CONEWS: A COLLABORATIVE APPROACH TO ONLINE
NEWS STORIES
Daniel Schneider, Jano de Souza and Ercilia de Stefano
COPPE/UFRJ - Computer Science Department, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
Keywords: Social networks, Online News Stories, Collaboration.
Abstract: In this paper we present the CoNews framework, a hybrid approach to publish online news stories,
consisting of the combination of news entries extracted from authoritative sources - retrieved from news
search engines - with blog articles and user-submitted less-authoritative stories. Some of the goals of this
research include experimenting with new forms of mass communication and editorial control as well as
improving users' access to the ever-expanding news information available to them. By creating an
appropriate environment, we encourage users not only to become a more active audience for news stories
and other issues, but also to contribute with his/her own articles to the body of knowledge.
1 INTRODUCTION
In 1997, Molina reported that online newspapers
were embarking on the journey towards multimedia.
The vision for the end of the journey was “a
personalized interactive electronic news system
making fully-integrated use of text, audio, still-
image, animation and video”. Several problems
were identified as well as uncertainties facing media
companies experimenting with steps towards the
multimedia vision. They include profitability,
copyright, and organization of production of the new
media (Molina, 1997).
Today, a large number of online newspapers
disseminate a variety of news reports to Internet
users through a Web Browser. At many news sites,
online readers can do more than merely select
information - they also can add comments, engage in
discussions, or even suggest a story or topic.
However, editors of major online newspapers may
be concerned of losing control or even their
credibility by allowing users to become a source of
communication messages. For this reason, and
because newspapers companies are business
oriented, they have failed to create an appropriate
environment to engage users in media
communication.
News search engines such as Google News have
been an answer to this, in that they integrate diverse
journalistic sources. They provide links to several
articles on the same story so that readers can choose
what subject interests them and consider a rich
variety of perspectives on any given story. Despite
offering a wider range of stories, personalized news
and other facilities, readers are still seen as passive
consumers.
In the recent years, open publishing initiatives
and journalism told by “common people” began to
emerge, enabled by new technologies such as blogs,
wikis, social networks and mobile computing.
Mobile blogging has also been transforming the way
people collaborate as they begin to use their cell
phones and other devices to send updates to their
blogs. Some authors consider these technologies part
of a social phenomenon embracing an approach to
generating and distributing Web content itself,
characterized by open communication,
decentralization of authority, freedom to share and
reuse (Web 2.0, 2006).
In this research, we are investigating new forms
of mass communication - open and multi-directional,
instead of one-way - where the goals of journalists
and readers may be optimally aligned. The main
target of this paper is presenting the CoNews
framework, a hybrid approach to publish online
news stories. By creating an appropriate
environment, we encourage users not only to
become a more active audience for news stories and
other issues, but also to contribute with his/her own
articles to the body of knowledge.
The rest of the paper is organized as follows. The
second section presents some key background
101
Schneider D., de Souza J. and de Stefano E. (2007).
CONEWS: A COLLABORATIVE APPROACH TO ONLINE NEWS STORIES.
In Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems - SAIC, pages 101-106
DOI: 10.5220/0002395701010106
Copyright
c
SciTePress
concepts and the most relevant work; the third
section presents the CoNews framework, its main
concepts and describes the prototype
implementation; and the fourth section the final
considerations and future work.
2 BACKGROUND AND RELATED
WORK
In this section, we begin addressing the main
problems related to online newspapers. Secondly,
we discuss news search engines and show that they
provide an answer to some of these problems. In the
following, we describe some rich technologies that
emerged in the recent years, including blogs, wikis
and social networks. And finally, we present the
most relevant work related to our research.
2.1 Online Newspapers
A long time before the dissemination of online
newspapers, Brown and Duguid (1994) claimed
several advantages of a printed newspaper over its
electronic news counterparts. The three advantages
for print included its uniformity of information -
because everybody got the "front-page news",
compared to everybody getting their own different
front-page - the juxtaposition of news through layout
in the paper, giving information about news value
and relatedness, and finally, the constrained physical
space of a printed paper, demanding a selection of
news.
On the other hand, the advantages to online
newspapers are many: their ability to be up-to-the-
minute, their flexibility, and their customizability.
But these same features are their downfall: readers
of online media don't all see the same news; stories
may change from time to time, so different readers
will see different versions of stories. According to
McElhearn (2006), while newspapers based on paper
offer a fixed, daily dose of news that everyone
shares, online newspapers tend to fragment the news
into only what catches the eye.
Pavlik (1997) claims that online content is
evolving through three stages. The first stage
involves repurposing print content for the online
edition. In stage two, content is augmented with
interactive features, such as hyperlinks and search
engines. Stage three is characterized by the creation
of original news content designed specifically for the
new medium.
