Sunday, November 13, 2011

Reflections


In order to blog effectively, it is important to build credibility. Some aspects such as credible sources, flawless grammars, informative contents and regular postings will enhance the persuasiveness and credibility of the blog. Besides, social networks can also help to build blogging communities. As Sobel (2010) states, ‘as the blogosphere converges with social media, sharing of blog posts is increasingly done through social networks’.

Furthermore, multimodality is needed to express an idea effectively. According to Walsh (2006, p. 24), ‘ … meaning is communicated through a [synchronization] of modes’. In order to convey a meaning effectively, the elements in a same blog post, such as pictures and texts, have to be relevant.

In addition, in order to prevent misunderstandings and misinterpretations, it is also important for bloggers to be sensitive to cultural context. As Schriver (1997, p. 372) states, ‘frame of reference comes from various sources which interact during document design, including cultural knowledge’.

Lastly, throughout the course of Issues in Publication and Design, I have learned some important theories which will be helpful in the field of communication. I hope you also enjoy reading my blog. Thanks!


References:
Schriver, KA 1997, ‘The interplay of words and pictures’, in KA Schriver (ed), Dynamics in document design: creating texts for readers, Wiley Computer Pub., New York, pp. 361-441.

Sobel, J 2010, State of blogosphere 2010, Technorati, viewed 18 August 2011, <http://technorati.com/blogging/article/state-of-the-blogosphere-2010-introduction/>.

Walsh, M 2006, ‘The ‘textual shift’: examining the reading process with print, visual and multimodal texts’, Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, vol. 20, no. 1, pp. 24-37.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Online plagiarism, Copyright Regulations & Fair Use


According to Landers (2011), ‘in a study of 1222 undergraduates … 61.9% admitted to [engage] in online plagiarism’.

Plagiarism is one of the research misconduct which many journalists and students have committed. An article ‘Copyrighted material: fairand unfair use’ which was featured on Editors Weblog on 22 June 2011 reported that the issues of copyright and plagiarism are out of control because of the advent of Internet. ‘Sometimes material online is blatantly stolen and plagiarized’ (Pichon 2011). Journalists have to be aware of the issues, as they may be suspended or terminated if their material is plagiarized. However, plagiarism standards are still overlooked by newsrooms. This situation will cause repercussions for journalists.


Righthaven, a company [which] specializing in copyright litigation’ (Pichon 2011)


The Internet has become a primary information source for users. As McKenzie (cited in Wang 2008, p. 743) states, ‘The New Plagiarism may be worse than the old because [the Internet] makes it possible to find and save huge chunks of information with little reading, effort or originality’. Eventually, it causes a continuous decline in journalism standards.

Plagiarism is an ‘act of taking and using the whole or any part of another person’s work and presenting it as your own without proper acknowledgement’ (Temasek Polytechnic 2011). On the other hand, copyright is a form of legal protection to defense an author’s original works; for example, the CopyrightAct 1987 that is implemented in Malaysia. Any reader is required to obtain permission before reprinting the works. However, the Internet diminishes the division line between copyrighted and free content. Many journalists do not know how to differentiate the two terms. Upon this matter, Saver (2006, p. 574) clarifies that ‘materials available on the Internet are copyright protected in the same way that printed materials are’. It is considered as plagiarism if one uses the information without citing the original source.

Furthermore, fair use is the one of the most misunderstood concepts in copyright law. ‘This is a doctrine that provides a defense to copyright infringement for some acts’ (Hollaar 2002). The copyright act only allows copyrighted material to be reposted for the purpose of criticism, commentary, research, scholarship, teaching or news reporting. The weakness of this act is ‘the law offers virtually no details for determining which activities may be safely allowed’ (Davidson n.d., p. 5).

In sum, there are still some flaws in the ethical publishing principles and copyright regulations. The government needs to reconstruct them in order to control the issues.

Journalism is one of the main media which publish research articles. ‘Editors therefore have the responsibility to ensure that, where appropriate, research articles submitted for publication meet the ethical standards required by journal’ (Price 2009, p. 95).


References:
Davidson, H n.d., Fair use of copyrighted works, viewed 11 November 2011, <http://www.halldavidson.net/FAIRUSE.PDF>.

Hollaar, LA 2002, Chapter 1: An overview of copyright, viewed 11 November 2011, <http://digital-law-online.info/lpdi1.0/treatise13.html>.

Landers, RN 2011, ‘Online plagiarism and cybercheating still strong – 61.9%’, NeoAcademic, blos posting, 4 February, viewed 11 November 2011, <http://neoacademic.com/2011/02/04/online-plagiarism-and-cybercheating-still-strong/>.

Pichon, F 2011, ‘Copyrighted material: fair and unfair use’, Editors Weblog, 22 June, viewed 11 November 2011, <http://www.editorsweblog.org/newsrooms_and_journalism/2011/06/copyrighted_material_fair_and_unfair_use.php>.

Price, R 2009, ‘Ethical issues in publishing’, Radiography, vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 95-96, viewed 11 November 2011, DOI: 10.1016/j.radi.2009.03.001.

