1 / 26

Social networking sites and the public sphere

Social networking sites and the public sphere. The US presidential election campaign on Digg, Reddit , Newsvine and Propeller. András Szabó Tampere, 18.4.2008 -. Social news sites?. community of editors, free of direct influence (in theory) ‏ filters or aggregators of content

calvin
Download Presentation

Social networking sites and the public sphere

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social networking sites and the public sphere The US presidential election campaign on Digg, Reddit, Newsvine and Propeller. András Szabó Tampere, 18.4.2008 -

  2. Social news sites? • community of editors, free of direct influence (in theory)‏ • filters or aggregators of content • news and discussion

  3. SNS and the public sphere • the two entry points: • social news sites accommodate discussion, and • they also set – at least their own – agenda.

  4. The strength of SNS • discussions that matter • the democratic principle • as opposed to blogs, discussion forums • common ground (with credibility issues)‏ • an advocacy domain of media (Dahlgren)‏ • cf. the strange economy of the internet

  5. The overall research plan • 3-pronged approach: • content analysis of social news sites • narratives, agenda-setting, sources, practicalities • critical discourse analysis of social news sites and blogs • critical discourse analysis of discussion forums

  6. Digg, Reddit Reddit 2.5 million unique visitors / month (1.7 m from US)‏ owned by Condé Nast (Wired, The New Yorker, GQ, Vogue...)‏ • Digg • 25 million unique visitors / month (of which 15 m from US)‏ • private company (Digg, Inc.)‏

  7. Newsvine, Propeller Propeller 6 million unique visitors / month (3.7 million from US)‏ owned by AOL LLC, belongs to the Time-Warner media conglomerate • Newsvine • 1 million unique visitors / month (840 thousand from US)‏ • owned by MSNBC, a joint venture of NBC Universal and Microsoft

  8. Samples and elections Why the elections? important widely covered fixed + variable elements large enough to include a variety of themes but small enough to remain comparable • sampling principles: • daily and weekly • from “politics” or “elections” category • aim: the 4 most popular (relevant) news items from each site, every day

  9. My questions • Agenda-setting • How important is the campaign? (public agenda)‏ • Can it influence the agenda of MSM? (agenda building)‏ • Narratives • What is covered in the news, and how does it differ from that of MSM? • Sources • How many and what kind of sources do SNS use? • Practicalities • How fast are sns, and what is their “added value”?

  10. Base of comparison • The PEJ (Project for Excellence in Journalism) News Coverage Index • network TV, newspapers, online news sites (but no blogs or social news sites), radio, cable news • subsets: campaign coverage index, talkshow index • One question: what is being covered in the news media? • http://www.journalism.org

  11. Elections? What elections?

  12. And now... ...something completely different.

  13. Primary, secondary sources • 348 articles • How many primary sources? • note that 1 submitted (secondary) source might use several primary sources

  14. Primary sources • 4 weeks, 348 news items • 150 (133) different primary sources

  15. Secondary sources • 4 weeks, 348 news items • 152 (114) different sec. sources – about 2.2 item / source

  16. Sources – summary • largely diverse, fragmented pool of both primary and secondary sources • including: The Rolling Stone, HBO, radio shows and Wikipedia • the role of independent private individuals compares to that of the most influential sources • though: is this really news production? (news vs opinion)‏ • no conclusive evidence of ownership influence on the use of sources

  17. Quickness • “afternoon edition”? • delayed, but expanded content • convenient archives

  18. The narratives – week 8 (18th - 24th February)‏ • Obama continues winning streak (Hawaii, Wisconsin), McCain explains lobby ties • prominent only on social news sites: Ralph Nader, BO vs HRC senate record

  19. The narratives – week 9 (25th Feb - 2nd March)‏ • Obama under closer scrutiny, McCain starts to disappear • prominent only in MSM: Clinton's experience, Mike Huckabee • MSM picks up on Nader, senate record comparison • prominent only on SNS: Antoin Rezko

  20. The narratives – week 10 (3rd - 9th March )‏ • Clinton makes comeback (Texas, Ohio), Democrats' deadlock? • MSM picks up on Rezko case • social news sites pick up on Clinton's experience

  21. The narratives – week 11 (10th - 16th March )‏ • a narrative of racial tension: Wright, Ferraro • prominent only on – some - SNS: John Hagee (reaction); Clinton's experience • overshadowing the campaign in MSM: the Spitzer-scandal

  22. Media exposure by party • average difference: 2.66 percentage points • “other” parties: 2.28% vs 3.06% • questioning the narrative altogether: 3 stories on social news sites (0.86% of the newswhole)‏

  23. Narratives and agenda setting • largely corresponding agendas (within the topic of the 2008 campaign)‏ • (though further analysis needed to study the effects of fragmentation)‏ • however, social news sites have the potential to overtake the conventional media: • the “Grassrootsmom”-file, Ralph Nader, the Rezko-case • Is there a causal relationship? There might be.

  24. Summary • social news sites use a large variety of sources – a main contributor to healthy “advocacy media” • the role of independent private individuals is important (both as primary and as secondary source) – civic journalism is treated equally • social news sites are quick • they largely mirror the agenda of the mainstream media – but also show potential to (at least) influence it

  25. What's missing? • Framing – the qualities of representation. How are issues presented, what are the underlying ideologies? Bias / objectivity of the sites? • What's the context of the practice of using a social news site? Do they complement or strive to substitute traditional media organs? • Analysis of discussion. Critical argument vs shouting abuse?

  26. Thank you. • Project for Excellence in Journalism: • http://www.journalism.org • Reach me at: • andras.szabo@student.uwasa.fi • http://raatali.wordpress.com

More Related