Do journalists need — or want — Publish2?

by Mathew on August 15, 2007 · Comments

I had a feeling that my friend Scott Karp over at Publishing 2.0 was up to something, and now I see the fruits of his secret labours — or rather, I’ve read his description of what he’s been up to over at the Publish2 blog. The final pieces of the puzzle likely won’t come into focus until the site launches in beta, which Scott says is coming next month.

Like Tony Hung at Deep Jive Interests, I’m a little fuzzy on what Publish2 is going to be exactly, or how it’s going to work — but I will say that Scott is a smart guy (with some smart backers such as Robert Young, Howard Weaver and Jeff Jarvis), and I am very interested in seeing what he comes up with.

It seems obvious from Scott’s preamble that Publish2 is based in part on a Digg-style model, in which journalists (and he appears to be defining that term broadly, as he should) submit and then vote for news stories. Publish2 will also apparently incorporate some of the social bookmarking features of sites like del.icio.us, and stored bookmarks may also feed into the service.

How the participants in the site will be chosen is a little unclear. It sounds as though it will begin with a selected number of journalists, and then spread out from there to journalists who are not part of a mainstream entity, and to what Scott refers to as “news bloggers.”

This reminds me of the model that Citizendium.com has been trying to use to fix what it sees as the flaws in Wikipedia, by using some form of “expert” sources. And it seems clear that Scott wants to use journalists as the core of his news aggregation engine in order to address some of the flaws of the Digg model.

Jason Calacanis tried to do something similar when he revamped Netscape.com, by using editors who select and highlight — and in some cases even report on — stories and content. And in Publish2 there also seem to be aspects of what Newsvine.com and Daylife.com (which Jeff Jarvis is also involved in) are doing, as well as Topix.com. Whether Publish2 can make it work better than any of these remains to be seen.

One of the first things I thought when I read Scott’s description was: “This sounds like exactly what newspapers should already be doing.” And part of what he implies in his post is that not enough journalists, and not enough publications, are really making use of social networking tools to improve the news generation or aggregation process. I would definitely agree with that.

Can Publish2 help to change that? I’m looking forward to finding out.

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  • I still can't figure out whether Publish2 is worth my time. What benefits does it really offer over other social bookmarking services like Delicious and Diigo? Apart from publishing to Delicious and Twitter at the same time, the only real benefit is having access to the linking lists of so many journalists all in one place. Though from what I've seen so far, not that many of them use Publish2 with much regularity.

    I'm curious. I know this is an old post (on this blog) but anybody want to explain for me the benefits of Publish2 over the other services I've listed?
  • I think you put your finger on the main benefit, Michael -- although it's one that is still mostly a potential benefit -- and that is the appeal of a service that aggregates links from journalists who are researching a specific story.

    In practice, Publish 2 is very much like Delicious or Diigo, but Scott's idea was to try and get journalists in particular to use a social tool, so that their bookmarks could be aggregated as a news-gathering tool.

    So it's really just a specialized version of a social bookmarking tool, and you are right that its real utility doesn't become obvious until a bunch of journalists are using it regularly. There's an example of what becomes possible at that point in a recent blog post at Publish2: http://blog.publish2.com/2009/01/09/networked-l...
  • I read that article this morning. It was brilliant that things came together like that for the journalists out in Washington.

    I guess I can see how it works for groups of journalists, and I don't doubt its usefulness for journalists who are just getting into social bookmarking and link journalism. For me though, I guess I'm too entrenched in Diigo and Delicious to switch over.

    Of course, my opinion of Twitter was "meh" at first too, but then I came back to it with a vengeance. Perhaps the same will happen for Publish2.
  • I used to be a big user of Delicious, with almost 10,000 saved items, but I've given it up and switched to sharing items through Google Reader instead. It's an RSS reader and social-bookmarking tool in one, and people I want to share items with can just subscribe to an RSS feed of my shared items, and I can subscribe to theirs.
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