The contents of this document were downloaded from http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/wemedia/book/ I have combined the individual HTML and PDF files into this one large file. The PDF was then converted to text format using pdftotext from the xpdf package. No changes have been made. -- John Goerzen 8/6/2004 We the Media Grassroots Journalism by the People, for the People by Dan Gillmor Copyright (c) 2004 Dan Gillmor. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Published by O'Reilly Media, Inc., 1005 Gravenstein Highway North, Sebastopol, CA 95472. O'Reilly Media books may be purchased for educational, business, or sales promotional use. Online editions are also available for most titles (safari.oreilly.com). For more information, contact our corporate/institutional sales department: (800) 998-9938 or corporate@oreilly.com. Editor: Allen Noren Production Editor: Mary Brady Cover Designer: Emma Colby Interior Designer: Melanie Wang Printing History: July 2004: First Edition. The O'Reilly logo is a registered trademark of O'Reilly Media, Inc. We the Media and related trade dress are trademarks of O'Reilly Media, Inc. Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this book, and O'Reilly Media, Inc. was aware of a trademark claim, the designations have been printed in caps or initial caps. While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this book, the publisher and author assume no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 License. To view a copy of this license, visit [1]http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, California 94305, USA. ISBN: 0-596-00733-7 [C] References Visible links 1. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/ Contents Introduction ix 1. From Tom Paine to Blogs and Beyond 1 2. The Read-Write Web 23 3. The Gates Come Down 44 4. Newsmakers Turn the Tables 66 5. The Consent of the Governed 88 6. Professional Journalists Join the Conversation 110 7. The Former Audience Joins the Party 136 8. Next Steps 158 9. Trolls, Spin, and the Boundaries of Trust 174 10. Here Come the Judges (and Lawyers) 191 11. The Empires Strike Back 209 12. Making Our Own News 236 Epilogue and Acknowledgments 243 Web Site Directory 251 Glossary 259 Notes 261 Index 281 v Introduction We freeze some moments in time. Every culture has its frozen moments, events so important and personal that they transcend the normal flow of news. Americans of a certain age, for example, know precisely where they were and what they were doing when they learned that President Franklin D. Roosevelt died. Another generation has absolute clarity of John F. Kennedy's assassination. And no one who was older than a baby on September 11, 2001, will ever forget hearing about, or seeing, airplanes exploding into skyscrapers. In 1945, people gathered around radios for the immediate news, and stayed with the radio to hear more about their fallen leader and about the man who took his place. Newspapers printed extra editions and filled their columns with detail for days and weeks afterward. Magazines stepped back from the breaking news and offered perspective. Something similar happened in 1963, but with a newer medium. The immediate news of Kennedy's death came for most via television; I'm old enough to remember that heart- breaking moment when Walter Cronkite put on his horn- rimmed glasses to glance at a message from Dallas and then, blinking back tears, told his viewers that their leader was gone. As in the earlier time, newspapers and magazines pulled out all the stops to add detail and context. September 11, 2001, followed a similarly grim pattern. We watched--again and again--the awful events. Consumers of ix w e the media news learned the what about the attacks, thanks to the televi- sion networks that showed the horror so graphically. Then we learned some of the how and why as print publications and thoughtful broadcasters worked to bring depth to events that defied mere words. Journalists did some of their finest work and made me proud to be one of them. But something else, something profound, was happening this time around: news was being produced by regular people who had something to say and show, and not solely by the "official" news organizations that had traditionally decided how the first draft of history would look. This time, the first draft of history was being written, in part, by the former audience. It was possible--it was inevitable--because of new publishing tools available on the Internet. Another kind of reporting emerged during those appalling hours and days. Via emails, mailing lists, chat groups, personal web journals -- all nonstandard news sources -- we received valuable context that the major American media couldn't, or wouldn't, provide. We were witnessing--and in many cases were part of--the future of news. Six months later came another demonstration of tomorrow's journalism. The stakes were far lower this time, merely a moment of discomfort