Saver, C 2006, ‘Legal and ethical aspects of publishing’, AORN Journal, vol. 84, no. 4, pp. 571-575, viewed 11 November 2011, <http://proquest.umi.com.ezlibproxy.unisa.edu.au/pqdlink?vinst=PROD&fmt=6&startpage=-1&ver=1&vname=PQD&RQT=309&did=1144882371&exp=11-11-2016&scaling=FULL&vtype=PQD&rqt=309&TS=1321197050&clientId=14273>.

Temasek Polytechnic 2011, Plagiarism, viewed 11 November 2011, <http://spark.tp.edu.sg/lib_home/lib_research/lib_plagiarism.htm>.

Wang, YM 2008, ‘University student online plagiarism’, International Journal On E-Learning, vol. 7, no. 4, pp. 743-757, viewed 11 November 2011, <http://proquest.umi.com.ezlibproxy.unisa.edu.au/pqdlink?vinst=PROD&fmt=6&startpage=-1&ver=1&vname=PQD&RQT=309&did=1580113191&exp=11-11-2016&scaling=FULL&vtype=PQD&rqt=309&TS=1321197569&clientId=14273>.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Advertising Ethics in Malaysia


According to Pollay (cited in Lee 2005, p. 57), ‘advertising is said to be a “distorted mirror” that reflects certain cultural values of the host country in which it exists’. It is a requirement for advertisers to practice code of ethics in advertising.

Malaysia is a multi-culture and multi-religious country. Advertisers have to consider about the cultural context before broadcasting or publishing any advertisement in the country. A news article ‘Media Prima pulls out “racist” Ramadan ads’ which was featured on The Malaysian Insider on 2 August 2011 reported that, previously, Media Prima had been criticized for broadcasting a controversial series of Ramadan commercials on 8tv channel. Some audiences claimed that it offended non-Muslims. Thus, ‘Media Prima Bhd was forced [to] axe [the controversial of commercials] … after it stirred a storm of protests online’ (Yow 2011).


Below is the controversial series of Ramadan commercials that is found racist (video provided by Neohpg 2011):

[note: the video is used for discussion only; Not to offend anyone.]

Culture is one of the situational variables that cue readers about the meaning of a particular text, image or video. As Schriver (1997, p. 372) states, ‘frame of reference comes from various sources which interact during document design, including cultural knowledge about how signs (visual or verbal) typically work, both in particular contexts and among various groups of people’. In order to design an effective advertisement, advertisers must consider the underlying cultural codes, especially if the target audience is from multi-cultural countries, such as Malaysia. ‘Malaysians have realized that advertising can be a powerful force in shaping national values’ (Waller & Fam 2000, p. 10). As de Arruda, MCC and de Arruda, ML (1999, p. 166) affirm, ‘the social uses [of advertising] do influence the human behavior, since they reflect and condition the values system of a society’. Thus, in order to protect the nationality and cultural identity, the Advertising Stands AuthorityMalaysia has implemented The Malaysian Code of Advertising Practice.

According to Lee (2005, p. 72), ‘Islam plays a larger role in the formation of advertising guidelines’. For example, it is prohibited to use women as sex symbols in advertising. Among the codes, Media Prima has violated the principle of cultural sensitivities. In order to maintain and promote racial harmony in the country, ‘no advertisement should contain statements or suggestions which may offend the religious, political, sentimental or racial susceptibilities of any community’ (ASA 2008, p. 17).

As CMCF (n.d.) clarifies, ‘religious broadcasts are aimed at respecting and promoting spiritual harmony … not to convey attacks upon any race or religion’. In order to present an effective advertisement without creating misunderstandings and misinterpretations, it is necessary for advertisers to acknowledge the cultural context and the advertising ethics.

Last September in 2010, TV3 was also forced to pull out a Muslim commercial. Audience complained that ‘it appeared influenced by Christmas and Santa Claus’ (Associated Press 2011).


Another example of banned Malaysian Commercial (video provided by Lacersan 2010):

 

[note: the video is used for discussion only; Not to offend anyone.]

References:
ASA 2008, Malaysian Code of Advertising Practice, Advertising Standards Authority Malaysia, UNICEF, viewed 9 November 2011, <http://www.unicef.org/malaysia/Code-of-Advertising-Practice.pdf>.

Associated Press 2011, ‘Malaysia Ramadan TV ads axed amid racism complaint’, Yahoo! News, 3 August, viewed 9 November 2011, <http://news.yahoo.com/malaysia-ramadan-tv-ads-axed-amid-racism-complaint-042754396.html>. 

CMCF n.d., The Malaysian communications and multimedia content code, The Communications and Communications and Multimedia Content Forum of Malaysia, viewed 9 November 2011, <http://www.cmcf.my/download/CONTENT_CODE_(V6-Final).pdf>.

De Arruda, MCC & de Arruda, ML 1999, ‘Ethical standards in advertising: a worldwide perspective’, Journal of Business Ethics, vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 159-169, viewed 9 November 2011, <http://ezlibproxy.unisa.edu.au/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=heh&AN=12129406&site=ehost-live>.

Lacersan 2010, Banned Malaysian TV3 Commercial, video, YouTube, 7 September, viewed 9 November 2011, <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bXVSsfl8Rho>.

