81 results
Search Results
2. Web-only Online Sites More Likely to Post Editorial Policies Than Are Daily Paper Sites.
- Author
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Cassidy, William P.
- Subjects
- *
CONTENT analysis , *WEBSITES , *ELECTRONIC newspapers , *DISCLOSURE , *JOURNALISTIC ethics - Abstract
This paper examines the web sites of daily newspapers as well as web-only news sites for the presence of information referred to by media critic Steve Outing as credibility statements. The Internet allows journalists to post information almost as soon as they receive it, a quality seen by many journalists as having a positive impact on the profession. A total of 196 news sites were content analyzed. The online editions of the top 100 daily U.S. newspapers by circulation based on March 31, 2004, figures were made part of the sampling frame as were the top papers in the 11 states not represented in the top 100. 118 of the sites analyzed posted information satisfying at least one of the six criteria for editorial policy statements. More than half discussed journalistic principles and one-third disclosed their business relationships. There were significant differences between the two groups regarding their implementation of several of the criteria. Web-only news sites were more likely to post information about journalistic principles, report business relationships and discuss business influences on editorial content. Most Internet news sites do not provide information concerning employee conduct, the influence of business relationships on editorial content or standards for separating editorial content from advertising.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Retaining hardcopy papers still important in digital age.
- Author
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Silverman, Randy
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRONIC newspapers , *DIGITAL technology , *MICROFILMS , *DIGITAL preservation - Abstract
Preservation librarian Randy Silverman makes the case for preserving hardcopy newspapers in the digital age. He faults the U.S. Newspaper Program that resulted in copying and destroying original historic newspapers while converting 60 million pages to microfilm, and he argues for the maintenance of the originals to support historical research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. 'This is ridiculous – I need to start a paper...': An exploration of aims and intentions of regional print proprietors of post-COVID start-up newspapers.
- Author
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Barnes, Renee, Dugmore, Harry, English, Peter, Natoli, Rosanna, and Stephens, Elizabeth J
- Subjects
REGIONAL journalism ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,CORONAVIRUS diseases ,NEW business enterprises ,SOCIAL cohesion - Abstract
In May 2020 at the height of Australia's first national COVID lockdown, NewsCorp Australia announced that more than 125 regional newspapers would either be closed or become available online-only. Queensland was hit hard with 22 regional and 20 community newspapers shifting to online formats, and 15 community newspapers closing. Yet within months of the NewsCorp changes, a significant number of new print newspapers were being announced to fill the 'news deserts'. Broadly welcomed by those in these local communities, the new publications suggest a reinvigoration of long-standing norms and tenets, many of which are specific to regional print news media, such as community-centred, locally-shaped news values and high reliance on 'micro-ads' (i.e. classifieds) and hyper-local business revenue. But given the dire prognostications about print business models, what are the aims and intentions of these start-ups (n = 22), and how do they translate their notions of community-centric news into business models they perceive as viable? Drawing on Hanitzsch and Vos framework for the discursive constructions of journalists' role in society, we find these newspaper start-ups both reassert and claim more vigorously the normative values associated with community journalism as 'social glue', while also developing 'lean start-up' business models that capitalise on the sense of a local newspaper's 'social good' functions through an affective rationale. We argue this represents a shift to a new 'hybrid' model, with strong elements of a traditional and still feisty monitorial news values fusing with a more 'morale-enhancing' and explicitly social cohesion-centric role conceptions. We call it a 'community cohesion model'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. IS INTERNET CONTENT DIFFERENT AFTER ALL? A CONTENT ANALYSIS OF MOBILIZING INFORMATION IN ONLINE AND PRINTNEWS PAPERS.
- Author
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Hoffman, Lindsay H.
- Subjects
- *
NEWS websites , *ELECTRONIC newspapers , *ELECTRONIC journals , *OPERATIONAL definitions , *INFORMATION services , *ELECTRONIC information resources , *ELECTRONIC reference sources , *INTERNET - Abstract
The present study answers calls of previous research to analyze the content of online news, assessing differences between print and online newspapers in frequency of ‘mobilizing information’ (MI)—information aiding people to act on pre-existing attitudes. Conceptual and operational definitions of locational, identificational, and tactical MI are included. Results revealed that online newspapers did not have significantly more MI than their print counterparts. This finding counters the assumption that online newspapers have more mobilizing content than print. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Verb objectivity and source qualification: Comparison of quotation attributions in offline and online newspapers.
