The non-profit Sourcefabric builds digital open source newsrooms to support quality, independent journalism. Traditional news organizations have taken a major beating from the Internet, but the Internet has also created opportunities for a free press in countries that have never had one before, and Sourcefabric is part of journalism's path to the future.
What is Journalism Anymore?Two of my favorite quotations are "Freedom of the press belongs to those who own one" (A.J. Liebling), and "Money changes everything" (Cyndi Lauper and Tom Gray).
Tie these together with the Golden Rule, "the one with the gold makes the rules" and the struggles and turmoil of modern journalism come into sharp focus. It's a different game now as print news has drastically declined, TV news is limping along in a stale 40-year old format and inexplicably tries to replicate this moldy experience on the Web, and we get our news from a multitude of non-journalism sources like Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter.
Online news publishing should be a great boon because the cost of distribution is low, and the reach is Internet-wide. But the business model is difficult because users don't pay; it is primarily advertiser-supported and enslaved to SEO (search engine optimization) voodoo, which means Google is the giant tail wagging the publishing industry dog. News publications get paid for driving traffic, rather than for publishing good quality material.
Change is a multi-edged device, and while the Internet and high tech have damaged traditional news organizations (think buggy whips), they have also lowered the barriers to entry and widened journalism's scope. Digital photographs, videos, and audio streams are considerably easier to edit, produce, and distribute than in the olden ways. Journalists are truly mobile and news publishers are not tied to a physical location, or to large investments in printing presses and broadcast studios.
So it's a different world now, and potentially a better one because independent and non-profit news organizations can compete with the establishment mainstream press (what's left of it), and fill niches that the traditional news organizations are not interested in. Like working weekends and holidays, breaking news as soon as it's ready in multiple formats and media, and covering important topics that may not please advertisers but are of interest to readers and viewers.
Real journalism is more than sitting down to a WordPress blog and emitting deep thoughts. It is a skilled profession, and it has always been a technology-dependent business. It may not be apparent to the reader, viewer, or listener of news, but putting a story together and then publishing it is a complicated, labor-intensive process. This is where Sourcefabric comes in.
SourcefabricSourcefabric is still a young project. You may have heard of the Campware (Center for Advanced Media-Prague) suite of news and content management software; Campware was created in 2005, and then spun off as an independent organization, Sourcefabric, in April 2010. Campware was originally created by the Media Development Loan Fund. The MDLF has been around since 1995, a "a mission-driven investment fund for independent news outlets in countries with a history of media oppression."
Sourcefabric provides software, hosting services, and training. Currently there are three main software applications: Airtime, Newscoop, and Superdesk. Each one plays a different role in gathering and publishing news, so let's take them for a spin.
AirtimeAirtime is for managing an Internet radio station. It runs on Apache, PostgreSQL, PHP, the RabbitMQ messaging system, and a whole lot of other good FOSS. It has a one-click installation on Debian and Ubuntu, and can be installed on pretty much any Linux distro. You can also try out a live demo, which is an excellent way to get acquainted with Airtime. You can upload your own audio, create playlists, and schedule and listen to your own programming. Its browser-based interface lets you control it from any computer anywhere (figure 1).
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