Lee, CW 2005, ‘Cultural influences in television commercials: a study of Singapore and Malaysia’, Journal of Promotion Management, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 57-84, viewed 9 November 2011, <http://search.ebscohost.com.ezproxy.taylors.edu.my/login.aspx?direct=true&db=ufh&AN=21983022&site=ehost-live>.

Neohpg 2011, TV8 advertisement for Ramadhan month on Monday 1st August 2011., video, YouTube, 5 August, viewed 9 November 2011, <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdSIcRTtjMI>.

Schriver, KA 1997, ‘The interplay of words and pictures’, in KA Schriver (ed), Dynamics in document design: creating texts for readers, Wiley Computer Pub., New York, pp. 361-441.
Willer, DS & Fam, KS 2000, ‘Cultural values and advertising in Malaysia: views from the industry’, Asia Pacific Journal of Marketing and Logistics, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 3-16, viewed 9 November 2011, <http://www.emeraldinsight.com.ezlibproxy.unisa.edu.au/journals.htm?articleid=853999&show=abstract>.

Yow, HC 2011, ‘Media Prima pulls out ‘racist’ Ramadan ads’, The Malaysian Insider, 2 August, viewed 9 November 2011, <http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/media-prima-pulls-out-racist-ramadan-ads/>.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Video Programming Network


‘Newspapers ... are no longer just written, but “designed”, and mutimodally articulated’ (Kress & van Leeuwen 1998, p. 187). The new form of journalism also allows them to monetize their video sites.

News video has become an imperative media. A news article ‘85%of media websites now use online video to cover news’ which was featured on Social Times on 3 May 2011 reported that, based on an online survey, Douglas Simon (cited in O’Neill 2011) concludes that online media has become a video programming network:

‘33% more media outlets are using online video to cover news than they were a year ago … [80% of survey respondents] indicating that [media websites] are currently selling advertising … [84% of them] are using third-party video’.


Below is the related video report from Douglas Simon (cited in O'Neill 2011):




Example of video programming:

‘Video programming is a major component of the Wall Street Journal Digital Network (WSJDN)’ (Dow Jones n.d.).


According to Walsh (2006, p. 24), ‘multimodal texts are those texts that have more than one “mode”, so that meaning is communicated through a [synchronization] of modes’. The affordance of online video news clips enhances the involvement and interactivity between audiences and news organizations. Instead of reading a wordy news article, many consumers these days are more prefer to watch a short news video. As Nielsen (2010) reports that ‘video/movies [including news sites] was the only other to experience a significant growth in share of U.S. activity online [in 2010]’.

Unlike print-based texts, ‘video clips can often feature graphic, emotionally intense, graphic video and audio in news stories’ (Hane; Karrfalt; Strupp, cited in Wise et al. 2009, p. 532). Video clips increase the interactivity and immediacy as the audience is “being there”, the ongoing situation, by watching them online. This type of revolutionary form of journalism is also defined as convergence. ‘Convergence transforms the consumers of media products from passive … to active audience’ (Sutu 2011, p. 49). Consumers can control when, where and how they access online news information.

Furthermore, ‘in a recent Nielsen survey, 85% of Internet users believed that online content that is currently free should remain free’ (cited in Ernst & Young 2010, p. 7). Thus, the news organizations mainly rely on advertising-based models to monetize their video sites. On the other hand, because of the growing number of online news audience, more advertisers are interested in Internet advertising. In addition, ‘ComScore found that product videos increase the likelihood of purchase by [64%]’ (The Social Newsroom 2011). Thus, video news sites are becoming one of the dominant media for advertising. Through the cooperation of both advertisers and news organizations, they share mutual benefits and able to increase their revenue.

The convergence of online video news clips has fostered the integration of news organizations, advertisers and readers. There will be more media companies transforming themselves into online video networks. This trend may affect the traditional form of media in the future.

A view from the opposite perspective:
News organizations receive some critics, saying that the third parties may alter the videos and mislead the audiences (like what has been discussed in the previous post about photojournalism ethics). According to Ugland & Slattery (2005), ‘many mainstream news organizations have taken seriously the need to establish written codes of ethics for their journalism employees. These codes … help ensure consistency of practice [and] give the audience some sense of what to expect’.


References:
Dow Jones n.d., Wall Street Journal Digital Network – video programming, Dow Jones & Company, viewed 8 November 2011, <http://www.dj.com/djcom/FactSheets/wsjvideofactsheet.pdf>.

Ernst & Young 2010, Monetizing digital media, Ernst & Young Global Limited, viewed 8 November 2011, <http://www.ey.com/Publication/vwLUAssets/Monetizing_digital_media/$File/Monetizing_digital_media.pdf>.

Kress, G & van Leeuwen, T 1998, ‘Front pages: (the critical) analysis of newspaper layout’, in A Bell & P Garrett (eds), Approaches to media discourse, Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 186-219.

Nielsen 2010, ‘What Americans do online: social media and games dominate activity’, Nielsen wire, blog posting, 2 August, viewed 8 November 2011, <http://blog.nielsen.com/nielsenwire/online_mobile/what-americans-do-online-social-media-and-games-dominate-activity/>.

