Archive for January 22nd, 2010

Airport Tweet Lands Man In Handcuffs

By Ben Haber

Add “making a joke about blowing up an airport” to the list of what not to tweet.

After a canceled flight disrupted his travel plans, British traveler Paul Chambers (26 years old) wrote on Twitter that he was going to blow the U.K.’s Robin Hood Airport  sky high:

Robin Hood airport is closed. You’ve got a week and a bit to get your sh** together, otherwise I’m blowing the airport sky high!!

However, the authorities did not find this particular tweet to be very funny. A week following the post, the man was arrested under the country’s Terrorism Act and question for hours. He was eventually banned from going to this specific airport again

This is not the first time this has happens – but it is the first reported case in the U.K.

4 comments January 22nd, 2010

Are Twitter and Facebook Good For Journalists?

By Kyle Austin

Earlier this week Cision and George Washington University released a survey, which reported that 84 percent of journalists believe social media sources are less reliable than traditional ones. Of the nearly 400 editors/journalists, which answered a custom questionnaire, 89 percent reported using blogs, 65 percent reported using social networking sites and 52 percent reported using micro-blogging sites like Twitter as part of their news gathering.

However, almost all of the respondents noted the reliability issues with Twitter, Facebook and other social networking sites. In fact, none of the responding journalists / editors  said “that news and information delivered via social media is a lot more reliable than news delivered via traditional media.”

Is this really a surprise though? I’m a huge advocate of journalists, editors and news organizations using these social media platforms, but I think we all understand that you need to take your bits of information and source leads with a grain of a salt. Yes, they’re a great tool for finding new potential leads, stories and information, but after that it comes back to the basic guidelines of reporting (verifying with two sources, fact checking, being objective, etc.).

That’s why this whole sending 5 journalists to a farmhouse in France with only Twitter and Facebook access to report stories doesn’t make a lot of sense to me. Yes, it’s fun story. A bizzaro, Real World France-journalistic hybrid; but it won’t really prove anything. While these tools are growing in importance, they’re still just a part of your toolbox. The phone is still a powerful tool – people will say things there that they won’t say on social media or in an email (no paper trail).  Your writing acumen, commons sense, etc. are powerful tools.

In addition, when looking strictly at news gathering – corporate Websites continue to be the most common destination for reporters doing background research or looking for information (Chart below).

Of course, the study also overlooks that social media is a powerful distribution / aggregation tool for journalists and editors. According to Venturebeat the NYTimes.com received nearly 3% of its traffic from Facebook in December 2009. And even with a scheduled move to metered traffic, the Times will still allow referral traffic from social media sites to see Times stories, without counting against their “meter”.

So while the five strangers picked to live in a farm-house in France, and have their stories Twittered,  may have trouble confirming their sources and fact-checking, they should have no trouble distributing their stories.

5 comments January 22nd, 2010

Twitter Finally Learns How to Welcome New Users

By Ben Haber

When Twitter exploded in popularity over the past year it was largely because of the celebrity influence on the micro social networking site – not it’s ability to welcome new users. For those unfamiliar with Twitter (as most new users are) it was difficult to find people that you genuinely were interested in following.

However, Twitter has just launched a new tool that suggests who to follow in 20 different areas/topics. This allows users to finally an easy way to locate interesting people in the topics they’re passionate about.

While almost most of the recommended Twitter handles aren’t people (or businesses) that are going to follow back and engage in conversation, it does help get new users acquainted with Twitter.

2 comments January 22nd, 2010


Calendar

January 2010
M T W T F S S
« Dec   Feb »
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Receive New Posts by Email

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Recent Posts

Categories


Race Talk Blog - Blogged