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July 02, 2009

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manu

hmmm, not sure if i'd equate states with the news industry... there's no choice in the former, there's choice in the latter... the way i see it, its only a disruption in the kind of aggregators we have around...
the 'sandwiched news' might perhaps get neglected in the short run, but even now, there are smaller entities focusing on local and hyperlocal... they could very well play the part that large newspapers used to do... and the targeting is automatic thanks to the scale...

also, i live in the hope that tools like those in social media will help make the community aspect of our life stronger, by say, aggregating people around interest and geography, and as this evolves, perhaps we will be more concerned about our common good than we are now.. (#findingthegood)

Pedro Rocha

Curatorship is still relevant. In governance, in media, in advertising.

We need filters, we need project managers. Or else, this happens: http://www.oak-brands.com/blog/?p=266

blaiq

@Manu: I am not equating states with newspapers - in fact, one of the things I didn't manage to capture too well was the analogue of states I had in mind.

Rather than seeing the entire newspaper as an entity (and a state) I saw spheres of news - like sports news, political news, celebrity gossip, weather news - as state-like entities. These succeed ie., make themselves widely known, or fail, ie. make themselves vulnerable to spin and misinformation.

I do agree with you that 'the sandwiched news' will indeed find players - but since people will have to seek these out, there won't be as many people who should know who will be in the know (if you know what I mean.) What the newspapers used to do was to aggregate in one package stuff you are interested in knowing and stuff you should be knowing - without a way to seprate the two (apart from turning over the page or reading only the sports page as I used to.)

The other point is that this 'sandwiched news' segment will be more likely to attract fewer players who are partisan and stand to gain by spin (with a reason to leave out the diversity and objectivity inherent when more than one opinion and viewpoint collide) - hence the greater likelihood of incumbents winning in Tim Harford's Cincinnati example.

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