  • 34. 34 2003 • Canada.com moves to paid subscription model • Breaking news is free • Other content requires $$
  • 35. 35 2003 • The dawn of citizen journalism • Blogging software makes web publishing easy and eliminates the need to know HTML • The “Baghdad Blogger” captivates the world
  • 36. 36 2004 • Bloggers lead the way in forcing CBS to retract its story on George W. Bush’s military service
  • 37. 37 • Bloggers beat the mainstream media to tsunami- ravaged South-East Asia … 2004
  • 38. 38 … bringing home the reality of the event with amateur video 2004
  • 41. 41 2005 Major trend: “A growing number of news outlets are chasing relatively static or even shrinking audiences for news. One result of this is that most sectors of the news media are losing audience. The only sectors seeing general audience growth today are online, ethnic and alternative media.”
  • 44. 44 Participatory journalism advocate Dan Gillmor tries (and fails) to put his emerging philosophy into practice 2006
  • 46. 46 “More sites were becoming profitable … [but] rivals on the Web that offer classified listings or aggregate other people’s work -- but produce very little journalistic content of their own -- were continuing to steal revenues away. There still appears no clear path for transferring to this new medium all the wealth that has long financed journalism for the good of civil society.” 2006
  • 50. 50 2007 New attempts at models for citizen journalism
  • 53. 53 2007 “Practicing journalism has become far more difficult and demands new vision. Journalism is becoming a smaller part of people’s information mix … “Journalists have reacted relatively slowly … There are signs that government, corporations and activists have reacted more quickly. Politicians, interest groups and corporate public relations people tell us they have bloggers now on secret retainer — and they are delighted with the results.”
  • 54. 54 “The evidence is mounting that the news industry must become more aggressive about developing a new economic model. The signs are clearer that advertising works differently online than in older media. “Finding out about goods and services on the Web is an activity unto itself, like using the yellow pages, and less a byproduct of getting news, such as seeing a car ad during a newscast. The consequence is that advertisers may not need journalism as they once did, particularly online.” 2007
  • 55. 55 2007 • September: Journalism sites move away from subscription-based news • Advertising is seen as the only workable funding model
  • 56. 56 2008 “As a category, news Web sites appear to be falling behind financially. They are not growing in advertising revenue as quickly as other kinds of Internet destinations. And these figures do not include the most important revenue source, search, where news is a relatively small player. The questions of who will pay and how they will do it seem more pressing than ever.”
  • 59. 59 59 What is the Internet? The Internet is a network of computers
  • 60. 60 60 What is the World Wide Web? • Created in 1990 when Englishman Tim Berners-Lee and colleagues at the European Center for Particle Physics developed a computer language that enabled users to navigate by clicking on underlined words called links. Tim Berners-Lee
  • 61. 61 61 What is the World Wide Web? • The language: Hypertext Markup Language.
  • 62. 62 62 What is the World Wide Web? • The Web is a place where people do things – buy airline tickets – search for recipes – read about disease – read and interact with the news – buy computers – listen to the radio – other things?
  • 63. 63 63 What makes the Web different? • Capacity – Nearly unlimited space, limited only by human decisions and high-capacity servers • Flexibility – words, pictures, audio, video, graphics • Immediacy – Information as events unfold – Sept. 11, tsunami, hurricanes – Breadth, or expansion (several angles to the same topic) – Depth (quality and depth of information about an individual story) • Permanence – Nothing need be lost • Interactivity – Immediate feedback channel – email links, forums, polls
  • 64. 64 64 Lessons learned • Online services must be personally useful – Popularity of email and search engines • Interactivity is a key element – weakness of traditional media, but not online journalism • Content must be free unless it is very specialized – Wall Street Journal sells subscriptions – Ebay makes commissions – Second layer (page 2) to espn.com – Adult sites make money • Real money is not in the technology but in the programming – Advertisers will pay money if the audience is there for the content
  • 65. 65 65 Summary • Roots of the WWW go back three decades • Like most inventions, the WWW was more like an evolution than an invention • Teletext  Videotext  BBS  WWW • WWW gives journalists a new, unique and interactive way to tell the story.