Beeb has plans...to do an Indy media !?
A. Blinkin | 06.05.2003 04:59
"Cronin and Matt Jones, an information architect with the BBC's new media wing, told conference attendees that the idea is to provide a loosely structured set of tools to make it easy for ordinary citizens to run their own activist campaigns on the Net."
In October, the BBC plans to flick the switch on an ambitious website designed to help Britons organize and run grassroots political campaigns. The site, dubbed iCan, is designed to help citizens investigate issues that concern them, find others who share those concerns and provide advice and tools for organizing and engaging in the political process.
"It's a big change for the BBC," said James Cronin, the project's technical lead. "It's ceasing to be just a broadcaster. It's starting to enable conversations."
The BBC's purpose is twofold. On the one hand, the iCan site will help keep the broadcaster's ear to the ground. By mining the iCan website for leads, the BBC will be better able to respond to issues pertinent to its viewers, or so it hopes.
On the other hand, the effort is intended to counteract what officials at the broadcasting network feel is widespread political apathy in the United Kingdom, marked by low voter turnout at elections and declining audiences for its political programming. As a state-financed institution operating under a royal charter to inform, educate and entertain, the BBC feels it is within its purview to help disenfranchised citizens engage in public life.
see entire item at http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,58715,00.html
"It's a big change for the BBC," said James Cronin, the project's technical lead. "It's ceasing to be just a broadcaster. It's starting to enable conversations."
The BBC's purpose is twofold. On the one hand, the iCan site will help keep the broadcaster's ear to the ground. By mining the iCan website for leads, the BBC will be better able to respond to issues pertinent to its viewers, or so it hopes.
On the other hand, the effort is intended to counteract what officials at the broadcasting network feel is widespread political apathy in the United Kingdom, marked by low voter turnout at elections and declining audiences for its political programming. As a state-financed institution operating under a royal charter to inform, educate and entertain, the BBC feels it is within its purview to help disenfranchised citizens engage in public life.
see entire item at http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,58715,00.html
A. Blinkin
Homepage:
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,58715,00.html
Comments
Hide the following 8 comments
So it goes
06.05.2003 08:21
If the Beeb had plans of creating a forum for putting the spheres of grassroots activism and politicians power broking (explained by pontification) into real and public contact with one another, it would be amazing. Just think: they could reserve two seats on the Question Time panel for activists selected by and from the grass roots by a transparant system of webbased decision making to give the pols a hard time and an entirely alternative viewpoint. The idea that we non-professional politicians are only qualified to give questions and comments from the audience is a form of deference that some of these guys who talk absolute violently racist gibberish do not deserve. When the Home Sec is doing his latest crusade against asylum seekers, who here wouldn't want to see an articulate and very illegal immigrant face up to his lies on camera. He would then be arrested and deported that evening.
[Of course, if the BBC arranged embarrassing moments for politicians like this, they would immediately be destroyed, so they must always give unreserved deference and protect them from the public.]
If the beeb is going to do it as a way of servicing separate sectors of entirely different "markets", then it is a waste of time. We can talk to ourselves already without their help.
goatchurch
don't worry
06.05.2003 08:52
However, this thing can only be helpfull. If activists and grassroot campaigners will prefer to use a BBC service instead of using more commercial, for-profit ones, it could still be helpfull. However, I doubt BBC will take on to offer alternatives to commercial businesses such as yahoo geocities/hotmail etc. so if it won't benefit the grassroots groups they won't use it much, anyway.
Also it will still be interesting where and how the BBC will relate its editorial policy- how they are accountable about how they use the content of grassroot campaigns which is published and where they will draw the (editorial guide) line.
Very very intersting. I am thrilled!
nona
Oh hell
06.05.2003 15:43
sorry.
I wouldn't use it. The BBC have shamed themselves over the coverage of Iraq and have shown they have no committment to free speech, free reporting and disseminating information.
The idea of them trying to do an 'Indymedia' is ridiculous.
and actually, not that funny, just disturbing.
Liberty
What the bbc stands for?
06.05.2003 17:04
kassem
You've got to laugh.
06.05.2003 22:15
But didn't we just see (Feb 15th) the biggest political demonstrations in UK history?
Not that you'd know from BBC coverage, which was atrocious.
Hasn't it dawned on the BBC that many people don't vote because they are totally disillusioned with the lying scum in Downing Street and Westminster - Tory, Neo-Labour, Lib Dem, they are fundamentally the same. And where there is dissent, the BBC looks the other way and ignores, marginalises or denies its existence.
They worry about declining audiences for their political programming - but is thst surprising when most of it appears to have been scripted by the Downing Street spin machine?
Auntie Beeb (no relation)
Spoiled brits
07.05.2003 15:50
It could be a lot worse. You guys really have no idea what bad or biased media is. The BBC does enough to, for example, constantly be accused by Zionits of being anti-Semitic. Dissent even to such a mild agree is completely absent from American stations, which fall all over themselves to fawn over the president at every available opportunity.
chris
chris
NOT JUST 15 FEB. DEMO
07.05.2003 15:54
I suppose this is what is called free media and free country. Free media (BBC & ITV) because the journalists are free to broadcast what ever the filthy western system allows them to transmit. Free country because the rulers of the country are free to appoint the people who know how it must run.
DEATH TO THE ENEMY OF HUMANITY.
KASSEM
we're in trouble
07.05.2003 19:37
Canada...got top 5 in a study done about 6 months ago to see which countriies had the best free press....US did not rate highly, nor did UK
Liberty