- Author
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Lee, Gunho
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC newspapers ,ATTRIBUTION of news ,ATTRIBUTION of quotations ,CREDIBILITY of the press ,NEWSPAPERS -- Objectivity - Abstract
This study explored the use of quotations in offline (the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal) and online (Huffington Post and Newsmax) newspapers in terms of verb objectivity and source qualification (transparency and credibility). Individual analyses showed offline papers relatively focused more on verb objectivity, whereas online papers concentrated on source qualification. On analyzing verbs and sources together, the study found better journalistic performance in online papers. While offline papers employed verb objectivity as a sole standard for desirable quotation usage, online papers utilized source qualification and verb objectivity as leverages. More transparent-credible sources outnumbered less transparent-credible sources and objective verbs outnumbered unobjective verbs in online papers, but offline papers only had more objective than unobjective verbs and ignored desirable source use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Laughing through the Stomach: Satire, Humour and Advertising in Sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Tshuma, Lungile Augustine, Msimanga, Mbongeni Jonny, and Tshuma, Bhekizulu Bethaphi
- Subjects
- *
SATIRE , *ELECTRONIC newspapers , *ADVERTISING , *MICROBLOGS , *STOMACH , *DIGITAL media - Abstract
This paper critically explores the use of satire and humour by fast-foods outlets in South Africa and Zimbabwe to advertise and market their menu through digital media platforms, Facebook and Twitter. Using Nando's South Africa and Mambo's Chicken, in Zimbabwe, as case studies, we examine how satire and humour are used as advertising strategies, and as a reflection of these countries' economic and political environments. Consumers are overwhelmed with information coming from different sources such as Television, radio, newspapers and Internet. The paper's theoretical approach is gleaned from advertising and satire. We argue that through their encounter with food, consumers tend to understand the reason behind their 'empty stomach', and mediate on prevailing socio-political and economic issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Indigenous language newspapers and the digital media conundrum in Africa.
- Author
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Onyenankeya, Kevin
- Subjects
DIGITAL media ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,ALTERNATIVE mass media ,NEWSPAPERS ,TECHNOLOGY convergence ,DIGITAL technology - Abstract
The future of journalism is being shaped by the convergence of technology and societal shifts. For indigenous language press in Africa battling to stay afloat amidst stiff competition from traditional media, the pervasive and rapidly encroaching digital transformation holds both opportunities and potential threats. Using a qualitative approach, this paper examined the implication of the shift to digital media for the future of the indigenous language newspaper in Africa and identifies opportunities for its sustainability within the framework of the theories of technological determinism and alternative media. The analysis indicates poor funding, shrinking patronage, and competition from traditional and social media as the major factors facing indigenous newspapers. It emerged that for indigenous language newspapers to thrive in the rapidly changing and technology-driven world they need to not only adapt to the digital revolution but also explore a business model that combines a futuristic outlook with a practical approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Editorial.
- Author
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Parker, Stephen
- Subjects
DIGITAL divide ,RECORDS management ,POLITICAL communication ,ELECTRONIC records management ,SOCIAL media ,LIBRARY personnel ,LIBRARY users ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. THE METRO WIDE WEB: CHANGES IN NEWSPAPER'S GATEKEEPING ROLE ONLINE.
- Author
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Singer, Jane B.
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC newspapers ,NEWSPAPER editors ,NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
Examines the print and online versions of selected Colorado newspapers by comparing the content of local and nonlocal news, sports and business in each version. Changes in the role of newspaper editors; Significance of local orientation in newspapers and its readers; Comparison of story total, location and staffing for each version.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Commercialization in the Icelandic Press: An analysis of hard and soft news in major print and online media in Iceland in times of change.
- Author
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Jóhannsdóttir, Valgerður
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC newspapers ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,COMMERCIALIZATION ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
This article examines the commercialization of content in print and online newspapers in Iceland over the past decade in the context of international trends. Market forces are said to be guiding the values and priorities of editorial decisions in news media in Western countries more than ever before. Traditional revenue models have been shattered and competition for audiences and advertising has intensified, not least because of technological changes. Research indicates that media in some countries are more resistant to commercialization than others and that online newspapers may be more susceptible to market pressures than print media. This study explores the amount and prominence of hard and soft news in the main Icelandic newspapers and their online counterparts in 2005, 2009, and 2013. The findings suggest that commercialization increased considerably in online newspapers that published significantly more soft news in 2013 compared to 2005. In print newspapers, the increase in soft news coverage was significantly less during the same period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Theorizing Roles for Online News Media in Representation of Risks: The Case of Malaysia.
- Author
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Dauda, Sharafa and Nik Hasan, Nik Norma
- Subjects
JOURNALISM & society ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,MALAYSIAN politics & government - Abstract
This paper theorizes a model for the representation of risks in online news media. Its practicability is demonstrated using Malaysian alternative online newspapers. Anxiety and uncertainty about a risk event are naturally rooted in discourse and count as discursive event because they appear on the discourse planes of politics and the media intensively and extensively. These discourses are pervasive on the Internet, which is used by over 20 million Malaysians. Furthermore, alternative newspapers flourish in online forms in Malaysia largely due to government press law inhibitions on mainstream print and broadcast media. The popularity of alternative online newspapers in Malaysia is also demonstrated by their ranking within the first three most visited web entities in the April 2015 Media Metrix rankings of Malaysian web entities. The model is used to provide presumptions on how risks can be spread or weakened. It also provides conjectures on how multiple semiotic resources in the composition, content and design of online news media like colour, gesture, image, layout, writing, etc can be used to amplify or attenuate risks from meanings that are conveyed using "tools shaped by cultural and social factors to mediate interests of members of social groups…" Thus, the model proposes a digital social amplification of risk communication model on the role of the news media in the representation of risks, and in negotiating socio-cognitive processes, behaviours and responses to risk events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The development and application of new media technology in news communication industry.
