Openpedia.org > Learning How to Teach on the Blogosphere
[Dennis Dunleavy] June 18, 2006 in 1st Amendment, Ashland, Oregon, Civil Rights, Copyright, Current Affairs, Dennis Dunleavy, Education, Fair Use , First Amendment, Internet Learning, Journalism, Journalism Southern Oregon University, Media Criticism, Mobile Journalists, Our Media, Personal Media, Photoblogging, Photojournalism, Press Freedom, Social Capital, Southern Oregon University, Web/Tech, Weblogs, Wikipedia, blogging, digital cameras, intellectual property, mini-digital video, moblogging, new technologies, orphan works, photoblogs, podcasting, point and shoot cameras, public domain, public journalism
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[Jerz.setonhill.edu] Journalism Archive (Jerz's Literacy Weblog): Each network broadcasts the evening news at 6:30 p.m., and for many American families, gathering around the television set to watch NBC anchor Tom Brokaw, CBS anchor Dan Rather, or ABC anchor Peter Jennings has become a tradition. But some media experts say that era may be coming to an end, with the retirement of NBC news anchor Tom Brokaw on December 1 after more than 40 years on the air, and the recent announcement by CBS anchor Dan Rather that he plans to step down early next year.
[Roughtype.com] Rough Type: Nicholas Carr's Blog: Hafner goes on to quote Lotus founder and open-source advocate Mitch Kapor, who says that Wikipedia "can tell us a lot about the future of knowledge creation, which will depend much less on individual heroism and more on collaboration." She also quotes Wikipedia cofounder and chief executive Jimmy Wales, who says that the online encyclopedia's imposition of restrictions on the editing of certain articles "is a tool for quality control, but it hardly defines Wikipedia. What does define Wikipedia is the volunteer community and the open participation." Regarding the establishment of editorial rules, Wales says: "It's not always obvious when something becomes policy.
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