However, stage three has not completely been
reached. Newspaper companies are businesses
oriented, and they are unable to understand the
autonomous nature of communication on the Net,
and to meet users’ needs and expectations. As a
matter of fact, the majority of online newspapers
remediate important features of their paper-based
counterparts. Their online services, layout and
communication patterns are largely influenced by
established practices in publishing the paper version.
In most cases, articles posted are exactly the same as
those printed in regular newspapers (Johnson, 1997),
but in the majority of cases, they are narrower
articles. Sometimes they are augmented with
multimedia features like hyperlinks and images, but
only a handful of sites include content designed
specifically for the Web as a new medium of
communication (Pavlik, 1997). For this reason,
except for major breaking news events, readers
spend a small portion of their time retrieving news
from online sources (Fidler, 1997).
It could be argued that a growing number of
online newspapers allow users to comment on news
articles, engage in discussions or even suggest a
story or topic. However, a major problem that rises
is that contributions are fragmented in many news
sites, and readers may feel uncomfortable with the
idea of having to comment in various sites that
publishes articles on the same story. In most cases,
readers may even give up the idea of collaborating
because they just cannot find the right place and the
right persons to collaborate with. Furthermore,
concerns about possible loss of credibility by editors
of major online newspapers may prevent users from
becoming a source of communication messages. By
not creating an environment that offers advantages
over traditional newspapers and that engages users
in a more participatory experience, online
newspapers fail to create significant audiences of
their own.
2.2 News Search Engines
With the goal of placing as much information as
possible on their main pages – to fit around the ads
online newspapers tend to shut out their readers.
News search engines like Google News have
been a partial answer to this problem. Their stories
show introductions, the first few words of stories,
allowing readers to have more context. News search
engines extract news information from both the Web
and news feeds, group related articles together in
“news stories”, cluster the stories in categories, and
finally display results in personalized pages.
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In Google News portal, as advocated in
(McElhearn, 2006), stories are selected by computer
algorithms, without human intervention, which is
why Google News is considered the antithesis of any
newspaper. Google claims that "news sources are
selected without regard to political viewpoint or
ideology, enabling you to see how different
organizations are reporting the same story" (About
Google News, 2006). In fact, this site creates a space
for the presentation of diverse journalistic voices,
although its diversity and quality depends both on
the availability and reliability of its professional
sources (Ananny and Strohecker, 2002).
Although they offer a wider range of stories,
advanced search, recommendations and many others
value-added services such as news alerts and
searching in news archives, readers are still seen as
passive consumers, and the emphasis remains upon a
one-way flow of information.
2.3 Blogs and Wikis
Blogs represent online journals for a particular
person, where people periodically post news stories
on a certain subject - such as politics – and users are
invited to comment on the stories. They usually
combine text with images or even streamed video,
contain links to other related sites, and entries are
displayed in a reverse chronological order.
In the recent years, they have emerged as a
phenomenon of great impact, not just because of the
millions of blogs that exist but because of the large
numbers of people interested in what bloggers are
saying (Raynsford, 2003). They represent the
antithesis of the values articulated by objective
journalism: they are personal, passionate, subjective,
and not subject to editorial oversight (Gill, 2005).
Some authors consider blogs a useful supplement
to online newspapers in that it may give readers
greater insights into what's happening on the ground.
But others remain sceptical about considering
blogging as a new form of journalism. They state
that two things separate blogging from journalism:
the personalisation of the voice of the blogger and
the lack of a workflow for publication that one
expects for any publishing system. In fact, no editor
comes between the author and the reader.
However, as mentioned before, online
newspapers have failed to create audiences on their
own and, as a result, many online readers have
chosen to eschew traditional sources of news in
favour of blogs. As happens with news stories
indexed by news search engines, there are many
blog search engines available on the Web - such as
Google Blog Search - dedicated to retrieving,
indexing, clustering and delivering blog articles.
A wiki is a tool for collaborative authoring in the
Web that can also be used to publish news stories. It
allows visitors themselves to add, remove, and easily
change content available in a Web page. Wikinews,
for instance, is a free-content initiative that allows
anyone to report news on a wide variety of subjects.
2.4 Social Networks
Social networks have become an emergent subject
in the communications field. They allow people to
share relevant information and media with one
another, self-organize, and easily form alliances to
engage constructively with our neighbors. Readers
are linked to other readers directly, creating smaller
audiences who share much in common.
According to Kollock (1999), users that
contribute in online communities that implement
social networks are motivated by three factors:
anticipated reciprocity, increased recognition and
sense of efficacy. As will be discussed in Section 3,
CoNews is a social network specifically designed
for collaboration over news stories.
2.5 Related Work
Currently, we are aware of a few systems that
provide functionality similar to CoNews.