- Author
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Hong Guo
- Subjects
- *
TELECOMMUNICATION , *COMMUNICATIONS industries , *INFORMATION technology , *COMMUNICATION of technical information , *TELEVISION broadcasting of news , *ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
Many new media technologies have emerged in modern society. The application of new media technologies has impacted traditional TV news media, which not only faces great challenges, but also brings some lessons for the development of TV news media. New media technology relies on powerful information processing technology and data storage technology to develop and grow continuously. Compared with traditional news, new media technology has more powerful information storage capacity and dissemination capacity. Firstly, this paper briefly introduces the concept of new media technology, summarizes the typical characteristics of new media technology, and analyzes the existing problems in the application of new media technology in the news communication industry based on the necessity of applying new media technology. Finally, some Suggestions are put forward based on this, hoping to provide some reference for the development of news communication industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Estimating Ideal Points of Newspapers from Editorial Texts.
- Author
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Kaneko, Tomoki, Asano, Taka-aki, and Miwa, Hirofumi
- Subjects
EDITORIAL writing ,SUPERVISED learning ,POLITICAL communication ,MACHINE learning ,HIGH-income countries ,HUMAN resources departments ,JAPANESE people ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
Although measuring the ideal points of news media is essential for testing political communication theories based on spatial theory, prior methods of estimating ideal points of media outlets have various shortcomings, including high cost in terms of time and human resources and low applicability to different countries. We propose that unsupervised machine learning techniques for text data, specifically the combination of a text scaling method and latent topic modeling, can be applied to estimate ideal points of media outlets. We applied our proposed methods to editorial texts of ten national and regional newspapers in Japan, where prior approaches are not applicable because newspapers have never officially endorsed particular parties or candidates, and because high-quality training data for supervised learning are not available. Our two studies, one of which analyzed editorials on a single typically ideological topic while the other investigated all editorials published by the target papers in one year, confirmed the popular view of Japanese newspapers' ideological slant, which validates the effectiveness of our proposed approach. We also illustrate that our methods allow scholars to investigate which issues are closely related to the respective ideological positions of media outlets. Furthermore, we use the estimated ideal points of newspapers to show that Japanese people partially tend to read ideologically like-minded newspapers and follow such newspapers' Twitter accounts even though their slant is not explicit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Poisson's ratios of molded pulp materials by digital image correlation method and uniaxial tensile test.
- Author
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Hua, Guangjun, Yang, Maoteng, Fei, Weimin, and Lu, Fude
- Subjects
POISSON'S ratio ,DIGITAL image correlation ,PAPERMAKING ,TENSILE tests ,WOOD-pulp ,SCANNING electron microscopy ,STRUCTURAL design ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
The mechanical properties of molded pulp materials are the basis of the structural optimum design of molded pulp products. Therefore, the correlations between Poisson's ratio and fiber structure, molding process, and thickness were found for materials including wood pulp, bamboo pulp, sugarcane pulp, white mixed pulp, black mixed pulp, recycled corrugated board pulp, and recycled newspaper pulp by the uniaxial tensile test and digital image correlation method. The fiber structures of the selected molded pulp materials were investigated by scanning electron microscopy. The results revealed Poisson's ratios of wood pulp, bamboo pulp, sugarcane pulp, white mixed pulp, black mixed pulp, recycled corrugated board pulp, and recycled newspaper pulp to be 0.169, 0.108, 0.202, 0.120, 0.166, 0.098, and 0.044, respectively. Microstructural investigation further revealed that Poisson's ratios of molded pulp materials were related to the fiber structure and drying method. The pulp material dried outside mold under lower pressure and temperature had a smaller Poisson's ratio, while that dried inside mold under higher pressure and temperature had a larger Poisson's ratio. The layered phenomenon of the molded pulp materials was also found by scanning electron microscopy images: the outer layer was denser than the inner layer. These results can provide guidance for the numerical simulation analysis and optimal design of molded pulp products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Online news galleries, photojournalism and the photo essay.
- Author
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Caple, Helen and Knox, John S.
- Subjects
PHOTOJOURNALISM ,GALLERIES (Architecture) ,PHOTOGRAPHS ,INTERNET forums ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,STORYTELLING - Abstract
This paper investigates the online news gallery as a site for new genres of multimodal news reporting, and the extent to which such galleries may be used as a method of news storytelling. News media websites are now well established and the relative ease with which multimedia can be incorporated into such websites has led us to question the extent to which galleries exploit the semiotic potential of the web to tell stories in new ways, or even to draw on long established traditions like the photo essay. We draw on two (of three) phases of data collection and analysis in this paper: an exploratory survey of a small number of galleries in established online newspapers; and an international survey of English language online newspapers, investigating the uptake of galleries and other multimedia. To tell a story, or not to tell a story: that is the question, and the answer, as online news gallery authors exploit the potential of galleries to varying degrees. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Presentation factors affecting reading behaviour in readers of newspaper media: an eye-tracking perspective.
- Author
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Leckner, Sara
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC newspapers ,MASS media ,BOOKS & reading ,READING interests ,SOCIAL media - Abstract
This paper examines reading behaviour in readers of printed and online newspaper media. The aim is to identify how much reading behaviour is dependent on various presentation factors, and how this dependence and its magnitude are related to output media. The work is based on review and analysis of empirical studies, primarily those employing methods using eye-tracking. The results show that some factors, such as text-based elements, size and placement, are an important guide to salience in both media. Images, on the other hand, have mostly been found not to elicit major visual attention online, affecting, for example, how ads are perceived. Reading behaviour is, however, a complicated process, and eye-tracking research does not consistently point in one direction. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Poisson's ratios of molded pulp materials by digital image correlation method and uniaxial tensile test.
