Blueprint
LOOKING FOR "Blueprinting the Information Valet Economy," (2008 gathering)? Try LOOKING HERE.
LOOKING FOR "Blueprinting the Information Valet Economy," (2008 gathering)? Try LOOKING HERE.
It’s time to frame the marketplace for digital information. Will you help?
News and information have never been more abundant and accessible than now. The advent of more portable, more function devices like smarts phones, tablets networked appliances of all sorts assures that this will continue.
The market is in place. But what are the currencies in trade? The first-generation information marketplace has been paid for by advertising. Yet as advertising becomes less mass market, and more personalized, consumers are asking: What is the tradeoff in personal privacy and information sharing? And as the reporters’ ranks shrink, the public also wonders: What will sustain the independent voices to tell us what we need to know as citizens?
Given these challenges – rising public concern about advertising and privacy, and shrinking support for reporting – it’s time to ask: What, now, are the building blocks for a new information economy?
Join the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute on Dec. 2-3 in Washington, D.C., as we assess the materials needed to build an open marketplace for sharing and selling digital information. A marketplace open to participants of all sizes and all views, where the common currencies include trust, identity enabling unfettered products, prices and services.
Why now? Because of game-changing, and recent, developments:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20101008/wr_nm/us_privacy_poll http://www.commonsensemedia.org/about-us/press-room/press-releases/online-privacy-poll http://www.zogby.com/Soundbites/ReadClips.cfm?ID=19472
http://www.editorsweblog.org/multimedia/2010/10/audio_janet_robinson_of_the_new_york_tim.php
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704011904575538351958125226.html
(get photo of a silo) http://www.flickr.com/photos/manning999/2170612303/in/pool-72383950@N00
Each of these initiatives represents a silo – an attempt by a portion of the marketplace to serve a territory and set of users. What could bring these emerging “walled gardens” together, for the benefit of users? Is there an analogy from another industry? Bank ATM networks began local, grew regionally, and then connected nationally and internationally.
How do we advance the user experience to the point where a user who wants the convenience of one account, one digital wallet, one identity, can gain access to and purchase information without walls?
The mission of “Blueprint to Building: Framing the Marketplace for Digital Information” is this: Consider developing voluntary “building codes” which will enable the privacy-protected sharing of users – and atomized content – across all these emerging platforms. Just as the World Wide Web describes a standard for information transfer, will we ever have standards for privacy protection and information payments?
"It is technically impossible for Yahoo! to be aware of all software or files that may be installed on a user's computer when they visit our site," Anne Toth, Yahoo's vice president of global policy and head of privacy, wrote to U.S. Reps. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) and Joe Barton (R-Texas). Microsoft Corp., YahooInc. and AOL Inc., AT&T Corp., CareerBuilder.com, Comcast Corp., Merriam-Webster.com, News Corp.'s MySpace.com, New York Times Co.'s About.com, Photobucket.com and Verizon Communications Inc. Removing tracking devices entirely would be "very detrimental to our business," CareerBuilder.com Chief Executive Matt Ferguson wrote to the lawmakers. "Nonetheless we are currently reviewing technology to determine whether we can adopt techniques to allow us to better monitor and control third-party cookies."
In the digital realm, paid content is a necessity, says Christoph Riess, CEO of the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers. “Will paid content generate revenue?” he asked in a speech to the World Editors Forum on Oct. 8 in Hamburg, Germany. “It's not a question of yes or no. It's question of how. In order to survive, we have to do it.” http://www.editorsweblog.org/multimedia/2010/10/christoph_riess_about_the_future_of_news.php
“I would say in early December you are going to see the full explanation in regard to the meter, full explanation with regard to the pricing,” Janet Robinson, CEO of the New York Times Co., said Oct. 7 in an interview posted as audio at EditorsWebLog. She said, “We have spent two years preparing for our metered model and I think the way we feel about the metered model – it stills allows us to be part of the open web ecosystem.” http://www.editorsweblog.org/multimedia/2010/10/audio_janet_robinson_of_the_new_york_tim.php
“Clearly there is acknowledgement the industry needs to build scale quickly by collaboration,” says one news-industry researcher. “But the question is who’s platform?” Perhaps the answer is: No one company’s platform, but rather an open platform and open standards for trust, identity and information commerce with which all may participate, and profit.
“From Blueprint to Build: Framing the Marketplace for Digital Information,” will set the scene with a dinner, talk and discussion on Thurs., Dec. 2, 2010. Joining us at an optional pre-dinner reception will be executives of some of the companies and initiatives who seem most likely to have access to tools for framing the new information marketplace.
For the day on Friday, we’ll resolve into five tracks, each lead by a domain expert, for roundtable discussions focused on posing ideas for research, plans for experiments and frameworks for platform and standards collaboration that foster competition and open markets. Here are the tracks:
Proposed track leaders: Martin Langeveld, CircLabs Inc., and Charlie Terry (ex CompuServe and Comtex)
Proposed track leaders: Paul Trevithick, Azigo Inc. and Richard Lerner, Clickshare Service Corp.
Proposed track leaders: Stephanie Padgett and Doc Searls
Proposed track leaders: Jeff Vander Clute and Merrill Brown.
By 3 p.m. on Friday, we’ll wrap the day’s ideas in a joint session producing fresh insights, next steps, and formats for continued collaboration.
“From Blueprint to Build: Framing the Marketplace for Digital Information,” builds on earlier work of the Reynolds Journalism Institute in 2008, 2009 and earlier this year. RJI’s intention is to foster discussions with lead to ideas, experiments, research and solutions that sustain the values, principles and purposes of journalism.