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We the Media
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Product Editions

  1. We the Media - January 2006
  2. We the Media - July 2004 (out of print)
Description
In We the Media, nationally acclaimed newspaper columnist and blogger Dan Gillmor shows how anyone can produce the news, using personal blogs, internet chat groups, email, and a host of other tools. He tells the story of this emerging phenomenon and sheds light on this deep shift in how we make--and consume--the news. Journalism in the 21st century will be fundamentally different from the Big Media oligarchy that prevails today. We the Media casts light on the future of journalism, and invites us all to be part of it.
Full Description
Table of Contents
  1. Chapter 1 From Tom Paine to Blogs and Beyond

    1. The Corporate Era

    2. From Outside In

    3. Ransom-Note Media

    4. Out Loud and Outrageous

    5. The Web Era Emergent

    6. Writing the Web

    7. Open Sourcing the News

    8. Terror Turns Journalism's Corner

    9. Endnotes

  2. Chapter 2 The Read-Write Web

    1. Mail Lists and Forums

    2. Weblogs

    3. Wiki

    4. SMS

    5. Mobile-Connected Cameras

    6. Internet "Broadcasting"

    7. Peer-to-Peer

    8. The RSS Revolution

    9. Making Sense of It All

    10. Endnotes

  3. Chapter 3 The Gates Come Down

    1. Spreading the Word

    2. Truth Squad

    3. Looking Deeper

    4. Bubble, Bubble, Tout and Trouble

    5. Swarming Investigators and Spies

    6. Watching Journalists

    7. Turning the Tables

    8. Endnotes

  4. Chapter 4 Newsmakers Turn the Tables

    1. Learning by Listening

    2. Blog It

    3. The Celebrity Blog

    4. Talking to the Audience

    5. Fine-Grain Pitching

    6. Some Rules for New-World PR and Marketing

    7. Endnotes

  5. Chapter 5 The Consent of the Governed

    1. Business as Usual

    2. What's New Is Old

    3. Electing a President

    4. Dean Meets Meetup, Blogs, and Money

    5. Cash Cow, and Catching Up

    6. Open Source Politics

    7. A Changing Role for Journalists

    8. The Tools of Better Governance

    9. Endnotes

  6. Chapter 6 Professional Journalists Join the Conversation

    1. Traditional Media's Opportunity

    2. Authority from Linking, Listening

    3. Asking the Former Audience for Help

    4. Case Study: Promoting, Then Reporting, Activism

    5. Case Study: The Citizen Reporters

    6. Newsroom Tools

    7. Teaching New Tricks

    8. A Question of Trust

    9. Endnotes

  7. Chapter 7 The Former Audience Joins the Party

    1. Citizen Journalist: Bloggers (and More) Everywhere

    2. Evolutionary and Revolutionary

    3. Nonprofit Community Publishing

    4. Alternative Media Flourishes

    5. The Wiki Media Phenomenon

    6. Business Models for Tomorrow's Personal Journalism

    7. New Business Models: The Tip Jar

    8. Endnotes

  8. Chapter 8 Next Steps

    1. Laws and Other Codes

    2. Creating the News

    3. Sorting It Out

    4. Syndication Takes Off

    5. The World Live Web

    6. Probing APIs and Web Services

    7. Okay, but Whose "Information" Do You Trust?

    8. Dinosaurs and Dangers

    9. Endnotes

  9. Chapter 9 Trolls, Spin, and the Boundaries of Trust

    1. Cut and Paste, Right and Wrong

    2. New Ways to Mislead

    3. Who's Talking, and Why?

    4. Trolls and Other Annoyances

    5. Spin Patrol

    6. Citizen Reporters to the Rescue

    7. A Flight to Quality?

    8. Plain Old Common Sense

    9. Endnotes

  10. Chapter 10 Here Come the Judges (and Lawyers)

    1. Defamation, Libel, and Other Nasty Stuff

    2. Jurisdiction

    3. Email and Free Speech

    4. Misusing Other People's Work

    5. Copyrights and Wrongs

    6. Forbidden Links and Other Outrages

    7. Endnotes

  11. Chapter 11 The Empires Strike Back

    1. Governments Get Nervous; Big Business Gets Nosy

    2. The Copyright Cartel

    3. Eye of the Beholder

    4. Charm and Toughness

    5. The Tech Industry Sellout

    6. The End of End-to-End?

    7. Return of the Jedi Users

    8. A Deregulatory Rescue?

    9. The End of Scarcity?

    10. Endnotes

  12. Chapter 12 Making Our Own News

    1. A Creative Commons

    2. Day-to-Day Changes

    3. Endnotes

  1. Appendix Epilogue and Acknowledgments

    1. Outline and Ideas

    2. Drafts and Other Postings

    3. Acknowledgments

    4. Endnotes

  2. Appendix A Web Site Directory

  3. Glossary

  4. Colophon

View Full Table of Contents
Product Details
Title:
We the Media
By:
Dan Gillmor
Publisher:
O'Reilly Media
Formats:
  • Print
  • Ebook
  • Safari Books Online
Print Release:
January 2006
Ebook Release:
July 2008
Pages:
336
Print ISBN:
978-0-596-10227-2
| ISBN 10:
0-596-10227-5
Ebook ISBN:
978-0-596-15302-1
| ISBN 10:
0-596-15302-3
Customer Reviews
About the Author
  1. Dan Gillmor

    Dan Gillmor is founder of Grassroots Media Inc., a project aimed at enabling grassroots journalism and expanding its reach. The company's first launch is Bayosphere.com, a site "of, by and for the Bay Area." Gillmor is is author of We the Media: Grassroots Journalism by the People, for the People (O'Reilly Media, 2004), a book that explains the rise of citizens' media and why it matters. From 1994-2004, Gillmor was a columnist at the San Jose Mercury News, Silicon Valley's daily newspaper, and wrote a weblog for SiliconValley.com. He joined the Mercury News after six years with the Detroit Free Press. Before that, he was with the Kansas City Times and several newspapers in Vermont. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the University of Vermont, Gillmor received a Herbert Davenport fellowship in 1982 for economics and business reporting at the University of Missouri School of Journalism. During the 1986-87 academic year he was a journalism fellow at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, where he studied history, political theory and economics. He has won or shared in several regional and national journalism awards. Before becoming a journalist he played music professionally for seven years.

    View Dan Gillmor's full profile page.

  • Book cover of We the Media