- Author
-
Guangjun Hua, Maoteng Yang, Weimin Fei, and Fude Lu
- Subjects
POISSON'S ratio ,DIGITAL image correlation ,PAPERMAKING ,TENSILE tests ,WOOD-pulp ,SCANNING electron microscopy ,STRUCTURAL design ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
The mechanical properties of molded pulp materials are the basis of the structural optimum design of molded pulp products. Therefore, the correlations between Poisson's ratio and fiber structure, molding process, and thickness were found for materials including wood pulp, bamboo pulp, sugarcane pulp, white mixed pulp, black mixed pulp, recycled corrugated board pulp, and recycled newspaper pulp by the uniaxial tensile test and digital image correlation method. The fiber structures of the selected molded pulp materials were investigated by scanning electron microscopy. The results revealed Poisson's ratios of wood pulp, bamboo pulp, sugarcane pulp, white mixed pulp, black mixed pulp, recycled corrugated board pulp, and recycled newspaper pulp to be 0.169, 0.108, 0.202, 0.120, 0.166, 0.098, and 0.044, respectively. Microstructural investigation further revealed that Poisson's ratios of molded pulp materials were related to the fiber structure and drying method. The pulp material dried outside mold under lower pressure and temperature had a smaller Poisson's ratio, while that dried inside mold under higher pressure and temperature had a larger Poisson's ratio. The layered phenomenon of the molded pulp materials was also found by scanning electron microscopy images: the outer layer was denser than the inner layer. These results can provide guidance for the numerical simulation analysis and optimal design of molded pulp products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Editorial.
- Subjects
DIGITAL media ,SCIENTISTS' attitudes ,MANAGEMENT information systems ,HEALTH information systems ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,INFORMATION resources management ,TECHNOLOGY Acceptance Model - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Visualisation of hierarchical multivariate data: Categorisation and case study on hate speech.
- Author
-
Kavaz, Ecem, Puig, Anna, Rodríguez, Inmaculada, Chacón, Reyes, De-La-Paz, David, Torralba, Adrià, Nofre, Montserrat, and Taule, Mariona
- Subjects
HATE speech ,VISUALIZATION ,ONLINE comments ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,HIERARCHICAL clustering (Cluster analysis) ,AUTOMATIC speech recognition - Abstract
Multivariate hierarchical data has an important role in many applications. To find the best visualisation that best fits a concrete data is crucial to explore and understand the relationships between the data. This paper proposes a categorisation – Elongated and Compact – of hierarchical data based on the inner shapes of the hierarchies, that is the connectivity degree of the internal nodes, the number of nodes, etc, that can be applied to any hierarchical data. Based on this taxonomy, we explore implicit and explicit layouts – Tree, Circle Packing, Force and Radial – to provide users with a complete view of the data. We hypothesise that Tree and Circle Packing fit with Elongated structures, and Force and Radial fit with Compact ones. In addition, we cluster multivariate features to embed them in the hierarchical layouts. Especially, we propose two different glyphs – one-by-one and all-in-one, and we bet for the one-by-one glyphs as the most suitable for showing the distribution of several features along with the hierarchical structures. To validate our hypotheses, we conducted a user study with 35 participants using a hate speech annotated corpus. This corpus comes from 4359 comments posted in online Spanish newspapers. The results indicated that users preferred the Tree layout over the other three layouts (Circle, Force, Radial) with both types of structures (EC and CC). However, when we focused the analysis only on Radial and Force layouts, both of them scored significantly higher with Compact than with Elongated data. Moreover, participants scored the one-by-one glyph higher than the all-in-one glyph, but the difference was not significant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The web could spell catastrophe.
- Author
-
Hagerty, Bill
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC newspapers ,ONLINE journalism ,DIGITAL media ,NEWSPAPER circulation ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,MASS media - Abstract
Mort Zuckerman, property billionaire, media magnate and intellectual giant, says papers need a new business model — and customers must pay [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The freeloading generation.
- Author
-
Blackhurst, Rob
- Subjects
FREE circulation newspapers & periodicals ,NEWSROOMS ,INTERNET publishing ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,NEWSPAPER circulation - Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Plans to save born-digital news content examined.
- Author
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McCain, Edward
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRONIC newspapers , *DIGITAL technology , *COPYRIGHT , *DIGITAL preservation , *DIGITAL libraries - Abstract
This paper reports the deliberations of a November 2014 “Dodging the Memory Hole” forum of scholars, librarians, archivists, technologists, lawyers and journalists at the University of Missouri to address the problems of preserving born-digital news. To dodge the memory hole, the paper suggests the urgency of resolving copyright and financial barriers to the preservation of news content. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A changing of The Guardian.
- Author
-
Cole, Peter
- Subjects
JOURNALISM awards ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,INVESTIGATIVE reporting ,EMPLOYEES - Abstract
The article provides details about the British newspaper, The Guardian under the twenty-year editorship of Alan Rushbridger, including the journalism awards it won like the British Press Awards, Pulitzer Prize for public service and Webbys. His career and the changes he brought about including the introduction of electronic version of the newspaper, launch of Club Guardian, sale of Auto Trader, investigative reporting of Edward Snowden revelations and WikiLeaks among others are touched upon.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The (non)use of likes, comments and shares of news in local online newspapers.
