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(Click) Media- Web 2.0 Tools and Practices for Journalists ------------------------------- See also: (Click) Media blog

Citizen Journalism- the learning process. Trying to find answers to some of the following questions: Where is the future of the media and the news industry? How will the traditional media merge with Citizen Journalism, and what will be the final product of it? Is Citizen Journalism just a current fashion, or is it really changing the way we perceive and make news? How revolutionary is Citizen Journalism, compared to other media developments over the history? What can other hystorical invention in the field of communications can it be compared to? How can Citizen Journalism change democracy, can CJ change it? Finally, what are the most significant examples of CJ done today? How accessible is CJ news to an average citizen today (and what are the potential future prospects)? What are the efforts done currently to promote CJ? What are the main CJ platforms? How are traditional media promoting CJ (the ones that are promoting it)? Why are traditional journalists affraid of CJ (the ones that are affraid)? Why is it seen as a potential for information liberation and the development of democracy? Who are the main CJ contributors from the developing countries, war zones, areas with opressed freedom of information? Etc. etc --------------------------- Posts that contain Immondizia Napoli per day for the last 30 days.
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Posts that contain Immigrazione Clandestina per day for the last 30 days.
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In fact, “citizen journalists” often have neither political nor journalistic intentions. Dr Dave Otway won second place in Press Gazette’s 2006 Citizen Journalism Awards. An avid amateur photographer, Otway took his prize-winning aerial shots of the Buncefield fuel depot in Hemel Hempstead burning after a fuel tank exploded there. Dr Otway had been on an early morning Ryanair flight which flew directly over the conflagration on 11 December 2005 and had taken several pictures. Immediately after arriving to work that morning, Otway uploaded five of the pictures he had taken to the photosharing web site Flickr. His intention, he said in an interview, was to share the images with others, not to report a breaking news story.