[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab on May 28, 2010.]
Facebook simplifies privacy control: After about a month of loud, sustained criticism, Facebook bowed to public pressure and instituted some changes Wednesday to users’ privacy settings. The default status of most of the data on Facebook — that is, public —hasn’t changed, but the [...]
Tags:
associated press,
Bay Citizen,
facebook,
iPad,
iPad apps,
Mark Zuckerberg,
paywalls,
privacy,
Publish2,
Steven Johnson,
the new york times,
twitter,
Wired
[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab on April 23, 2010.]
Facebook tries to connect the web: Most of the talk on journalism and the web this week was about two tech giants making moves that, for the most part, aren’t making users and commentators happy. The first one I’ll run down is Facebook [...]
Tags:
Apple,
associated press,
clay shirky,
control,
facebook,
hot news doctrine,
investigative journalism,
iPad,
news apps,
print,
privacy,
WikiLeaks
As Jay Rosen surmised after my last Media Musings, this review is largely curated from Twitter, with some RSS thrown in there to catch anything I might have missed. But because I’ve been out on the road and mostly off the grid for the last week, I decided to catch up via RSS, rather than [...]
Tags:
advocacy journalism,
associated press,
bias,
fox news,
jeff jarvis,
npr,
obama,
political journalism,
rupert murdoch,
social media,
washington post