- Author
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Solvoll, Mona Kristin and Larsson, Anders Olof
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRONIC newspapers , *SOCIAL media , *NEWSPAPERS , *AUDIENCE participation , *SHARING , *AUDIENCES - Abstract
This paper utilizes a nationally representative survey to gauge the ways in which media users engage with their local newspapers by using features that allow for sharing, liking, and commenting. The main results indicate that significant predictors for different types of news engagement vary, but that age and education emerge as two of the more interesting varieties. Implications are discussed—for instance, how both psychological and behavioral experiences constitute the concept engagement and how our results challenge the technology-optimistic argument that social media presence on a newspaper website promotes audience engagement in the journalistic process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Access, use and preferences for online newspapers.
- Author
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Chyi, Hsiang Iris and Lasorsa, Dominic
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRONIC newspapers , *READERSHIP surveys - Abstract
Readers of online editions of local papers tend to be readers of that paper, but online editions of national papers reach people who don't read the print edition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Connections Between Internet, Social Media News Use, and Political Participation in Kenya.
- Author
-
Kipkoech, Gilbert
- Subjects
POLITICAL participation ,INTERNET access ,DIGITAL media ,SOCIAL media ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,INTERNET ,KENYANS - Abstract
Competing theories have been put forward about the effect of Internet and social media use for news on political engagement. Some argue that Internet use for news reduces political engagement while others suggest that it increases political participation. Similar arguments have been advanced for the effects of social media use. This study tests both claims using representative data of over 2000 Kenyans. Bivariate results show that Internet and social media use for news has a positive relationship with political participation in Kenya. After controlling for demographic variables, political orientation variables, and traditional news use, digital media use (i.e., Internet and social media use for news) shows no significant associations with political participation in Kenya. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Exploring the effects of traditional media, social media, and foreign media on hierarchical levels of political trust in China.
- Author
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Xu, Ping, Ye, Yinjiao, and Zhang, Mingxin
- Subjects
TRUST ,SOCIAL media ,FEDERAL government ,CHINESE people ,LOCAL government ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,POLITICAL trust (in government) - Abstract
Although there is a consensus that mass media play an important role in the rise and fall of political trust in Western democracies, existing research on media use and political trust in China achieved relatively inconclusive findings. By using two surveys conducted in China in 2013 and 2018, we examine the effects of media use, including traditional media, social media, and foreign media, on Chinese citizens' trust in their central and local governments. Our research shows that traditional media usage such as watching TV and reading newspapers is positively associated with citizens' trust in the central government but is not related to their trust in local governments. Social media usage is negatively associated with trust in local governments but not with trust in the central government. Using VPNs to access foreign media is negatively associated with Chinese citizens' trust in the central government but does not affect their trust in local governments. We explain why different types of media have such contrasting effects on political trust in central versus local Chinese governments and discuss the theoretical and empirical implications of these findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Newspaper archives reveal major gaps in digital age.
- Author
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Hansen, Kathleen A. and Paul, Nora
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRONIC newspapers , *DIGITAL technology , *DIGITAL libraries , *PDF (Computer file format) , *NEWS websites - Abstract
In-depth interviews about the archiving practices at nine legacy newspapers and one born-digital publication reveal that legacy newspapers maintain archives of their print editions in paper, microfilm and PDF versions. Archiving of Web-only content and multimedia elements, however, is spotty or nonexistent. The public has limited or no access to digital photo and graphic archives at most newspapers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Print and online newspapers as material artefacts.
- Author
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Fortunati, Leopoldina, Taipale, Sakari, and Farinosi, Manuela
- Subjects
ITALIAN newspapers ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,JOURNALISM ,CONTENT analysis ,READERSHIP ,NEWSPAPER circulation - Abstract
Traditional newspaper journalism is in a state of crisis and there have been several attempts to overcome this. Many discourses have reiterated the triumphal march of a digital revolution in newspaper journalism and anticipated the end of the print newspaper. This moment calls for an in-depth analysis of reader habits of news consumption and use in order to understand the audiences for journalistic output and their relationship with the journalistic objects. In this study, we adopt a multi-method approach, integrating (1) qualitative content analysis of student essays dealing with the physicality of printed and online newspapers, (2) ethnographic observation of the use practices of readers and (3) expert interview. The findings show that informants perceive print and online newspapers as objects with which they have a different experience and highlight the need to develop bridging strategies combining print and digital media in order to overcome the crisis facing printed news media. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Social Norms and the Dynamics of Online Incivility.
- Author
-
Shmargad, Yotam, Coe, Kevin, Kenski, Kate, and Rains, Stephen A.