for a powerful executive. On March 26, 2002, poor Joe Nacchio got a first-hand taste of the future; and this time, in a small way, I helped set the table. Actually, Nacchio was rolling in wealth that day, when he appeared at PC Forum, an exclusive executive conference in sub- urban Phoenix. He was also, it seemed, swimming in self-pity. In those days Nacchio was the chief executive of regional telephone giant Qwest, a near-monopoly in its multistate mar- ketplace. At the PC Forum gathering that particular day, he was complaining about difficulties in raising capital. Imagine: whining about the rigors of running a monopoly, especially when Nacchio's own management moves had contributed to some of the difficulties he was facing. x introduction I was in the audience, reporting in something close to real time by publishing frequent conference updates to my weblog, an online journal of short web postings, via a wireless link the conference had set up for attendees. So was another journalist weblogger, Doc Searls, senior editor of Linux Journal, a soft- ware magazine. Little did we know that the morning's events would turn into a mini-legend in the business community. Little did I know that the experience would expand my understanding of how thoroughly the craft of journalism was changing. One of my posts noted Nacchio's whining, observing that he'd gotten seriously richer while his company was losing much of its market value--another example of CEOs raking in the riches while shareholders, employees, and communities got the shaft. Seconds later I received an email from Buzz Bruggeman, a lawyer in Florida, who was following my weblog and Searls's from his office in Orlando. "Ain't America great?" Bruggeman wrote sarcastically, attaching a hyperlink to a Yahoo! Finance web page showing that Nacchio had cashed in more than $200 million in stock while his company's stock price was heading downhill. This information struck me as relevant to what I was writing, and I immediately dropped this juicy tidbit into my weblog, with a cyber-tip of the hat to Bruggeman. ("Thanks, Buzz, for the link," I wrote parenthetically.) Doc Searls did likewise. "Around that point, the audience turned hostile," wrote Esther Dyson, whose company, Edventure Holdings, held the conference.1 Did Doc and I play a role? Apparently. Many people in the luxury hotel ballroom--perhaps half of the execu- tives, financiers, entrepreneurs, and journalists--were also online that morning. And at least some of them were amusing themselves by following what Doc and I were writing. During the remainder of Nacchio's session, there was a perceptible chill toward the man. Dyson, an investor and author, said later she was certain that our weblogs helped create that chill.2 She called the blogging "a second conference occurring around, through, and across the first." xi w e the media Why am I telling this story? This was not an earth-shaking event, after all. For me, however, it was a tipping point. Consider the sequence of news flow: a feedback loop that started in an Arizona conference session, zipped to Orlando, came back to Arizona and ultimately went global. In a world of satellite communications and fiber optics, real-time journalism is routine; but now we journalists had added the expertise of the audience. Those forces had lessons for everyone involved, including the "newsmaker"--Nacchio--who had to deal with new pres- sures on the always edgy, sometimes adversarial relationship between journalists and the people we cover. Nacchio didn't lose his job because we poked at his arrogance; he lost it, in the end, because he did an inadequate job as CEO. But he got a tiny, if unwelcome, taste of journalism's future that morning. The person in our little story who tasted journalism's future most profoundly, I believe, was neither the professional reporter nor the newsmaker, but Bruggeman. In an earlier time, before technology had collided so violently with journalism, he'd been a member of an audience. Now, he'd received news about an event without waiting for the traditional coverage to arrive via newspapers or magazines, or even web sites. And now he'd become part of the journalistic process himself--a citizen reporter whose knowledge and quick thinking helped inform my own journalism in a timely way. Bruggeman was no longer just a consumer. He was a pro- ducer. He was making the news. This book is about journalism's transformation from a 20th century mass-media structure to something profoundly more grassroots and democratic. It's a story, first, of evolutionary change. Humans have always told each other stories, and each new era of progress has led to an expansion of storytelling. This is also a story of a modern revolution, however, because technology has given us a communications toolkit that allows anyone to become a journalist at little cost and, in theory, with global reach. Nothing like this has ever been remotely possible before. xii introduction In