About Media Industry

BNET Media provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives in publishing, print, broadcast, film, and online media. In addition to media company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new partnerships, media products, mergers and acquisitions, labor and cost management, media buying, investments and a host of other important business issues.

AllVoices to Adapt Twitter's Method to Gather Global News

By David Weir | Apr 15, 2009

As Twitter ascends to the stratosphere as the communications channel of choice — and there’s no stopping it now – media types can’t be blamed for wishing there were some easier ways to separate out, say, what our dear fellow Twitterers may have had for breakfast, from significant breaking news stories.

Now, there are ways, involving tags and such, but the barrier to entry is so far proving daunting to multi-tasking journalists and bloggers. What I, for one, have been wishing out loud about for a while now would be a Twitter News Channel.

So, along comes AllVoices.com today with an interesting approch to this very issue. You may recall that we profiled AllVoices here a couple of months back. The company is run by a dynamic Pathan-American, Amra Tareen, and its mission is to create a global community for sharing news from anywhere in the world in a multimedia format that dispalys multiple points of view — “free from the traditional editorial oversight and censorship characteristic of global media organizations.”

Today, AllVoices announced that it now can accept a 160-character text news submissions, and algorithmically build a rich media context around that small snippet of information — think of it as a news headline submitted by anybody, anywhere that triggers a multimedia event page supplied by AllVoices.

A particularly intriguing aspect of this service is its global nature. According to the company, around 80 percent of the globe is now covered by SMS access numbers, so users can text in a news submission from almost anywhere.

Meanwhile, AllVoices is attempting to overcome one of the blocks to seamless global communication, which is that there is no free cellphone network for the world. Accordingly, the company has secured several dedicated international SMS numbers for overseas users to submit their stories, as well as one central number (“VOICES” (864237) for use inside the U.S.

Erik Sundelof, who led development of the new service for AllVoices, explained to me in broad terms how the company’s unique credibility ranking algorithms work. “First, we evaluate the reputation of the poster to see whether (s)he has supplied credible, popular content before. Second, we search and supply online news stories, blogs, and citizen journalism to provide context for this particular submission. Third, we rate the community interactivity things like views, ratings, comments, or added content.”

Once AllVoices receives a news submission, it sends the user back a short “report code,” which can be used to add more content to the story at hand, or to share it with his or her community.

As CEO Amra Tareen said today in a prepared statement:  “More than three billion people around the globe carry a mobile device capable of capturing a live event and posting it to the web in real time.  That alone has driven the citizen journalism phenomenon to the interest highs we’re witnessing today.  It’s become increasingly clear people want breaking news delivered immediately, and with little editorial bias or interference.”

Let’s see: Twitter’s character count constraint is 140 (for Tweets). AllVoices’ is set to 160 (for news). Are we just possibly beginning to see the emergence of  the virtual equivalent of radio frequencies for microbloggers?

In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Star-Ledger announces salary and benefits cuts

    Poynter Online - 196 days 19 hours 36 minutes ago

    mit.edu [PDF file] "Much of the press criticism online is driven by ideology and sees agenda where it often does not exist," NYTer David Carr tells Temple prof Christopher Harper. "Conspiracy theories abound and there is a scarcity of carefully reported analytics. A lot of it comes from writers on hobby horses." PLUS: Observations from Jay...

  • Mashable Trends Launches: A New Hub for the Mashable Twitter Community

    Mashable - 60 days 12 hours 32 minutes ago

    We love how the Mashable community uses Twitter to discuss and share our stories, but until now there’s been no way to connect with Mashable readers who Tweet. Why not create a hub of all the Mashable-related activity happening on Twitter to help find the most talked-about stories, track trending topics within the social media realm and...

  • Xconomy Goes Mobile at m.xconomy.com

    Xconomy.com - 95 days 2 hours 14 minutes ago

    We’re happy to announce that there’s now an easier to way to read Xconomy on your mobile phone. Go to http://m.xconomy.com for the new mobile-friendly version of our site, which we’ve simplified for easy navigation on small screens. All the usual content is there: our Boston, San Diego, and Seattle news stories, along with Xconomist Forum...

  • I have too many ideas and can't get things done. Help!

    SmartCompany - 3 days 22 hours 14 minutes ago

    I have too many ideas which stops me from getting anything done. I feel like my brain is always in top gear... thinking of easier ways to do things... I just can't concentrate on those repetitive (but necessary) tasks that need to be done for longer than 10 minutes. Take today for example. I was supposed to update some figures in a spreadsheet....

  • Co-Creation Grows Into a Viable Business Model

    Ogilvy PR - 88 days 21 hours 13 minutes ago

    There’s been a lot of interesting discussion recently on how to best leverage channels like Twitter to communicate.  This post talks about a bit about the co-creation of new social experiences that drive conversation and engagement in innovative ways, with the potential to then communicate the co-creation activity across multiple channels -...

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement
Click Here