O’Neill, M 2011, ‘85% of media websites now use online video to cover news’, Social Times, 3 May, viewed 8 November 2011, <http://socialtimes.com/85-of-media-websites-now-use-online-video-to-cover-news_b60505>.

Sutu, RM 2011, ‘Convergence, the new way of doing journalism’, Romanian Journal of Journalism & Communication, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 48-53, viewed 8 November 2011, <http://search.ebscohost.com.ezproxy.taylors.edu.my/login.aspx?direct=true&db=ufh&AN=59580601&site=ehost-live>.

The Social Newsroom 2011, ‘Online video use on media sites jumps to 85%’, The social newsroom, blog posting, 2 May, viewed 8 November 2011, <http://www.press-feed.com/blog/?p=289>.

Ugland, E & Slattery, K 2005, Ethics: third-party content needs more security, The Digital Journalist, viewed 8 November 2011, <http://digitaljournalist.org/issue0511/ethics.html>.

Walsh, M 2006, ‘The ‘textual shift’: examining the reading process with print, visual and multimodal texts’, Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, vol. 20, no. 1, pp. 24-37.

Wise, K, Bolls, P, Myers, J & Sternadori, M 2009, ‘When words collide online: how writing style and video intensity affect cognitive processing of online news’, Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, vol. 53, no. 4, pp. 532-546, <http://web.ebscohost.com.ezproxy.taylors.edu.my/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=11347c54-5fb0-42f8-b007-5a347c828cf1%40sessionmgr111&vid=2&hid=9>.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Photojournalism Ethics


According to Kress & van Leeuwen (1998, p. 216), ‘different newspapers do [layout] in different ways and to different degrees, which relate to the nature of their readership and to the wider (national) cultural context. However, cultural context may contradict with photojournalism ethics.

The advent of digital editing and publishing software becomes a serious issue in the industries of both journalism and photography. A news article ‘Orthodox Jewish paper apologises for Hillary Clinton deletion’ which was featured on The Guardian on 10 May 2011 reported that, Di Tzeitung, an Orthodox Jewish paper, ‘has apologized for digitally deleting an image of US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, from a photograph of Barack Obama and his staff monitoring the raid by navy Seals that killed Osama bin Laden’ (Associated Press 2011). Di Tzeitung explained that they are prohibited to publish women’s images due to their editorial policy and the Jewish laws of modesty.


The doctored image from Di Tzeitung:

Hillary Clinton and  the counterterrorism director, Audrey Tomason, were digitally removed (Seth Wenig/AP, cited in Associated Press 2011)


The original photo from The White House:

Hillary Clinton and Audrey Tomason were inside the original photo (The White House/Getty Images, cited in Associated Press 2011)


‘Each culture creates its own universe of symbolic meaning that structure and shapes the perception of reality which members of a specific clan or society experience’ (Winkler 2009, p. 5). In the case of Di Tzeitung, its action seems reasonable if audience views it from a cultural perspective. Yet, it has violated the ethics in photojournalism. As Bersak (2006, p. 5) clarifies, according to ‘the National Press Photographers Association’s Code of Ethics read, photographic and video images can reveal great truths … photographs can also cause great harm if they are callously intrusive or are manipulated’.

In order to understand texts or images, audience needs to acknowledge the visual and cultural context of the document. As Winkler (2009, p. 21) states, ‘the easiest way to generate understanding through images is when they pertain to very common and logical realities’. However, realistic images will still have a chance to be interpreted wrongly as there are different cultural realities in different societies. The audience who is not acquainted with the Orthodox Jewish culture may make meaning that the image is offensive to women. In response to the misinterpretation, Di Tzeitung has explained that the Jewish laws of modesty are actually respecting women.

Besides, it is essential for publications to obey the Code of Ethics in order to publish ethical article or image. An image is actually hard to define whether it ‘accurately represents the subject or … misleads the viewer’ (Bersak 2006, p. 7). Ethical practices can be different in different society; for example, under The New York Times Company Policy on Ethics in Journalism, ‘whatever the medium, we tell our audiences the complete, unvarnished truth as best we can learn it’ (The New York Times Company 2005). Publications should not conceal factual reality even though is because of cultural context. Any editing should maintain the honesty of the images’ content and context.

Many audiences still believe that camera captures reality. However, with the latest digital editing skills, the content and reality of a photo may be manipulated. Viewers and readers must have critical thinking and analysis when reviewing any photo or image.

On the other hand, according to PublicSource (2011), journalists should ‘never distort the content of news photos or video. Image enhancement for technical clarity is always permissible. Label montages and photo illustrations’. The statement above is one of the Code of Ethics which journalists from every publication should obey.


References:
Associated Press 2011, ‘Orthodox Jewish paper apologises for Hillary Clinton deletion
’, The Guardian, 10 May, viewed 5 November 2011, <http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/10/jewish-paper-apologises-hillary-clinton>.

Bersak, DR 2006, ‘Ethics in photojournalism: past, present, and future’, MSc thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, viewed 5 November 2011, <http://web.mit.edu/drb/Public/Bersak_CMS_Thesis_FINAL.pdf>.

Kress, G & van Leeuwen, T 1998, ‘Front pages: (the critical) analysis of newspaper layout’, in A Bell & P Garrett (eds), Approaches to media discourse, Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 186-219.