- Subjects
OFFENSIVE behavior ,SOCIAL dynamics ,SOCIAL norms ,VIRTUAL communities ,ONLINE comments ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
Online discussions are performed in the gaze of fellow users. To increase engagement, platforms typically let these users evaluate the comments made by others through rating systems (e.g., via Likes or Down/Up votes). Understanding how such ratings shape, and are shaped by, features of the underlying discussion is important for our understanding of online behavior. In this study, we focus on an increasingly concerning aspect of online discussions: incivility. We draw on the theory of normative social behavior to analyze a data set of over 6,000 online newspaper comments. We find that repeated incivility by the same person is more likely when their initial incivility was affirmed by both descriptive norms (incivility in nearby comments) and injunctive norms (Up votes). Repeated incivility receives more Up votes if nearby comments also include incivility but fewer Up votes if they do not, suggesting that injunctive norms are contextual and shaped by descriptive norms. We conclude that online incivility is a dynamic, normative process that is responsive to both positive feedback and proximate incivility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Siren songs or path to salvation? Interpreting the visions of Web technology at a UK regional newspaper in crisis, 2006–2011.
- Author
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MacGregor, Phil
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC newspapers ,INTERNET ,MULTIMEDIA systems ,TECHNOLOGY ,CONVERGENCE (Telecommunication) - Abstract
A 5-year case study of an established regional newspaper in Britain investigates journalists about their perceptions of convergence in digital technologies. This research is the first ethnographic longitudinal case study of a UK regional newspaper. Although conforming to some trends observed in the wider field of scholarship, the analysis adds to skepticism about any linear or directional views of innovation and adoption: the Northern Echo newspaper journalists were observed to have revised their opinions of optimum Web practices, and sometimes radically reversed policies. Technology is seen in the period as a fluid, amorphous entity. Central corporate authority appeared to diminish in the period as part of a wider reduction in formalism. Questioning functionalist notions of the market, the study suggests cause and effect models of change are often subverted by contradictory perceptions of particular actions. Meanwhile, during technological evolution, the ‘professional imagination’ can be understood as strongly reflecting the parent print culture and its routines, despite pioneering a new convergence partnership with an independent television company. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. ONLINE VERSUS PRINT: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF WEB-FIRST SPORTS COVERAGE IN AUSTRALIA AND THE UNITED KINGDOM.
- Author
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English, Peter
- Subjects
TELEVISED sports ,NEWS websites ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,PRINT materials - Abstract
Sports departments are among the best suited sections of a news organisation for the publishing of web-first articles, due to the urgency of reporting regular matches and news events. The decision about which platform to use first has become a major issue for media outlets. This article reports the results of a comparative analysis of 2606 articles published on the sports websites and newspapers of three Australian (The Australian, The Age and the Courier-Mail) and three UK titles (the Guardian, the Daily Telegraph and The Sun). The study found that the UK publications published more than double the number of web-first stories than the Australian ones. In-depth interviews with staff from each of the sports departments confirmed the view that Australian news organisations would prefer to protect exclusive content by holding it back for the newspaper, while two of the three UK companies pursued web-first aims. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. VIRTUAL COMMUNITY SUPPORT FOR OFFLINE COMMUNITIES THROUGH ONLINE NEWSPAPER MESSAGE FORUMS.
- Author
-
Rosenberry, Jack
- Subjects
VIRTUAL communities ,INTERNET forums ,READERSHIP surveys ,COMMUNITY involvement ,MASS media ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,READERSHIP ,INTERNET users - Abstract
A survey of participants in message forums located within the online sites of U.S. newspapers determined that taking part in forum reading and posting helps to predict users' sense that they understand their local communities better but is not related to their actually getting out and taking part in real-world community activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. USE OF AND SATISFACTION WITH NEWSPAPER SITES IN THE LOCAL MARKET: EXPLORING DIFFERENCES BETWEEN HYBRID AND ONLINE-ONLY USERS.
- Author
-
Hsiang Iris Chyi, Mengchieh Jacie Yang, Lewis, Seth C., and Nan Zheng
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC newspapers ,INTERNET users ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,NEWS websites ,ONLINE journalism ,INTERNET traffic - Abstract
This study explores U.S. newspapers' online readership in the local market by comparing (I) "hybrid" readers who access both the print and online versions arid (2) online-only readers. Survey data gathered from twenty-eight newspaper sites show that hybrid readers outnumber online-only users by a 2-to-1 margin and use their local newspaper sites more actively. Regression analyses identify predictors of site satisfaction and user type. These findings provide new perspectives on the nature multiplatform news consumption as readers weigh related goods of news and information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Study Compares Yahoo! News Story Preferences.
- Author
-
Curtain, Patricia A., Dougall, Elizabeth, and Mersey, Rachel Davis
- Subjects
- *
WEBSITES , *NEWS websites , *ELECTRONIC newspapers , *WEB design , *ELECTRONIC journals - Abstract
This study of choices on the Yahoo! News portal suggests that while users access more entertainment than they might find in their daily paper, they also want national/political and world events and issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. ONE PRODUCT TWO MARKETS: HOW GEOGRAPHY DIFFERENTIATES ONLINE NEWSPAPER AUDIENCES.
- Author
-
Sylvie, George and Hsiang Iris Chyi
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC newspapers ,NEWS audiences ,INTERNET advertising ,NEWSPAPER advertising ,ECONOMIC competition ,NEWSPAPER circulation ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
A secondary data analysis of 136 U.S. online newspapers' usage reports investigates how geography differentiates online newspaper audiences. Results showed that online newspaper penetration is stronger in the local market, but the local market accounts for less than 50% of the overall traffic--suggesting that the size of the long-distance readership is larger than previously anticipated. Larger newspapers tend to attain a larger online audience (in raw numbers), but all newspapers attain a substantial portion of online traffic from outside the print market. Online or not, geography still matters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. News Consumption and the New Electronic Media.