Digg is a framework for publishing news stories
submitted by users. The stories are ranked through a
user-based ranking system and then promoted to the
front page. Should the story not receive enough
“diggs”, or if enough users make use of the problem
report feature to point out issues with the
submission, the story will remain in the "digg all"
area, where it may eventually be removed. Articles
are categorized by topic - similar to topic categories
for major online newspapers - but not per region.
So, there are Digg versions in many countries
around the World.
Concerns have been raised over Digg's growing
influence as a news source. It has been criticized for
spotlighting false, misleading and poorly-written
information (Digg, 2006). Not offering a workflow
machine to support the collaborative creation and
publishing of news stories could be pointed as a
major lack of opportunity in Digg framework. In
fact, despite the recent wave of Digg-like services
provided by commercial companies, few scientific
publications are devoted to studying online
communities dedicated to news stories.
Indymedia is a good initiative that also relates to
our project. It consists of a global network of
independent journalists that was founded with the
CONEWS: A COLLABORATIVE APPROACH TO ONLINE NEWS STORIES
103
goal of facilitating the publishing of news media, as
directly as possible - by people themselves. By
January 2006, there were over 190 Independent
Media Center (IMC) outlets spread between many
countries around the world (Indymedia, 2006).
Although they produce both print and electronic
content, they are most well known for their blogs
where media is created and edited by its participants
- both the users who post content and members of
the local outlets who administer the site. Editing is
done by a system of layered contributors for each
site, by participating on open email lists and
attending meetings and real-time communication
done via the Indymedia IRC network. Policies for
removing undesired articles generally are chosen
locally by IMC collectives, which are also expected
to have an editorial policy for determining features
for the center column of the local site.
Another initiative that relates to our research is
SilverStringers: a community-centric approach to
news coverage and presentation intended to train
and equip its members to be reporters,
photographers, illustrators, editors, and designers of
a localized Web-based publication (Silver Stringers,
2006). Perhaps the most important contribution in
SilverStringers is that, in contrast to pyramid-like
organizational structures typically found in
corporate newspapers, SilverStringers operate
without any hierarchy. "A rotating coordinator runs
the meetings, and all decisions are made by the
group. Stories are essentially assigned with the
entire group being kept informed of who is doing
what. Within minutes after being cleared, stories
are published" (
Driscoll and Turpeinen, 1997).
The core of the system is a simple workflow
machine where stories are submitted, published and
archived. Articles are always in one of the four
possible states: reporter, editor, published, archived.
3 THE CONEWS FRAMEWORK
An appropriate environment to publish news stories
must exploit the Internet medium properties:
multimedia, speed for updating information,
horizontal distribution, decentralization,
accessibility, no hierarchy, no censorship and
interactivity (Lasica, 1996). We have envisioned a
system where users are active and questioning
audience for news events and issues, and are
involved in a collaborative experience. In this sense,
a central idea in our framework is that innovative
and well-written stories are created as people
collaborate and creatively experiment with
relationships among different opinions, and this
process might be supported by everyday news
stories published by authoritative and non-
authoritative sources. The main characteristics of our
framework are described below:
Hybrid approach – As mentioned before, our
approach combines news information extracted from
online newspapers, blogs, and also submitted by
users of CoNews Portal – which acts as an active
and central repository that stores both news articles
and contributions over news information.
Social networking – CoNews portal can be seen
as a social network. As such, users of the system can
find others with whom they share affinities, and
"add" those persons in the circle of collaborators.
Eventually, users of some of these "circles" may
self-organize and engage in communities that can be
created in the system, as will be discussed in the
following topic. They can also recommend news
stories to other users. Every user has a “newsbook
in the system where stories are either suggested by
CoNews recommendation system or by users in the
circle of collaborators.
Community-centric approach – In our
framework, users are encouraged to create
communities and define relevant roles in the
community for publishing news stories. For
instance, we may define an editor, a reporter and a
contributor role in a certain community. Every
community publishes its own articles – that are
published with the stamp of the community. Tools
for collaborative creation and edition of news stories
are provided, and everything is done through a Web
browser. Rules that manage the control of article
flow can also be created and are enforced by a
workflow machine. It is important to mention that a
user in the Portal is not forced to engage in any
community to publish a story, but it’s highly
recommended for increased recognition.
Open publishing – Our framework supports the
open publishing approach. The main principles
advocated are non-hierarchy, public participation,
minimal editorial control, and transparency (Open
publishing, 2006). Users are encouraged to
contribute with his/her own stories. In addition,
articles are filtered as little as possible to help the
readers find the stories they want. Readers can also
see the editorial decisions being made by others.
Finally, news stories can be distributed in other open
publishing sites.