PublicSource 2011, Our editorial policies, viewed 5 November 2011, <http://publicsource.org/our-editorial-policies>.

The New York Times Company 2005, The New York Times Company Policy on Ethics in Journalism, viewed 5 November 2011, <http://www.nytco.com/press/ethics.html>.

Winkler, DR 2009, ‘Visual culture and visual communication in the context of globalization’, Visible Language, vol. 43, no. 1, pp. 4-43, viewed 5 November 2011, <http://proquest.umi.com/pqdlink?did=1703115691&Fmt=6&clientId=14273&RQT=309&VName=PQD>.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Screen versus Print Document Design


As what has discussed in the previous post, new media has a big impact on journalism. Other than it alters the trend of journalism, it also creates differences between Screen and Print document design. The following is going to examine three main considerations (differences) of designing based on the elements of layout and writing structure.


1. Dimensionality

In this case, the dimension is referred to Page Dimension. According to OLAP (1995), 'a page dimension is generally used to ... define the specific page requested for display'. In other words, it considers the element of spatial on a page. Print design is 2-dimensional. It pays much attention to layout of the page. Readers can turn the page physically, but it is rare to have substantial interplay between different spreads. Nielsen (1999) states that 'typically, each view is a design unit created for a fixed size canvas - often a big canvas when designing newspapers or posters'.


Example of two-page-spread in Lucky Magazine (Palma Collection 2009)


On the other hand, 'web design is simultaneously 1-dimensional and N-dimensional' (Nielsen 1999). Instead of flipping the page in canvas, users have to scroll the page to read further. There is no fixed spatial relationship between elements. As Nielsen (1999) clarifies, 'users often begin scrolling before all elements have been rendered, and different users will scroll the page in different ways throughout their reading experience'.


The arrow shows the way of scrolling Twitter page on a smartphone screen. (Business Insider 2011)


2. Typography


Typography (Brown 2009)


'Typography is a central component of design. It gives us an understanding of the heritage behind our craft' (Bailey 2011). It helps to pass on information to others by arranging the type.  The arrangement of type influences readers' understanding on a particular subject or content. 'It works with your layout, grid, and color choice to create a well-rounded design ... your choice of typefaces and your technique of setting type give your composition its character, pace and style' (Bailey 2011). For instance, types of fonts can maximize legibility. 

In print form, 'the number of fonts available are almost limitless and a font can be chosen that precisely gives the feeling and function desired' (Benetos 2005). Conversely, screen form has the limitation of the choice of fonts. This is because the font in a hypertext document has to be common to the platform which displays the hyperdocument. Monitor resolutions and reader preferences have to be considered for the appearance of the text. For instance, serif fonts are more legible in print, while 'sans-serif fonts are [the most] legible at small sizes for most monitor displays' (Benetos 2005).


Newspaper in serif fonts (In House Media n.d.)


Sans-serif fonts on webpage (Lloyd 2009)


3. Multimodality

Multimodality is needed to express the meanings in texts effectively. According to Walsh (2006, p. 24), ' ... meaning is communicated through a [synchronization] of modes. That is, they may incorporate spoken or written language, still or moving images, they may be produced on paper or electronic screen and may incorporate music and sound'. For example:

(i) Print form - picture books, newspaper and magazine.
(ii) Screen form - film, video and the Internet.


Print-based texts (DHD Multimedia Gallery n.d.)


The novel above is in print-based texts. Print-based texts are 'the words that "tell", including the discourse, register, vocabulary, linguistic patterns, grammar. Arrangement and layout of chapters, paragraph and sentence structure, typography' (Walsh 2006, p. 35). The reading pathway is mostly linear and   follows a certain sequence.


Multimodal Texts (Jessica & Heidi n.d.)


The picture above shows multimodal texts that consist of photos, hyperlinks and tagging. Multimodal texts are 'visual images that "show" including layout, size, shape, [color], line, angle, position, perspective, screen, frames, icons, links, hyperlinks. Movement, sound, animation with graphics, video clips, voice-over and write-over' (Walsh 2006, p. 35). The reading pathway is non-linear and non-sequential.


References:
Bailey, C 2011, 'The basics of typography', Design Instruct, June 22, viewed 22 August 2011, <http://designinstruct.com/tools-basics/the-basics-of-typography/>.

Benetos, K 2005, Design considerations when writing: print vs screen, TECFA, Universite de Geneve, viewed 22 August 2011, <http://tecfa.unige.ch/staf/staf-k/benetos/staf13/per5/lire.html>.

Brown, A 2009, The use of typography, Examiner, viewed 22 August 2011, <http://www.examiner.com/web-2-0-in-miami/the-use-of-typography>.


DHD Multimedia Gallery n.d., Texturas text-sample-of-novel, viewed 22 August 2011, <http://gallery.hd.org/_c/textures/text-sample-of-novel-DHD.jpg.html?sessionVar=spider&sessionVarLocale=es>.

In House Media n.d., Newspaper design - how can you use it to improve your website, viewed 22 August 2011, <http://www.ihm.co.uk/blog/news/newspaper-design-how-you-can-use-it-to-improve-your-website/>.

