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The Media in the United States > Online Journalism
Introduction
| Freedom of the Press | Media Ethics |
Newspapers
| Magazines | Radio | Television | Online Journalism

What kind of information materials are available?
CD: Texts available on CD version.Texts available in multiple languages.

Background
C-Span - Public Affairs on the Web
Columbia Journalism Review
CyberJournalist
Digital Promise
Journalism on the Internet (Nieman Seminar)
Newswatch.org (News about the News)
Online Journalism Awards
Online Journalism Review
Online News Association
Online Publishers Association
Pew Internet and American Life Project
Poynter Online Journalism

Salon - News
The State of the News Media 2010 (Project for Excellence in Journalism) NEW

Original Documents
ASME Best Practices for Digital Media (American Society of Magazine Editors)
Handbook of Independent Journalism 2006 (IIP)
Online News (Pew Internet and American Life Project)
Stanford/Poynter's Eyetrack Study on Internet News Readership

Link Lists
American Press Institute - Journalist's Toolbox
Columbia Journalism Review - Resources
Foreign Press Center - Useful Links (State Department)
Tools for Online Journalists (Committee of Concerned Journalists)
Yahoo: Journalism Web Directories

Internet URL

Speed and timeliness were once the strength of newspapers. The wire services built their reputations on being first with the big stories, which people typically found in their local papers. The immediacy of television took that edge from the printed press. Now the Internet has established its own advantages of speed and timeliness. In doing so, it has enabled newspapers to come full circle by posting breaking news and extending their brand identities through such innovations as online afternoon editions.

Web technology has strengthened the traditional watchdog functions of journalism by giving reporters efficient ways to probe more deeply for information. The capacity to search documents, compile background and historical context, and identify authoritative sources has expanded the reporter's toolbox. It also has introduced a fundamentally different culture built on interactivity, fewer rules, and fewer limits.

The process of establishing standards online has been influenced by three developments. First, the reality that the dominant news Web sites will be run by the old media -- the traditional news organizations such as daily newspapers, newsmagazines, and network and major cable television outlets. Second, efforts by online journalists to craft standards for the Web. The Online News Association is beginning a project to develop strong guidelines, including recommendations for how they can be applied and monitored. The third, and perhaps the most far-reaching influence on journalistic standards, is the interactivity of e-mail. E-mail can bring instant feedback, enabling reporters and editors to hear from people who may know something about the story and who can share an authoritative perspective, provide additional sources, or point out parts of the story that may be unbalanced or unfair.

 
Texts are abridged from U.S. State Department IIP publications and other U.S. government materials.
 
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Updated: March 2010