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Blogger Follows: Craig Calls Out the "Urban Myth" that He Hurt Newspapers

By David Weir | Nov 6, 2009

One of keys to Twitter’s success is its propensity for letting its users improve on the basic product. Founders Biz Stone and Evan Williams have often spoken out about this, noting that popular features like hash tags and reTweets were not their ideas, but instead emerged from the community that has accrued around the service.

Another one of those features is Follow Friday, when people recommend others to follow on the micro-blogging platform.

In that spirit, I think bloggers should also cull through and recommend other blogs from time to time, especially less-traveled ones that you might have missed (unless you are also keeping a non-stop watch on the media industry).

Two that grabbed my attention today involved, first, Craigslist and whether it is a cause of the newspaper industry’s decline; and second, the prospects for magazines and newspapers going forward, given the historic switchover in advertising placements from print to online and mobile platforms that is well underway.

The first story comes via Ava Seave, posting at Audience Development for Folio about Craig Newmark’s visit to the Harvard Business School Club this week. “It’s an urban legend that Craigslist affected the news business badly,” she quotes Craig as saying. (Seave seems to disagree with him, BTW.)

She also reports another piece of news — that the classified service will be rolling out a type of OpenID system in 2010. “We need a better balance between anonymity and accountability,” she quotes Newmark as saying.

The second story that caught my eye was the position advanced at an advertising conference by Martin Sorrell, CEO of WPP, as reported by Hoag Levins at AdAge, that he “not only thinks the contraction of the newspaper and magazine industry will continue, but that it needs to continue.”

According to Levins, Sorrell “cited the over-capacity of supply and inventory as a major problem holding back the re-stabilization of the media business. He also predicted that ad agencies would be getting ‘very much more involved’ in the development of content and that the lines between advertising and editorial are going to get ‘much more blurred’ than they already are today.”

Taken together, these short blog pots today neatly bookmark what is wrong about two points of accepted wisdom in the traditional media today:

  1. How things got this way. (Read the related posts below.)
  2. Why they won’t get better soon.

So, there you have today’s contribution for a kind of Follow Blogger Friday…

Related Bnet Media Links:

When Craigslist Won the War Over Classified Ads

Don’t Blame Craig for Killing Newspapers

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:
  • Is Craig Newmark the Col. Mustard of Newspapers?

    Media Bistro - 169 days 11 hours 58 minutes ago

    After he dropped in to cover mediabistro Circus, Beet.TV's Andy Plesser headed over to yet another media conference happening during this busy Internet Week in New York, the IWantMedia conference. Plesser asked Craig Newmark whether his list helped kill the newspaper as we know it. Newmark calls that kind of talk "urban legend" and New York...

  • Craigslist Founder Defends Web Site

    National Public Radio - 109 days 10 hours 39 minutes ago

    Craigslist founder Craig Newmark says the tension between anonymity and accountability is one of the most pertinent issues on the Internet. The self-described former nerd says his Web site was built of a single good idea, which he expanded by listening to suggestions

  • The Craigslist Challenge Continues

    WebProNews - 198 days 13 hours 50 minutes ago

    Craig Newmark never killed anyone. In fact, all Craig wanted to do was help people. Unfortunately, Philip Markoff possibly did kill someone, and he found his lead on Craig’s website, Craigslist.org.Thankfully, Craig himself is not responsible. In 1995, when Newmark started up a little website that helped people stay informed about community...

  • Consumer Reports online health summit

    Schwitzer - 302 days 7 hours 16 minutes ago

    I'm at Consumer Reports in NY today for a session, "A Healthier Web: Blogging, Rating & Community." On Twitter, you can follow the discussion among several bloggers who are attending. Right now listening to predictions from Craig Newmark, founder of Craigslist.

  • CIRM Says California Stem Cell Report is 'One-Sided'

    California Stem Cell Report - 282 days 12 hours 5 minutes ago

    The chief PR person for the California stem cell agency this morning volunteered the following comment on the items that appeared last night on the California Stem Cell Report.Don Gibbons said in an email:"Once again you have written a one sided piece using only half Dr Pizzo's quote. He said we have heard two avenues this evening, a route to...

 

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