Jessica & Heidi n.d., Websites, viewed 22 August 2011, <http://bedyear4newliteracies.wikispaces.com/Jessica+and+Heidi+--+Websites>.

Lloyd, I 2009, Learn HTML and CSS: an absolute beginner's guide article, Sitepoint, viewed 22 August 2011, <http://www.sitepoint.com/html-css-beginners-guide-14/>.

Nielsen, J 1999, Differences between print design and web design, viewed 22 August 2011, <http://www.useit.com/alertbox/990124.html>.

OLAP 1995, OLAP glossary, viewed 22 August 2011, <http://altaplana.com/olap/glossary.html>.

Palm Collection 2009, Palma collection is in Lucky Magazine this month (April 2009)!, viewed 22 August 2011, <http://store.palmacollection.com/blogs/media/1267902-palma-collection-is-in-lucky-magazine-this-month-april-2009>.

Walsh, M 2006, 'The 'textual shift': examining the reading process with print, visual and multimodal texts', Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, vol. 20, no.1, pp. 24-37.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

New Forms of Media Publishing


In the 21st century, cyberspace plays a dominant role in a new media ecosystem. Instead of using the word 'replacing', the Internet is a complement to traditional media. According to Oyanagi (2010), 'traditional media are mostly push media ... while the Internet is a pull medium ... which means tactics to drive web users to the website is inevitable, and this often means using and mixing with other media/communication channel'. In the new trend of publishing, audiences are no longer just passive receivers, but they can consider themselves journalists by blogging. Will this phenomenon cause the end of journalism? Well, Naughton (2006) clarifies that 'a new organism has arrived in our media ecosystem and existing organisms are having to accommodate themselves to the newcomer ... relationships are emerging between the new medium of blogging and more conventional print journalism'.


Twitter (Smashing Editorial 2009)


Twitter is 'a free social networking and micro-blogging service that enables users to send and read messages (known as "tweets")' (Stassen 2010, p. 7). Twitter consists of short fragments of instant information and news, either it is from official or unofficial sources. It provides a platform for users to share the latest information and news happening around the world in short but concise form. For instance, news about 311 Japan Earthquake was updated through Twitter during the happening. Besides, it also enhances the interactivity among the users and media as people can track news by clicking 'follow', 'retweet' or giving comments. Somehow, it acts as a backup channel of information in journalism. According to Rao (2010), '91% of bloggers and 68% of online reporters "always" or "sometimes" use blogs for research'. 

This phenomenon can be related to the concept of Produsage. Twitter serves as user-led space and it breaks down the boundaries between producers and consumers. As Snurb (2007) states, 'produsers engage not in a traditional form of content production, but are instead involved in ... the collaborative and continuous building and extending of existing content in pursuit of further improvement'.


The Prodeser (Snurb 2007)


Twitter is 'fundamentally built on the affordances of the technosocial framework of the networked environment' (Snurb 2007). The term affordance means 'what is made possible by the modes used' (Walsh 2006, p. 34). In this case, the content in Twitter is shared and not owned by any authoritarian. Users can share any information without waiting for the approval of gatekeepers (as what traditional media facing with). It extends 'the boundaries for the community of participants able to contribute to [Twitter]' (Snurb 2007). For instance, the dissemination of information causes a formation of citizen journalists, who do not exist in previous traditional media. However, there is still a controversy about social networking in journalism. Communicators need to be aware of this issue as it affects communication system.


References:

Naughton, J 2006, Blogging and the emerging media ecosystem, Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, University of Oxford, viewed 21 August 2011, <http://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/fileadmin/documents/discussion/blogging.pdf>.

Oyanagi, M 2010, 'Vol.22-what distinguishes Internet/Web from traditional media?', Future Direction of Web 2.0 and Internet Marketing, blog posting, 21 February, viewed 21 August 2011, <http://megoyanagi.thoseinmedia.com/2010/02/21/vol-22-%E2%80%93-what-distinguishes-internetweb-from-traditional-media/>.

Rao, L 2010, 'Study: 52 percent of bloggers consider themselves journalists', TechCrunch, blog posting, 1 April, viewed 21 August 2011, <http://techcrunch.com/2010/04/01/study-52-percent-of-bloggers-consider-themselves-journalists/>.

Smashing Editorial 2009, 'Tools icons, horror icons and Twitter icons', Smashing Magazine, 12 January, viewed 21 August 2011, <http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/01/12/tools-icons-horror-icons-and-twitter-icons/>.

Snurb 2007, Produsage: a working definition, Produsage, viewed 21 August 2011, <http://produsage.org/node/9>.

Stassen, W 2010, 'Your news in 140 characters: exploring the role of social media in journalism', Global Media Journal, vol. 4, no. 1, viewed 21 August 2011, <http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=2e15f1ac-add8-432a-b387-7ed312a6e851%40sessionmgr104&vid=2&hid=112>.

Walsh, M 2006, 'The 'textual shift': examining the reading process with print, visual and multimodal texts', Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, vol. 20, no. 1, pp. 24-37.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Types of Blogging Communities & Methods to Build Blogging Communities


Blogosphere consists of million of bloggers, this phenomenon can be identified as Blogging Communities. According to Owyang (2007), 'an online community is where a group of people with similar goals or interests connect and exchange information using web tools'. In blogosphere, bloggers can visit other blogs and share their common interests and experiences with each other. The mutual interests somehow form a norm in different blogging communities.

