Blogging About Recent Events As They Occur
One of the most notable cases of news hitting a blog before appearing in other media happened in July 2005 when terrorism struck London. As passengers were removed from a subway car near an explosion, one man took several photographs of the scene with his cellphone, and within an hour these pictures were posted online. First-person accounts of the disaster began showing up on blogs soon after these photos appeared, and people all over the world discovered the events in London by reading the words and seeing the photos posted by bloggers.
The belief that these stories and photographs were being spread directly by individuals operating without the added filter of a reporter helped to make the crisis feel very immediate to people across the globe. In terms of blogging, news often appears in a very personal context. This has the potential to be the beginning of an fascinating new era of reporting, one that takes "New Journalism" to it's logical next step by putting the power to shape how the news is written and read directly into the hands of the public.
Many bloggers and cultural commentators who are champions of the weblog movement feel that this developing trend of persons who getting their news from blogs is a good thing, because it makes the flow of information more democratic. By decentralizing the control of news, blogs allow more voices to enter the field of debate about important current events. However, many people are adamantly opposed to the use of blogs as news outlets, and there are plenty of good arguments on this side of the debate.
Unlike newspapers or television stations, few blogs have fact- checkers, and there is little attention paid to journalistic accountability on many blogs. This can lead to the rapid spread of misinformation, and more than one untrue stories has taken the blogosphere by storm. The questions about whether blogging news as it happens is ethical or not are very complicated, but no matter where you stand on the topic of recent events blogs you are almost sure to agree that this movement has the potential to revolutionize how modern people get their news.