People Are Spending More Time In Mobile Apps Than On The Web

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By Jay Dunn on Social Media Today, Sept. 23 – People are spending more time inside mobile applications on average than they are on the web, according to an analysis from Flurry, a mobile analytics firm.

Flurry measures the time people spend in apps through its own direct analytics. It got numbers for the web using public data from comScore and Alexa. The analysis is somewhat imperfect, but even if you judge it solely on a directional basis you can see mobile apps are consuming more and more time.

So what are people doing in those apps? Gaming and social networking, which absorb 79% of people’s time, according to Flurry. The rest is news, entertainment, and other apps.

Read the full post of Social media Today

Twitter, Facebook and Co. – good for teens and the First Amendment?

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From the Knight Foundation website: MIAMI, (Sept. 16, 2011) – While social media have been blamed for teen ills from narcissism to cyberbullying, a new study offers an inspiring perspective: as social media use has grown in the United States, so has students’ appreciation for the First Amendment. The national study was released today to coincide with the celebration of Constitution Day. It was funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

The national study was released today to coincide with the celebration of Constitution Day. It was funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

“This is the first generation in history that can text, tweet and blog to the whole world – it’s great news that their support is growing for the freedoms that let them do it,” said Eric Newton, senior adviser to the president of Knight Foundation. “But the bad news is that teachers aren’t nearly as excited as students about social media or student freedom.”

The Future of the First Amendment study found:

  • Both social media use and First Amendment appreciation are growing among high school students. More than three-quarters of students use social media several times a week to get news and information. Meanwhile, the percentage of students who believe “the First Amendment goes too far” in protecting the rights of citizens has dropped to a quarter (24 percent) in 2011 from nearly half (45 percent) in 2006.
  • There is a clear, positive relationship between social media use and appreciation of the First Amendment. Fully 91 percent of students who use social networking daily to get news and information agree that “people should be allowed to express unpopular opinions.” But only 77 percent of those who never use social networks to get news agree that unpopular opinions should be allowed.
  • Still, many teachers believe social media harms education. Most teachers also do not support free expression for students. Only 35 percent, for example, agree that “high school students should be allowed to report controversial issues in their student newspapers without the approval of school authorities.” In addition, teachers are more inclined to think that the emergence of the newest forms of digital media have harmed (49 percent) rather than helped (39 percent) student learning.

“For many, the First Amendment is an abstract concept, but this new study tells us that social media bring the importance of free speech home to young Americans,” said Ken Paulson, president of the First Amendment Center. “The vibrancy of worldwide communications today, fueled by social media and engaged users, is in effect exporting First Amendment values to a new and global generation.”

The study, conducted through interviews with 12,090 students and 900 teachers nationwide, was written by Dr. Kenneth Dautrich, a senior researcher at The Pert Group. It is the fourth Future of the First Amendment study done by Dr. Dautrich for Knight Foundation since 2004.

Madison Davis, a senior at Branham High School in San Jose, Calif. who took the survey, says she thinks using Facebook several times a day has given her a greater appreciation for the First Amendment and freedom of expression.

“It has taught us early on that we have a right to say whatever we want without worrying,” Madison said. “Because we have an easier outlet to express our views, we’re more likely to. All it takes is going online and typing in a post and we’ve already expressed ourselves to 400 plus people.”

Alexander Richter, a senior at Branham Senior High School, says expressing himself on social media makes him more likely to do the same in person.

“If you can go on Facebook and easily post your opinion, you appreciate your rights to do it in a protest or outside of the Internet more,” Alexander said. He recently found himself arguing online over national economic recovery plans, and felt more confident to make his case the next day in school.

“I knew what I wanted to say, I was prepared to say it, and I was already attached to the issue because of Facebook.”

As a response to the survey findings, Knight Foundation and the First Amendment Center will release a teachers’ guide to social media and the First Amendment as a way to foster discussion and appreciation for both. The guide will be unveiled at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. on Dec 15, in celebration of the Bill of Rights’ birthday.

For more information about activities celebrating the First Amendment, follow the First Amendment Center’s 1 for All campaign on Twitter @1forAllus.

For more on the Future of the First Amendment Survey, visit knightfoundation.org.

About the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation

Knight Foundation supports transformational ideas that promote quality journalism, advance media innovation, engage communities and foster the arts. The foundation believes that democracy thrives when people and communities are informed and engaged. For more, visit KnightFoundation.org.

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Contacts:

Marc Fest, Vice President/Communications, (305) 908-2677, fest@knightfoundation.org

See also previous years of FoFA research: 2007 Report | 2006 Report | 2004 Report.

Read the article on the Knight Foundation website

WSJ Places Content on Facebook, Hopes to Meet Readers There

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By Jeff Bercovici on Forbes, Sept. 19 – Is Facebook a friend of news companies, or is it a rival? No matter how much success publishers have piggybacking off its traffic, they can’t escape the cruel math: The more of their time consumers spend on Facebook and other social networking hubs, the less they have left over for news sites.

Now The Wall Street Journal has what it thinks is an answer to this problem. Called WSJ Social, it filters Journal content through the so-called social graph to yield a news product that lives entirely within the walls of Facebook. It launches Tuesday. Here’s what it looks like:

Photo Credit: Forbes

“The fundamental idea of it is super simple,” says Alisa Bowen, general manager of the WSJ Digital Network. “It’s about making [WSJ content] available where people are.”

