By
IJNet
As news organizations struggle to
reinvent themselves, "newsrooms need to be in a sort of permanent BETA
mode," says Global Editors Network (GEN) Deputy Director
Antoine Laurent.
“Newsrooms have to systematize a new
kind of innovation process in order to produce new apps, interactive content,
data visualization and newsgaming projects," Laurent said. He manages the Editors’ Lab, which brings together journalists
and technologists for hackdays to do just that.
This weekend, 14 teams from across
South Africa will gather in Cape Town for Sub-Saharan Africa's first newsroom
hackday. Three-person teams -- each consisting of a journalist, designer and
developer -- from all of South Africa’s major news organizations will compete.
At the two-day event hosted by digital news publisher 24.com, the teams will use
public data and other content to build mobile apps or digital tools that help
audiences better understand or engage with the world around them.
Preliminary ideas include apps and
tools to help citizens report corruption, bribes or potholes; to track
politicians' election promises; and to monitor schools' performance.
Previous Editors’ Labs have been hosted
at world-renowned newsrooms including the New York Times, the Guardian and
Spain's El País. “The program of Hackdays is a kind of world cup of innovation
in journalism,” Laurent said in a release. The event will aim to “meet the
community of newsroom innovators and give them the attention and the credit
they deserve -- and to share experiences among their counterparts around the
world.”
GEN, Google and the African Media Initiative (AMI), the continent’s
largest association of media owners and operators, organized the event.
The best projects created at the
hackathon will win ZAR 20,000 (about US$2,000), as well as tickets to the 2014 GEN Summit in Barcelona, Spain. There, South
African winners will compete against their counterparts from around the world,
at the annual Editors Lab Hackathon.
After the Hackday, AMI’s Code
for Africa laboratories in South Africa and Kenya will help teams
turn their ideas and rough prototypes into real newsroom products.
“We’re hoping to find some great ideas
here, that we can help scale globally through things like our African News Innovation Challenge" and similar support
programs, said Justin Arenstein, AMI chief
strategist and an ICFJ Knight International Journalism Fellow.
Arenstein is also a judge in GEN's Global Data Journalism Awards.
Judges for the South Africa event
include Laurent, Arenstein and Memeburn editor Michelle Atagana.
To learn more, visit GEN Facebook and Hacks/Hackers Africa Facebook. Follow GEN on
Twitter here and AMI on Twitter here. The event’s hashtags will be: #EditorsLab
and #hackday.
No comments:
Post a Comment