Hi!
Wikinews will be hosting a second Interview of the Month (http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikinews/Interview_of_the_month), 2000 UTC on 23 January 2006, Danny O'Brien (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_O%27Brien) of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_Frontier_Foundation) will be interviewed live in IRC (irc://irc.freenode.net/wikinews), and you are invited to attend and be a part of the action.
Danny O'Brien is the "Coordinator of Activism" at the EFF, which he came to from a technology journalism career. He helped found the Open Rights Group, amongst other digital and online rights activisms.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation is a U.S. ngo, with staff also in Canada and the United Kingdom, focused on free speech rights in a digital world. Focused on defending those rights as they are related to technology, and educating the press, public, and policymakers about the issues, EFF has taken a number of actions which put the spotlight on the project recently: Sony BMG's CD protection issue, cracking the US government's programme to have laser printers put tracking information on every document they print, and publishing the Legal Guide for Bloggers. They're also in the advocacy and lobby industry, and are closely watching Broadcast Flag legislation in the US capitol which is scheduled for debate on 24 January.
The Wikinews Interview of the Month is a program to give citizen journalists the opportunity to be involved in interviews with news makers. Research and questions are developed by everyone who wishes to take part both before the interview (for this interview, you can get involved at http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikinews/Interview_of_the_month/January_2006_...) and during the interview. As the interview progresses, questions may be passed to the moderators who will try to squeeze in as many questions as possible.
Wikinews is a project of the Wikimedia Foundation, and is produced in 19 languages.
Amgine
I think a good idea for easily getting good questions (since the current questions are pretty generic), as well as increasing the positive interest in Wikinews (since people like the EFF) is to make a post on Slashdot in the style of "ask your questions on Slashdot, and a selection of the highest moderated quesitons will be picked to specifically ask Danny O'Brien". Then you can pick out some good questions, ask him, and make another Slashdot post once the entire interview has been written up.
I'm going to try to get a story on Slashdot. I would suggest that someone protect http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikinews/Interview_of_the_month/January_2006_... (although I won't link to it). As for the IRC interview, I hope it is being set up so that the interviewee can be separated from the rest of the people. He should probably be in his own channel, which has restricted access.
brian0918
Amgine wrote:
Hi!
Wikinews will be hosting a second Interview of the Month (http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikinews/Interview_of_the_month), 2000 UTC on 23 January 2006, Danny O'Brien (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_O%27Brien) of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_Frontier_Foundation) will be interviewed live in IRC (irc://irc.freenode.net/wikinews), and you are invited to attend and be a part of the action.
Danny O'Brien is the "Coordinator of Activism" at the EFF, which he came to from a technology journalism career. He helped found the Open Rights Group, amongst other digital and online rights activisms.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation is a U.S. ngo, with staff also in Canada and the United Kingdom, focused on free speech rights in a digital world. Focused on defending those rights as they are related to technology, and educating the press, public, and policymakers about the issues, EFF has taken a number of actions which put the spotlight on the project recently: Sony BMG's CD protection issue, cracking the US government's programme to have laser printers put tracking information on every document they print, and publishing the Legal Guide for Bloggers. They're also in the advocacy and lobby industry, and are closely watching Broadcast Flag legislation in the US capitol which is scheduled for debate on 24 January.
The Wikinews Interview of the Month is a program to give citizen journalists the opportunity to be involved in interviews with news makers. Research and questions are developed by everyone who wishes to take part both before the interview (for this interview, you can get involved at http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikinews/Interview_of_the_month/January_2006_...) and during the interview. As the interview progresses, questions may be passed to the moderators who will try to squeeze in as many questions as possible.
Wikinews is a project of the Wikimedia Foundation, and is produced in 19 languages.
Amgine _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@wikimedia.org http://mail.wikipedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
Brian wrote:
I think a good idea for easily getting good questions (since the current questions are pretty generic), as well as increasing the positive interest in Wikinews (since people like the EFF) is to make a post on Slashdot in the style of "ask your questions on Slashdot, and a selection of the highest moderated quesitons will be picked to specifically ask Danny O'Brien". Then you can pick out some good questions, ask him, and make another Slashdot post once the entire interview has been written up.
I'm going to try to get a story on Slashdot. I would suggest that someone protect http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikinews/Interview_of_the_month/January_2006_... (although I won't link to it). As for the IRC interview, I hope it is being set up so that the interviewee can be separated from the rest of the people. He should probably be in his own channel, which has restricted access.
brian0918
Actually, we want exactly the opposite.
The point of the interview is to be available for many people to be involved in creating the questions, and to write their own articles about what happened during the interview; what the answers mean. For this reason we want the interviewee to be in the same channel as everyone else. That doesn't mean the channel will be open for everyone to shout questions: we will probably set the channel to moderated, and only allow the interviewee and the interviewer to be voiced.
The same is true of research and questions page. We really do want people to be actively editing this page, but we may protect it for the hour or so of the actual interview, so questions are not being altered at the time they are being asked.
Feel free to suggest this to Slashdot; obviously questions could be copied from the Slashdot comments to the research and questions page, but we don't want to use Slashdot as the working/editing space since they haven't agreed to hosting that.
Amgine
Amgine wrote:
Brian wrote:
I think a good idea for easily getting good questions (since the current questions are pretty generic), as well as increasing the positive interest in Wikinews (since people like the EFF) is to make a post on Slashdot in the style of "ask your questions on Slashdot, and a selection of the highest moderated quesitons will be picked to specifically ask Danny O'Brien". Then you can pick out some good questions, ask him, and make another Slashdot post once the entire interview has been written up.
I'm going to try to get a story on Slashdot. I would suggest that someone protect http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikinews/Interview_of_the_month/January_2006_... (although I won't link to it). As for the IRC interview, I hope it is being set up so that the interviewee can be separated from the rest of the people. He should probably be in his own channel, which has restricted access.
brian0918
Actually, we want exactly the opposite.
The point of the interview is to be available for many people to be involved in creating the questions, and to write their own articles about what happened during the interview; what the answers mean. For this reason we want the interviewee to be in the same channel as everyone else. That doesn't mean the channel will be open for everyone to shout questions: we will probably set the channel to moderated, and only allow the interviewee and the interviewer to be voiced.
That's basically what I meant. The interviewee and interviewer will make their official statements in the main, moderated channel, while another channel is set up for everyone to submit questions to the interviewer, and for other random discussion to occur.
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