Read the full article on Forbes

Study: LinkedIn top social media site for journalists

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By Kristin Piombino on ragan.com, Aug. 29, 2011 – When 92 percent of journalists have a LinkedIn account, there has to be a good reason. There is, and business leaders, representatives and PR pros should pay attention.

new survey from Arketi Group found that the percent of journalists on LinkedIn has increased from 85 percent in 2009. Why?

LinkedIn provides an easy way for reporters to connect with sources.

“It comes as no surprise more BtoB journalists are participating in social media sites, especially LinkedIn,” Mike Neumeier, principal of Arketi Group, says, “LinkedIn provides an online outlet for them to connect with industry sources, find story leads and build their professional networks.”

Read the full article | Download the report

 

MediaShift Idea Lab: Journalists Should Join Google+ to Understand What Comes Next

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By David Cohn on MediaShift, Sept. 1 –  This month’s Carnival of Journalism, a site that I’ve organized where bloggers can convene to all write about the same topic, was hosted by Kathy Gill, a social media consultant and senior lecturer at the University of Washington, who seized on the new social network that is Google+.

Still in its infancy, Google+ has been the topic of many-a-tech blog posts. As a former tech writer, I love and hate this stuff. Sometimes I want to slap Mashable right in the “http” and tell them to never do another “Top X Ways [name your industry professionals] Can Use [new social-networking tool].” If you are curious though, here are the top five ways journalists can use Google+, courtesy of Mashable.

Equally, I want to avoid speculation about Google+ vs. Facebook or Twitter, etc. It’s a valid conversation, but there is already plenty of it. If a Facebook executive has a sneeze that sounds like “aww-choogle-phluss,” the tech press is all over it. I personally am not a fan of Facebook and welcome my Google+ overlords. I do have a post in me about privacy, Silicon Valley speculation, etc. — but I don’t want to add my voice to that already loud chorus.

Instead, I want to write about Google+ in terms of everyday average use — both how journalists use the Internet and how everyday average people use the Internet (assuming the latter is slightly different).

Read the full post on MediaShift

How Journalists Are Using Google+

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From Meghan Peters on Mashable, July 18 – Social networks have proved to be incredible distribution platforms for real-time news and continue to fascinate journalists as communication tools. It’s no surprise that many media professionals have jumped quickly on the Google+ band wagon to explore its potential for journalism.

Some are updating personal accounts while others have created profiles for their organizations. They’re in experimentation mode, testing out which features are most beneficial for messaging and engaging with their audiences.

Google+ has yet to be defined. For the news industry, it will become what the early adopters of the field make of it. Here are a few ways we’ve seen media professionals using the platform and what that might mean for the future of Google+ in journalism.

Read full article

Ad Agencies and Media Companies Should Hunt for the Next Instagram

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By Reed Phillips on AdAge, June 9 – Social media shouldn’t remain solely the province of companies launched since Justin Bieber hit puberty. In fact, traditional ad agencies and media companies have the chance to catch the internet wave they may have missed by aggressively becoming players in social media.

Ad agencies of all sizes are already mobilizing to crack the social-media code for themselves and their clients. David Jones, newly elevated CEO of Havas Worldwide, recently disclosed that his firm now employs 2,000 people who are focused on social media. And, Jon Bond, a big-agency veteran turned CEO of social-media agency Big Fuel, believes that eventually ad agencies will use social media as the engine that drives the rest of their business, putting social media on the front-end of their offerings.

Smart publishers across the media landscape — general-interest, enthusiast and B-to-B — understood the essence of community a century before the term social media was coined. Moreover, the rich interactivity that digital technology allows between publisher and readers has advertisers clamoring for new ways to harvest that community. Read the full article

 

Long-form Journalism and Social Media

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By Lois Beckett on Nieman Journalism Lab, May 27 – Last month, Rolling Stone brought three of its reporters to a Manhattan bookstore for a standing-room-only conversation about long-form journalism. The event was co-hosted by a hashtag.

At the time, #longreads, along with its associated Twitter feed, had just reached its second birthday. Founder Mark Armstrong had made the tag ubiquitous as a source for great nonfiction, helping to prompt the media business’ startled realization that people will actually read long stuff on the Internet. But could Longreads’ crowd of nonfiction fans, nearly 25,000 strong on the web, be mobilized to help support the creation of the stories they loved?

It’s a question that Armstrong is still working on, as he continues Longreads’ development from media-geek favorite to industry standard. (NYT Magazine editor Hugo Lindgren used the tag Wednesday morning to announce the magazine’s latest cover story.) Read full article

 

New Al Jazeera Show Merges TV with the Social Web

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Al Jazeera’s new TV program, The Stream, uses social media to both gather news information and interact with its viewers. The show launched online a few weeks ago and will start airing on TV May 2. The Stream uses Storify, which opened to the public this week, to gather information from across the social web to share with viewers.

The show incorporates Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other social media elements to create a show that focuses on Middle Eastern news and technology. The show encourages its viewers to interact with them – via Twitter or Facebook – by submitting to the “Feed the Stream” box on their site.

What do you think about news shows like The Stream that incorporate social media elements into the program?

 

 

Storify Compiles News from the Social Web

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A new website that allows users to compile news from the social web just launched its public beta version. Storify allows users to compile news from across the social web using sites like YouTube, Facebook, Flickr and Twitter and then build streams of information around specific topics. Users can also add text, pictures or their own information about a topic.


The information streams can then be followed by other users or even embedded on a website. Storify is now open to public users, after being tested by news organizations like The Washington Post, NPR and PBS.

You can read a New York Times article about it here.