- Author
-
Ahlers, Douglas
- Subjects
- *
TELEVISION broadcasting , *PRESS , *DIGITAL media , *INTERNET , *NEWS websites , *ELECTRONIC newspapers , *NEWSPAPER circulation , *INTERNET advertising - Abstract
Recently, the print and television news media have begun to question the future of their industries. From newspaper executives at the New York Times who have asked whether there will be a print version of their paper in ten years, to television news executives who openly speculate on whether there will be network nightly news, the stated cause for alarm is the competitive threat of the Internet. This article looks at the hypothesized shift of news consumption from the traditional media to the online news media. The hypothesized mass migration of news consumption behavior is not supported by the facts. Some migration from offline to online news consumption has occurred, but this number (12 percent direct substitution) is less than many believe. Another 22 percent of U.S. adults have substituted some online news for offline news, but for a substantial portion of this group, the online news media acts as a complement rather than as a substitute. Most significant is the fact that two-thirds of the U.S. adult population have not shifted to online news consumption and appear unlikely to do so. The author also examined the advertising markets for the traditional news media and for the online media and found that online advertising is an imperfect substitute for advertisers. Despite declining television viewership and newspaper circulation, advertising revenues are not only staying with the traditional news media but are also increasing, albeit slowly. The author has found no major impact on the economics of the news industry due to the online news media. This is not to say that pressures are not being felt, but they are not felt to an extent that warrants predictions of the demise of the traditional news media. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. What You Seek Is Who You Are: An Applied Spatial Model of Newspapers' Ideological Slant.
- Author
-
Curini, Luigi
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER circulation ,NEWSPAPERS ,CONSUMER preferences ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
In recent years, the news media landscape has been characterized by two distinct patterns: a decline in newspaper circulation, and a persistent degree of ideological slant in newspapers' position. We explore a possible nexus between these two phenomena by means of a model that extends some recent developments in the empirical spatial theory of voting to the reader's choice with respect to newspapers. We assume that ideological proximity to a newspaper affects the choice made by a consumer to read it. Newspapers will then compete among themselves to maximize their respective readerships by finding an optimal placement in the ideological space. However, newspapers can also decide to target readers of a specific type. As we will show, this is a crucial step to take into consideration. We empirically apply our model to the Italian case. We show that Italian newspapers appear largely to behave as theoretically expected. However, the "ideological force" behind this conclusion must be sought in newspapers' competition with respect to that subset of readers which can be identified as regular ones. This result highlights a possible mechanism driving a persistent newspaper ideological slant in time of lower newspaper circulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Study Examines Daily Public Journalism at Six Newspapers.
- Author
-
Young Choi
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRONIC newspapers , *ELECTRONIC publishing , *JOURNALISM , *NEWSPAPERS , *PUBLISHING - Abstract
Comparisons of online newspapers reveal few differences between public and non-public online papers. Also, online and print editions of the public journalism newspapers did not show that public journalism is better practiced online. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. ONLINE NEWS: USER AGREEMENTS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR READERS.
- Author
-
Ekstrand, Victoria Smith
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC newspapers ,CONTRACTS ,NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
Presents a legal analysis of the online news user agreements of the top U.S. daily circulation newspapers. Limitations on liability as expressed in the agreements; Liability of online news providers for inaccuracies and errors on their sites; Application of news user agreements as contracts.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Few Newspapers Use Online Classified Interactive Features.
- Author
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Thompson, David and Wassmuth, Birgit
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRONIC newspapers , *INTERNET advertising , *CLASSIFIED advertising - Abstract
Discusses the content features and interactive functions of classified advertising sites used by online newspapers in the U.S. Percentage of papers that have online classified ads; Advantages of online classified advertising; Technical and human aspects of online advertising.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Advertising and Media Capture in Turkey: How Does the State Emerge as the Largest Advertiser with the Rise of Competitive Authoritarianism?
- Author
-
Yanatma, Servet
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER advertising ,ADVERTISING ,ADVERTISERS ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,GOVERNMENT business enterprises ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
This article examines the distribution of advertising in newspapers in Turkey and the impact of the government on the allocation, in particular, of official announcements and of advertising by partially state-owned enterprises and private companies loyal to the ruling party, as well as pressure on other commercial advertisers, during the rule of the Justice and Development Party between 2002 and 2020. It demonstrates that the government has, in the last decade, largely used the advertising sector as a "carrot and stick" tactic to control newspapers through the distribution of official announcements and advertising by state-owned enterprises. It further finds that the state has emerged in recent years as the largest advertiser financing the "captured media," control of media ownership has proved to be not enough to ensure docile news media. Turkey has shifted to competitive authoritarianism in recent years, and this article demonstrates the selective allocation of advertising, which is a strong component of suppressing the independent media. The article uncovers the impact of government on advertising, using two data sets to show: (i) the total spend on official announcements received by each newspaper and (ii) how much advertising space in square centimeters state-owned enterprises have placed in each newspaper. Interviews with editors-in-chief of newspapers also expose the direct role of government in the distribution of advertising. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Ethical Implications of the Overuse of Technology in Education.
- Author
-
Ben-Jacob, Marion G. and Glazerman, Allan H.
