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In this post on tech blog GigaOM, Mathew Ingram discusses the recently launched application Storify, which gives users a simple way to collect content from their various social media feeds (Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, etc.) and turn them into a single news feed.

Ingram's post focuses on the threat that services like Storify pose to mainstream media — who have until recently been the gatekeepers for curating and aggregating news. He seems to draw a line between trained journalists who work for "branded" big-name media outlets and everyone else, but he doesn't address a group who might also benefit from Storify: freelance jounalists.

When more and more roles in the media involve evaluating and parsing stories by other outlets — the Huffington Post is beginning to hire in Canada, after all — Storify is an easy way for freelancers or journalists looking for permanent work to show their aggregation and curation abilities. They may not be the most important skills for a freelancer, but including a news feed from Storify or a similar platform on a CV or in an online portfolio might be the thing that sets you apart from the pack.

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…