Collaboration over news stories – For engaging
users in a collaborative experience, our framework
supports an annotation module that allows users to
contribute with comments over fine-grained
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elements of a news article. It is also possible to reply
to other user’s contributions, creating discussion
threads. In similar way to Digg comment system, we
allow users to rate comments, which ensures that,
much like what happens with news stories,
undesired comments can also be eliminated from the
Portal. The ideas behind the collaboration and
workflow of publishing components of CoNews
framework are mainly an extension of CEJ Project
proposals, targeted at offering an environment for
flexible definition and execution of scientific
publication processes (Schneider et al, 2005).
Other collaboration features – There are many
opportunities for collaboration in CoNews system.
For instance, users can find new collaborators based
on their membership of groups of users with whom
they share commom interests. They are also
encouraged to invite others to collaboratively
publish a story or even to suggest a topic for a chat
based on the reading of a published story. To help
remove undesired articles – for instance, spam or
offensive stories – we allow users to report such
posts. In similar way to Digg framework, when an
article has been reported enough times, it is
automatically buried by the system.
Recommendation – Our framework includes a
recommendation system based on collaborative
filtering techniques. The idea is to group users with
similar interests together, presenting the same news
stories to all the group members.
Searching news stories – A major problem for
online newspapers is that users often have to read
stories that the newspaper has selected to him, or the
stories retrieved by searching in the newspaper
archives. In our system, we aim to provide the full
range of stories collected from diverse sources and
also submitted by the users themselves.
User interfaces – User interfaces for creating
and editing content, and also for the delivering of
news articles, including "front-page news” and
customized pages, are still under investigation. We
aim to provide specific “news pages” per community
and per user, but some issues still need to be worked
out.
In CoNews portal, users play an active role in
argumentation. By encouraging a collaborative
dialogue with other users, we believe our framework
helps the delivering of news stories of interest to
their users.
3.1 System Description
A high-level perspective of CoNews System is
shown in the Figure 1. In the server side, CoNews
system provides specific components to
communicate with a news search engine (in order to
retrieve news entries from authoritative sources) and
also with a blog search engine (in order to retrieve
blog articles). Also, it provides a Web application
that handles the submission of news stories; the
searching function; the delivering of news stories;
the delivering of value-added services to CoNews
users; and all the collaboration of users of CoNews
social network.
Figure 1: CoNews System.
Our service collects news stories and blog articles
and stores them in a dedicated machine (News DB).
We are currently using Google engine for both the
news and blog search components, but we may soon
provide an interface that allows users to suggest
other news and blog sources. The server-side
application also interacts with a RDBMS that stores
all the relevant objects, including user profiles.
Finally, there’s also a notification agent that
periodically retrieves information from the System
RDBMS and notify users of new events.
3.2 Prototype Implementation
The software prototype environment is being
implemented by a group of graduate students and
this work will soon produce a final project for the
graduate level course. For the implementation of
CoNews social network and the Web application
services provided to users of CoNews portal, we are
extending the technology built in CEJ environment
(Schneider et al, 2005).
Java is the primary programming language for
system implementation - to provide platform
independence - and we are working with the same
frameworks for Web development used in CEJ,
including Resin (as the container), MVC-based
CONEWS: A COLLABORATIVE APPROACH TO ONLINE NEWS STORIES
105
Struts (for the application control) and Hibernate
(for the persistence). We are also reusing the
workflow machine of CEJ Environment for
implementing the publishing module of CoNews,
including the facilities to create, manage the
editorial control and publish the news stories.
Finally, the two server-side components
responsible for retrieving news and blog articles
from the respective search engines have been
implemented as Java-based agents that periodically
update the News DB component.
4 CONCLUSIONS
We are moving towards a multi-directional,
collaborative and democratic experience of mass
communication, currently represented by blogs,
diggs and social networks. As users assume a larger
role in news publishing, including collaboration on
the editing process, the power of journalists and
editors is significantly reduced and users become an
active voice.
In this paper we presented the CoNews
framework, an approach where users are encouraged
to collaborate with each other and publish online
news stories. As mentioned before, CoNews is a
social network specifically designed for
collaboration over news stories.
We are currently working on the implementation
of the system prototype and we aim to conduct some
experiments as soon as we finish a stable release of
the system. Future work will include investigating
new opportunities for collaboration and news
delivery that could be provided by mobile
computing. Given the success of wireless services
built on top of mobile networks, we also aim to
integrate applications such as mobile blogging into
the CoNews framework. The results of the
investigation of these topics will be reported in
follow-up papers.
The development of social networks aimed at
creation, sharing and distribution of news stories
electronically may be an opportunity for engaging
users in a more participatory and collaborative form
of mass communication. The analysis of the
CoNews framework presented here has shown that
the potentials of improvement are large, and that
established practices for online news publishing may
be transformed positively. However, it seems clear
that we have a long road to travel and it is still
unclear where this journey of change will take us.
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