市选民媒体报纸赞助

M. Latham.
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文提出了一个政治媒体改革的实验,由竞争对手的报纸共同主办一个博客比赛,报道一个城市的政府和社区问题。目的是测试VoterMedia设计的博客竞赛能否产生足够的公众利益新闻,让市政纳税人在未来为此类竞赛提供资金。这可能成为支持新闻报道的新收入来源,不仅包括城市,还包括其他选民群体,包括民主国家和企业。为了给报纸一个短期的赞助激励(除了潜在的未来收入来源的长期激励外),竞争的博客将被要求授予赞助商发表其博客文章的非排他性权利,包括署名和链接。为了模拟纳税人资助的竞赛,参赛将尽可能开放,允许任何个人、团体或组织参赛。这将包括业余博主和专业记者,无论是自由职业者还是赞助(或非赞助)报纸的员工。例如,赞助商可以参加比赛,并试图赢回他们的一些钱。因此,比赛应独立于赞助商进行管理。VoterMedia.org(一个非盈利项目)提供免费管理这项竞赛,包括主持投票。在过去的五年里,VoterMedia的竞赛设计已经在英属哥伦比亚大学的学生会和加拿大大温哥华的一些市政选举中进行了测试和完善。参与者在VoterMedia网站的视频采访中讨论了UBC的实验结果。
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Newspaper Sponsorship for Municipal VoterMedia
This paper proposes an experiment in political media reform, in which competing newspapers would jointly sponsor a blogging contest to cover a city government and community issues. The goal is to test whether the VoterMedia design for a blog contest will generate enough public interest journalism to make it worthwhile for municipal taxpayers to fund such competitions in the future. This could become a new source of revenue supporting journalism that covers not only cities, but also other voter communities, including democracies and corporations. To give newspapers a near-term incentive to sponsor (in addition to the long-term incentive of a potential future revenue source), the competing blogs would be required to grant the sponsors non-exclusive rights to publish their blog posts, with attribution and link-back. To simulate a taxpayer-funded competition, entry would be as open as possible, admitting any individual, group, or organization. This would include amateur bloggers and professional journalists, whether free-lance or on staff of a sponsoring (or non-sponsoring) newspaper. So for example, sponsors could enter the competition and try to win some of their money back. The contest should therefore be administered independently from the sponsors. VoterMedia.org (a nonprofit project) is offering to administer the proposed competition for free, including hosting the voting. The VoterMedia contest design has been tested and refined for the past five years at the University of British Columbia's student union, and in some municipal elections in Metro Vancouver, Canada. Experimental results at UBC are discussed by participants in video interviews on the VoterMedia website.
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