Canada’s meeting place for freelance writers and creators

Established 2010

The Washington Post Co. has reportedly invested between $5 and $10 million in developing Trove, a free personalized aggregation service that will collect news from 10,000 sources online. WaPo's senior vice president and chief digital officer, Vijay Ravindran, says it "probably won’t save journalism on its own, but it’s a start." The site launches in beta next month, and apps will also be available for for iOS and Android mobile devices.

Ravindran says that Trove's main goals are "revenue and innovation," but he doesn't discuss where the news is going to come from. Tellingly, the word "writer" appears only once in the article. Instead,  much digital ink is spilled explaining how Trove will use algorithms—like those perfected by NetFlix—to predict what customers news will want to see.

Like the NYT Co., which has been developing a similar app, called News.me, WaPo is investing in personalized aggregation, hoping to turn initially free services into money-makers.  But if all the money is in repackaging these days, how much of that hoped-for revenue will trickle down to the people who create the news? And when readers are being given only what they ask for, what do services like Trove mean for journalists who cover  difficult, less-sensational stories that may not find their way into many users' customized feeds?

John Stackhouse, executive editor at the Globe and Mail, has reportedly told Globe staffers they can no longer freelance for Toronto Life  and Chatelaine because the magazines are now considered “competitors.” What’s more, the same policy applies may soon apply to freelancers who contribute to the paper, most of whom don’t earn enough…
Submissions for the Canadian Association of Journalists annual awards must be postmarked today. You can download an application here.  Print, broadcast and photojournalism submissions must have been published or broadcast during the 2010 calendar year. The CAJ/CNW Group Student Award of Excellence deadline is February 28, 2011. Award winners…
Tim Rutten skewers AOL and the Huffington Post in today's LA Times. The company and blog are a match made in journalism hell. Both have contributed to reducing online journalism to a slight commodity that exploits desperate journalists, many of whom lost their jobs - and benefits and pensions - in the traditional media. Here's the conclusion…
The CRTC must withdraw the proposed weakening of a regulation that bans false and misleading news from the airwaves and call a public hearing on broadcast news, says the Canadian Media Guild. “The Commission appears to be proposing to give (broadcasters) free rein to lie and mislead the Canadian public in the guise of delivering news,” the CMG…
The following statement has been posted at cmg.ca: We are deeply concerned about stories emerging this week from Egypt about beatings, detention and harassment of journalists, including our own colleagues.The events underscore how dangerous our work can be and yet how vitally important it is in order to let the world know what is going at times…
The CRTC is proposing to loosen some of the only rules we have related to broadcast news content in Canada. The current rules say that broadcasters cannot air "any false or misleading news." Period. The change, scheduled to come into effect on September 1 of this year, would limit that prohibition to situations where the false or misleading news…
Shannon Rupp writes in The Tyee about "the really super new new journalism" in which journalists are "repeaters." She describes an incident in which an editor paid a freelancer for a piece only to learn that the freelancer had simply put their byline on a press release.Rupp's not so sure this kind of practice can be condemned in the trade today,…

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