the 20th century, making the news was almost entirely the province of journalists; the people we covered, or "news- makers"; and the legions of public relations and marketing people who manipulated everyone. The economics of publishing and broadcasting created large, arrogant institutions--call it Big Media, though even small-town newspapers and broadcasters exhibit some of the phenomenon's worst symptoms. Big Media, in any event, treated the news as a lecture. We told you what the news was. You bought it, or you didn't. You might write us a letter; we might print it. (If we were television and you complained, we ignored you entirely unless the com- plaint arrived on a libel lawyer's letterhead.) Or you cancelled your subscription or stopped watching our shows. It was a world that bred complacency and arrogance on our part. It was a gravy train while it lasted, but it was unsustainable. Tomorrow's news reporting and production will be more of a conversation, or a seminar. The lines will blur between pro- ducers and consumers, changing the role of both in ways we're only beginning to grasp now. The communication network itself will be a medium for everyone's voice, not just the few who can afford to buy multimillion-dollar printing presses, launch satel- lites, or win the government's permission to squat on the public's airwaves. This evolution--from journalism as lecture to journalism as a conversation or seminar--will force the various communities of interest to adapt. Everyone, from journalists to the people we cover to our sources and the former audience, must change their ways. The alternative is just more of the same. We can't afford more of the same. We can't afford to treat the news solely as a commodity, largely controlled by big insti- tutions. We can't afford, as a society, to limit our choices. We can't even afford it financially, because Wall Street's demands on Big Media are dumbing down the product itself. There are three major constituencies in a world where anyone can make the news. Once largely distinct, they're now blurring into each other. xiii w e the media Journalists We will learn we are part of something new, that our readers/listeners/viewers are becoming part of the process. I take it for granted, for example, that my readers know more than I do--and this is a liberating, not threatening, fact of journalistic life. Every reporter on every beat should embrace this. We will use the tools of grassroots journalism or be consigned to history. Our core values, including accu- racy and fairness, will remain important, and we'll still be gatekeepers in some ways, but our ability to shape larger conversations--and to provide context--will be at least as important as our ability to gather facts and report them. Newsmakers The rich and powerful are discovering new vulnerabilities, as Nacchio learned. Moreover, when anyone can be a jour- nalist, many talented people will try--and they'll find things the professionals miss. Politicians and business people are learning this every day. But newsmakers also have new ways to get out their message, using the same technologies the grassroots adopts. Howard Dean's presidential cam- paign failed, but his methods will be studied and emulated because of the way his campaign used new tools to engage his supporters in a conversation. The people at the edges of the communications and social networks can be a news- maker's harshest, most effective critics. But they can also be the most fervent and valuable allies, offering ideas to each other and to the newsmaker as well. The former audience Once mere consumers of news, the audience is learning how to get a better, timelier report. It's also learning how to join the process of journalism, helping to create a massive con- versation and, in some cases, doing a better job than the professionals. For example, Glenn Reynolds, a.k.a. "Insta- pundit," is not just one of the most popular webloggers; he xiv introduction has amassed considerable influence in the process. Some grassroots journalists will become professionals. In the end, we'll have more voices and more options. I've been in professional journalism for almost 25 years. I'm grateful for the opportunities I've had, and the position I hold. I respect and admire my colleagues, and believe that Big Media does a superb job in many cases. But I'm absolutely certain that the journalism industry's modern structure has fostered a dan- gerous conservatism--from a business sense more than a polit- ical sense, though both are apparent--that threatens our future. Our resistance to change, some of it caused by financial con- cerns, has wounded the journalism we practice and has made us nearly blind to tomorrow's realities. Our worst enemy may be ourselves. Corporate journalism, which dominates today, is squeezing quality to boost profits in the short term. Perversely, such tactics are ultimately likely to undermine us. Big Media enjoys high margins. Daily newspapers in typi-