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGY education ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
Such trust must be mutual, and it must be created and fostered between teacher and students as well as between each student and his classmates. In the realm of education, the overuse of technology may be regarded as unethical, firstly, where it directly undermines student trust, and, secondly, where it has deleterious effects on the students. If a student does not respect and trust his or her teacher or professor, or if an instructor is not respectful of students, the learning environment will not be as supportive as it should be and the instructor's pedagogical strategy will not be as effective. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. INTERACTIVITY, ONLINE JOURNALISM, AND ENGLISH-LANGUAGE WEB NEWSPAPERS IN ASIA.
- Author
-
Massey, Brian L. and Levy, Mark L.
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC newspapers ,ELECTRONIC journals - Abstract
Presents information on a study which examines English-language Web newspapers in Asia. Methodology of the study; Results and discussion on the study.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. 'Stay informed', 'become an insider' or 'drive change': Repackaging newspaper subscriptions in the digital age.
- Author
-
Nechushtai, Efrat and Zalmanson, Lior
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER subscriptions ,BUSINESS models ,ORGANIZATIONAL commitment ,JOURNALISM ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
Subscription fees are an increasingly prominent revenue source for news organizations, challenging advertising as the primary business model for news. But when most online news remains available for free, how do publishers convince readers to pay? We examined how the 55 most-read US newspapers frame their value proposition when they ask readers to subscribe. Using the Meyer-Allen organizational commitment framework, we analyzed the informational, social, and normative elements mentioned in 'subscribe now' webpages. Every subscription offer referred to the informational value in a regular relationship with the newspaper, yet 62 percent also mentioned affective and community-based benefits in subscription, and 33 percent evoked normative and value-based benefits. Our data show that newspaper subscriptions are often promoted as a relationship with social and normative dimensions, rather than merely an information-based transaction – with some differences in the language used by newspapers of different sizes, ownership types, US regions, and local political orientations ('red'/'blue' state). This work demonstrates the merit in analyzing promotional materials produced by news organizations to better understand both their strategies and their relationships with the communities they serve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The influence of media use on public perceptions of artificial intelligence in China: Evidence from an online survey.
- Author
-
Cui, Di and Wu, Fang
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,PUBLIC opinion ,RISK perception ,INTERNET surveys ,CHINESE people ,TELEVISION viewing ,DIGITAL media ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
With support from government and business, artificial intelligence is growing quickly in China. However, little is known of how media use shapes the Chinese public's perception of artificial intelligence. Based on a national online survey (N = 738), this pilot study explored the linkages between media use and people's risk perception, benefit perception, and policy support of artificial intelligence. Results showed that respondents perceive artificial intelligence as more beneficial than risky. Newspaper use was negatively associated with benefit perception and policy support, whereas television and WeChat use positively predicted both. Analyses of interaction effects showed that personal relevance could partly mitigate the influence of media use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. How to author a picture gallery.
- Author
-
Caple, Helen and Knox, John S
- Subjects
PHOTOJOURNALISM ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,STORYTELLING ,PERSONAL communication service systems - Abstract
Picture galleries offer photojournalism an opportunity to shine. Despite the considerable technological advances of recent decades, picture galleries typically fail to realise their potential for storytelling; rather they present an incohesive series of image–caption complexes collected under a headline. Here, we offer a set of guidelines regarding the sourcing, selection and sequencing of compelling images coupled with agile writing of leads and captions that complement the kind of visual story being told. Such investment in the authoring of picture galleries creates opportunities to provide readers with an engaging and more memorable experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Ample Sample? An Examination of the Representativeness of Themes Between Sampling Durations Generated From Keyword Searches for 12 Months of Immigration News From LexisNexis and Newspaper Websites.
- Author
-
Tamul, Daniel J. and Martínez-Carrillo, Nadia I.
- Subjects
STATISTICAL sampling ,KEYWORD searching ,EMIGRATION & immigration in the press ,ELECTRONIC information resources ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
Recommendations vary on sample sizes researchers should use to represent a year's worth of coverage from electronic databases. We use a keyword search to create two sampling frames of immigration news in 2009. We use LexisNexis to represent elite and regional news outlets and a keyword search of individual Arizona newspapers to represent state coverage. We examine the representativeness of themes, created and coded with IBM's Modeler program. We compare the efficiency of samples created with simple random sampling and constructed week sampling and conclude most variables are representative when sampling between 10 and 14 weeks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Industries in Turmoil.
- Author
-
Weber, Matthew S. and Monge, Peter R.
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL change ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,HYPERLINKS ,ELECTRONIC newspapers ,ECONOMIC change - Abstract
Organizational scholars have studied the process of organizational transformation for decades, focusing on the impact of inertia and environmental disruptions as drivers of transformation. Building on this body of work, the present study demonstrates the importance of organizational agency in affecting long-term organizational change. The analysis focuses on 487 newspapers in the United States and looks at the adoption of hyperlinking as part of the process of transforming from print-based organizations to multimedia information providers during an 11-year period from 1997 to 2007. The results show that traditional newspapers that aggressively adopted hyperlinking practices had a decreased likelihood of failure in the long run. The findings provide insights into the important role of individual and organizational action in the transformation process and emphasize the utility of hyperlinks as a communicative tool for organizations seeking to adapt in a digital environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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