Furthermore, bloggers can communicate and form bonds with new friends within the blogosphere. 'Blogging can be passive activity' (Denise 2009). Thus, it is required for individual blogger to step away from personal blog and start immersing oneself in the blogging community. The below are several methods to build blogging communities:


1. Tagging
Tagging (Raymond 2007)


Tagging allows users find a blog post according to a specific keyword. As Kinkeldei (2007) states, 'a tag cloud allows [people] to aggregate the community users' most popular bookmarks and lets new users immediately identify the most important topics related to the blog community'.


2. Allowing Comments

Comment box in Blogger (Chitu 2008)


Bloggers can interact with readers by reading and replying their comments. 'The ability for readers to leave comments in an interactive format is an important part of many blogs' (Kinkeldei 2007).


3. RSS Feeds (Really Simple Syndication)

RSS Feeds (DFW Renaissance n.d.)


It allows reader to subscribe to updated blog posts. 'RSS Feeds [provide] concise summaries to prospective readers ... [it] encourages [readers] to return' (Housley 2008).


4. Social Networking

Social Network Icons (Search Engine Island 2011)


Social networking is useful for promoting blogs as it becomes a major media in communication. Users can share their blogs through social networking websites, such as Facebook, Twitter and etc.


Three types of blogging communities by Nancy White


Figure 1: Blog Based Communities (White 2006)


'[Blogging communities show] up in three main patterns with a wide variety of hybrid forms emerging between the three' (White 2006). The patterns are reviewed based on technology/design; social architecture; the role of content or subject matter; and other issues (eg. scalability and lifecycle). The three patterns are listed below:


1. Single Blog/Blogger Centric Community

Figure 2: Single Blog/Blogger Centric Community (White 2006)


Blog owners are the central identities in this community. As they get to know each other, they build relationship and personal identity among commentors. Besides, they have ultimate power of control. For instance, a blog owner can remove his/her blog, disable comments and even censor readers. They setting the conversational topic, but commentors cannot control it. In other words, 'there is no expectation of democracy [in this community]' (White 2006).


2. Topic Centric Community

Figure 3: Topic Centric Community (White 2006)


This community is a network formation. The network is linked by a common interest or a topic shared by blogs. 'The boundary of the network is a combination of subject matter (domain) and membership (community)' (White 2006). Power and identity are allocated through the community. As White explains further, 'identity is manifest through the relevance, quality or amount of enjoyment a post provides to others'. Furthermore, tools like hyperlinks, RSS and etc are applied by each blogger. These tools categorize the blog posts according to a mutual topic and they actually blur the boundaries of each individual blog.


3. Boundaried Community

Figure 4: Boundaried Community (White 2006)


In this community, one has to register and join as a member. Members not only can create a blog, but also have internal connections with other members. A defined boundary in the community makes it easier to access other blogs. 

According to White (2006), 'power in boundaried communities is held in part by the "owner" of the platform who can impose rules on the community'. However, power is also applied by members in three typical ways: '(i) Frequency of Posting; (ii) Popularity or Interest as measured by how many comments a blogger gets; (iii) Social Networking Tools associated with the blog that help visualize relationship' (White 2006).


Edublogs is one of the examples of Boundaried Community.

Edublogs (Farmer 2007)


Edublogs is a blog hosting and '[a] custom blogging platforms to individual teachers, school districts and hundreds of thousands of students' (Edublogs 2011). It is rich with features such as discussion tools, video embedding, integration of social networking sites, wikis and etc. Besides, it offers 'a specific set of terms of use, identify what is not allowed, and the rest is up to the participants' (White 2006).


References:
Chitu, A 2008, 'Don't talk about blogger's comments', Google Operating System, blog posting, 15  March, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://googlesystem.blogspot.com/2008/03/dont-talk-about-bloggers-comments.html>.

Denise 2009, How do you build community?, blog posting, 9 March, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://www.blogher.com/how-do-you-build-community>.

DFW Renaissance n.d., About the editor, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://www.fwrenaissance.com/outsider-mom/>.

Edublogs 2011, Why Edublogs?, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://edublogs.org/why-edublogs/>.

Farmer, J 2007, 'Edublogs 2.0', Incorporated Subversion, blog posting, 31 July, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://incsub.org/blog/2007/edublogs-20>.

Housley, S 2008, What are RSS Feeds?, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://knol.google.com/k/what-are-rss-feeds#>.

Kinkeldei, B 2007, 'Forging connections and promoting growth through blog communities', Whitepaper Blog Communities, 21 Publish, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://www.21publish.com/pub/21publish/blogging-whitepaper.pdf>.

Owyang, J 2007, 'Defining the term: "online community"', Web Strategy, blog posting, 28 December, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://www.web-strategist.com/blog/2007/12/28/defining-the-term-community/>.

Raymond 2007, 'A simple blogger tag cloud widget', Compender, blog posting, 5 December, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://www.compender.com/2007/12/simple-tag-cloud.html>.

