The Digital Age has bought about a change to the way we access and consume news. Before the accessibility of email, readers would pick up the newspaper and if there was anything on the readers mind, they would send a letter to the editor to voice an opinion. With the advent of the Internet and converging media, journalist must compete with the rise of the amateur reporter. The reader has gone from the news consumer; to the news producers. One such example was the Boston Marathon bombing. The average citizen provided most of what we at home were viewing as we watched the terror unfold. Information about victims had already started showing up on the social media sites. Video of the blast had been shared on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube. In the past when a news story broke, the journalist would be the one to find background information and photos of those involved. Now that the spread of digital video, photo enable mobile phones, combined with blogs and viral distribution of the internet, this technology is making publishers take a second look at the way news is being reported. News organizations are no longer competing with just other news sources, but the readers themselves. Some news agencies have embraced this new digital age, such as CNN who has added the iReport to their website, giving some bloggers a place to upload videos and report a story as it
The Digital Age has bought about a change to the way we access and consume news. Before the accessibility of email, readers would pick up the newspaper and if there was anything on the readers mind, they would send a letter to the editor to voice an opinion. With the advent of the Internet and converging media, journalist must compete with the rise of the amateur reporter. The reader has gone from the news consumer; to the news producers. One such example was the Boston Marathon bombing. The average citizen provided most of what we at home were viewing as we watched the terror unfold. Information about victims had already started showing up on the social media sites. Video of the blast had been shared on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube. In the past when a news story broke, the journalist would be the one to find background information and photos of those involved. Now that the spread of digital video, photo enable mobile phones, combined with blogs and viral distribution of the internet, this technology is making publishers take a second look at the way news is being reported. News organizations are no longer competing with just other news sources, but the readers themselves. Some news agencies have embraced this new digital age, such as CNN who has added the iReport to their website, giving some bloggers a place to upload videos and report a story as it