So the corporate news propagandists are upset that people are going elsewhere for news. That should tell them something. But they already know that they put out government bullshit. They are upset that people have figured it out. That's why they are trying to destroy the internet. (see previous post)
Old media raises a fuss over web aggregators
It must sting a little bit for the “old media” to see the growing trend of news-and-information seekers going to websites like the Drudge Report, The Huffington Post, WorldNetDaily, Infowars and, dare I say it, Oklahoma Watchdog, when they seek hard-hitting news stories.
Indeed that “sting” has chafed Leonard Downie Jr., the former executive editor and current vice president-at-large of The Washington Post. The Post, a paper that seems to live in the past, has a website that has been trounced by the more popular Huffington Post, a left-leaning news and entertainment website. HuffPo also blew past The New York Times website in terms of traffic earlier this year.
Downie does not like the above-mentioned websites. At a lecture in London, which addressed “old media vs. new media,” Downie sounded a bit annoyed about news aggregators, calling them “parasites living off journalism produced by others.”
As noted at Politico yesterday: “The aggregators fill their websites with news, opinion, features, photographs and video that they continuously collect – some would say steal – from other national and local news sites, along with mostly unpaid postings by bloggers who settle for exposure in lieu of money,” Downie said. “Though they purport to be a new form of journalism, these aggregators are primarily parasites living off journalism produced by others. They attract audiences by aggregating journalism about special interests and opinions reflecting a predictable point of view on the left or right of the political spectrum, along with titillating gossip and sex. Revealing photo of and stories about entertainment and celecrities account for much of the highly touted web traffic to the Huffington Post site, for example.”
As someone with a degree in journalism and over a decade of newsroom experience, I can say that my sites – Oklahoma Watchdog and Red Dirt Report – are aggregators, Red Dirt Report moreso than the original-content-heavy Oklahoma Watchdog.We break a lot of stories here at Oklahoma Watchdog and we have seen our traffic rising every month.
A long time ago, in the age of Lewinsky, Matt Drudge produced original content. He doesn’t write much anymore. Still, the Drudge Report is one of the biggest sites in the world and if you are linked to that site your site will get slammed with traffic. Isn’t that a good thing?
Link:
http://oklahoma.watchdog.org/1261/old-media-raises-a-fuss-over-web-aggregators/
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