Nicholas Lemann - What is the effect of "citizen journalism" on news reporting?

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Nicholas Lemann Citizen journalism has a neutral effect on news reporting. What has it brought us?

Evidence approved (3/14/2008 2:40:27 PM)

What has it brought us?

New Yorker

 

From Lemann's lengthy piece:

...That’s the catechism, but what has citizen journalism actually brought us? It’s a difficult question, in part because many of the truest believers are very good at making life unpleasant for doubters, through relentless sneering.

 

...To live up to its billing, Internet journalism has to meet high standards both conceptually and practically: the medium has to be revolutionary, and the journalism has to be good. The quality of Internet journalism is bound to improve over time, especially if more of the virtues of traditional journalism migrate to the Internet. But, although the medium has great capabilities, especially the way it opens out and speeds up the discourse, it is not quite as different from what has gone before as its advocates are saying.

A million or so words later, he wraps up:

 

Journalism is not in a period of maximal self-confidence right now, and the Internet’s cheerleaders are practically laboratory specimens of maximal self-confidence. They have got the rhetorical upper hand; traditional journalists answering their challenges often sound either clueless or cowed and apologetic. As of now, though, there is not much relation between claims for the possibilities inherent in journalist-free journalism and what the people engaged in that pursuit are actually producing. As journalism moves to the Internet, the main project ought to be moving reporters there, not stripping them away.

 

He generally has a wait-and-see attitude towards citizen journalism. (Piece was written in August, 2006)