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Andrew Keen: Glimmers of hope for journalists in a grim world of redundancies

New Media

Sunday 07 December 2008 20:00 EST
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In the holiday spirit, two glimmers of new media hope for print journalists depressed by the drip-drip of redundancies, cuts and falling readership.

The first slither of good news is that Microsoft is emerging as an outspoken defender of an economically viable press in which journalists are paid for their work. Leading the defence of paid, online news content, is Microsoft's Tom Rubin. Speaking in London to the UK Association of Online Publishers last month, Rubin battered the internet's idealistic "information wants to be free" movement which, he said, "not only does not work, actually it has been a disaster for almost all newspapers". And he was no less sympathetic to Web 2.0's "amateurs and algorithms" which, he said, are "no substitute for reporters and editors".

Rubin spoke to me on the phone last week from his office at Microsoft HQ in Redmond, Washington state. Rubin is optimistic about the future of newspapers on the internet. The future of a sustainable media ecosystem, he told me, rests on an active pursuit of the "three Cs": copyright, competition and collaboration. And Rubin gave the examples of the online editions of the Financial Times and Wall Street Journal which, he said, are "taking advantage of the opportunity on the internet" and which are "ahead of the game" in terms of figuring out how to establish strong online brands. The second glimmer of hope might be seen as both a symptom and cure for the great sickness that is now afflicting the news business, Dan Abrams, a former anchor on MSNBC, the 24-hour American television network originally founded as a joint venture between Microsoft and NBC, has launched an online business called Abrams Research (www.abrams research.com). This is a digital exchange network which connects companies looking for expert media insight with journalists seeking to sell their insider's knowledge. Abrams' social media business has created a storm of controversy in America with critics accusing the former television star of muddying the church-state boundary between independent journalism and public relations. Abrams is a new media pimp turning journalists into whores, one blogger angrily told me. I recently had tea with the most unpimp-like Abrams who explained that Abrams Research was simply a way of using social media to allow corporations to transparently buy the expertise of journalists. In Abrams' defence, his new business is one of the few online media ventures with a clear business model for paying professional journalists. And that might be why within the first 24 hours after the launch of the online start-up last month, Abrams received 500 resumés from media people eager to join his social network and monetise their expertise.

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