Hello all,
as some of you may know, I was in Seoul, Korea, from Wednesday to Sunday to visit the OhmyNews International Citizen Reporters' Forum and give a presentation on Wikinews. Two reports on this event with lots of photos are now online at:
http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/OhmyNews_citizen_reporters_meet_in_Seoul%2C_Kore... and http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/OhmyNews_forum_discusses_experiences_in_citizen_... [The second one has just been posted, so it may not be quite up to snuff yet.]
For those not familiar with OhmyNews, it is an extremely significant website in South Korea known literally to the entire young generation there. It popped up five years ago as an alternative to overly conservative traditional media. 80% of stories are written by "citizen reporters" and vetted by a professional staff of editors. Many people say that OMN was responsible for putting the current President in power, and indeed, he granted his first interview to OhmyNews.
Behind this fairy tale, there's also the truth that there's a lot of money invested into OhmyNews. It's a for-profit endeavor, sponsored by advertising and subscriptions, and enjoys good relationships with Korean industry and politics. The "citizen reports" are often so-called "life stories", the kind of thing you would find in a blog, but edited professionally.
The project has recently launched an "international" (really English, but from many different countries) edition, which it sought to boost using the International Forum. Even people who had just written a handful of stories were, with generous sponsor support, flown to Seoul to share their experiences.
In my presentation ( http://www.scireview.de/temp/wikinews.pdf ), I invited the OhmyNews community to share content with Wikinews through compatible licensing, and to find other ways to collaborate, such as common communication channels. I had agreed with Jimbo on the night before on my strategy to continue these discussions privately with OhmyNews founder Oh Yeon Ho. Yeon Ho is seeking to build a "global citizen journalism alliance" and asked me what it would take for Wikinews/Wikimedia to join such an alliance. I responded that this would likely only happen if the alliance itself was a non-profit project not governed by a single entity.
We also briefly discussed the issue of free content -- currently all OhmyNews content is under traditional copyright, and indeed, due to the editing process, citizen reporters lose the right to distribute their own stories in the published form. Yeon Ho didn't seem to know about free content licensing -- he had never heard of Creative Commons -- so I am going to follow up on this privately. I also hope that some citizen reporters will begin to publish their stories under Creative Commons licenses; it would be interesting to see how and if OMN reacts to that.
All in all, I think it was a productive and valuable visit, and I hope that Oh Yeon Ho is serious about bringing citizen journalism projects closer together.
Best,
Erik