Search Engine Island 2011, Social networking site - what benefits can it offer?, blog posting, June, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://www.searchengineisland.com/2011/06/social-networking-site-what-benefits.html>.

White, N 2006, 'Blogs and community - launching a new paradigm for online community?', The Knowledge Tree, 11th edn, Commonwealth of Australia, viewed 20 August 2011, <http://kt.flexiblelearning.net.au/tkt2006/edition-11-editorial/blogs-and-community-%E2%80%93-launching-a-new-paradigm-for-online-community>.

Friday, August 19, 2011

Classification of Blogs & Opinion about the most Appropriate Classification Approach


The development of blog phenomenon causes varieties of blogs. The differences are not only in types of content, but also in other aspects, such as media types, audiences, devices and etc. Thus, blog taxonomy helps to classify the blogs. 'Blog taxonomy is the study of organizing your blog for both search engines and human beings' (Herzog 2011).

Two different classification systems are discussed in this post. First of all, blog taxonomy that is introduced by Margaret Simons. Below is the list of nine different types of blogs:


1. Pamphleteering Blogs
Pampheteering is 'important to [every] social movement since the printing press was invented ... [Unlike political blogs which only focus on political issues, authors will give] points of view on current events, [politics], sometimes broader events' (Simons, cited in Funnell 2008).



2. The Digest Blog
It acts 'primarily as guides and summaries to things you can access elsewhere, either in mainstream media or no other blogs. Sometimes they include commentary as well' (Simons 2008). 



3. The Advocacy Blog
It is quite similar with Pamphleteering Blog. It is divided into a different category is because it focuses on related topics. 'These blogs tend to be run by established advocacy groups or commercial organisations rather than by individuals, and concern themselves with a single topic, whereas the pamphleteering sites cover many different issues' (Simons 2008).



4. The Popular Mechanics Blog
This blog consists of information that offers instructions or advices on a specialist field. 'Now there is a huge welter of blogs out there now on just about any speciality you care to list, from quilting to gardening, to photography, to scuba driving' (Simons, cited in Funnell 2008).



5. The Exhibition Blog
It is especially for artists, writers, craftspeople and different kinds of artisans to share their works to a wider audience. 

Eg.


6. The Gatewatcher Blog
This a blog which critiques the reporting issues of media. It 'allowing specialist, experts and others with particular knowledge of public events to watch and hold to account the 'gatekeepers' of traditional media' (Simons 2008).



7. The Diary
It is more personal and intended for an author's family and friends. 



8. The Advertisement
As what has stated in the previous post, blog is used as an effective tool in advertising. 'Some of the [blogs] are actually created by the commercial companies and are thinly-veiled advertisements' (Simons, cited in Funnell 2008).

Eg. 


9. The News Blog
Authors post the latest news and information in their blogs.



Next, the second classification system is introduced by Partha Sarathi Mandal. There are five categories of blogs, such as:


1. Media blogs
    -Vlog (eg. Howard Rheingold's Vlog)
    -Sketch Log (eg. Jillian Tamaki Sketchblog)
    -Photo log (eg. Flickr Blog)
    -Tumble log (eg. Tumblr)
    -Art Log (eg. Ea's Artlog)


2. Device blogs
'A blog written by a mobile device like a mobile phone or PDA is called Moblog' (Mandal 2011, p. 156).

Moblog (Digital Family 2011)


3. Subject Blogs
These blogs focus in a specific subject. For example: music, fashion and etc.



4. Legal Status
Blogs can be personal, public, or corporate.


5. Searching Blogs
These help to search for the blogs available on the Internet by using key terms.



These two classification systems have a similarity: both systems categorize blogs based on the nature of the written contents. It is more convenient to distinguish the blogs according to written contents, because each blogger has different purposes and target audiences. As comparison with Mandal's system, Simon's taxonomy classifies blogs in a more specific way. On the other hand, Mandal's classification is too broad. For instance, even though blogs such as vlog and photo log have distinctive contents, they are still grouped into the same category: Media Blogs. Hence, Simon's taxonomy provides the better classification method.


References:
Digital Family 2011, Blog design for every screen, viewed 19 August 2011, <http://www.digitalfamily.com/mobile/blog-design-plugins.html>.

Funnell, A 2008, 'A taxonomy of blogs', The Media Report, transcript, 25 September, ABC Radio National, viewed 19 August 2011, <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/mediareport/stories/2008/2372882.htm#transcript)>.

Herzog, A 2011, 'Why blog taxonomies are important', Social Media Journal, blog posting, 24 January, Social Media Club, viewed 19 August 2011, <http://socialmediaclub.org/blogs/social-media-journal/why-blog-taxonomies-are-important>.

Mandal, PS 2011, 'Blog and its role in library and information services', Journal of Library & Information Technology, vol. 31, no. 3, pp. 155-158, viewed 19 August 2011, <http://publications.drdo.gov.in/ojs/index.php/djlit/article/viewFile/983/411>.

Simons, M 2008, Towards a taxonomy of blogs, Australian Policy Online, viewed 19 August 2011, <http://www.apo.org.au/commentary/towards-taxonomy-blogs-0>.