
Distrust of media is widespread and pervasive. It’s killing journalism. Something’s got to give.
As advertisers pivot to social media, journalists and publishers pivot to readers, to build a new business model built on reader revenues. This demands a new relationship, a relationship built on trust and respect.
And that’s where blockchain — which is “a technology that allows for fast, secure and transparent peer-to-peer transfer of digital goods including money and intellectual property” — comes in. The truth is blockchain can be used for a whole lot more than just trading crypto-currencies.
Much of the current internet works on institutional trust. In the case of e-commerce, for example, we trust the banking institutions both as buyers and sellers. Or, at least, we trust their computer (until it’s hacked, of course).
Media lacks that institutional trust — now more than ever, for reasons ranging from the Trumpian “Fake News!” jihad to the sacrifice of quality through job cuts.
Blockchain replaces the institutional trust of the current internet with distributed, verifiable trust, which requires verification by data block across the platform chain. Think Wikipedia, but verified by crowd-sourcing computer power, not volunteer editors. It relies on scale and transparency as a guarantee against hacking. Given the fundamental mistrust in our media institutions, blockchain may not be what we want, but it may be what we need.
Proponents of this thought believe that the blockchain is the coming reiteration of the internet, a reiteration made for 21st-century journalism. It can rebuild trust in media by linking readers and writers in a verifiable chain. It will, they say, democratise journalism by taking it out of the hands of the distrusted media oligopolies – that handful of surviving mastodons that tramped the 20th-century earth.
It’s easy to see its benefits for markets. A number is always a number. Tick.
But in journalism, assessments of quality — or even relevant facts — are a matter of professional judgement.
Still, we’re starting to find out what blockchain can do. We’re seeing experiments using blockchain as a publishing platform, as an intellectual property register, as a tool for subscriptions and, perhaps most exciting, as a tool for verifying journalism itself.
Take Civil, which burst into the headlines last October with a US$5 million investment from ConsenSys, developer of the Ethereum blockchain platform. Civil is a publishing platform for use by journalist groups writing for a particular geographical or interest-based community.
It quantifies quality by using “tokens” recorded on Ethereum either to underpin a particular story or to challenge it. The tokens provide both a means of payment (through subscriptions) and a tool for distributed editing by the publication’s group of journalists and its supporters or community.
Civil has already provided a home for the hyper-local, Chicago-based online newspaper DNAinfo, which had closed late last year (immediately after its staff voted to unionise). Its journalists have resurrected it as a reader-funded vehicle on the Civil platform as Block Club Chicago.
Reader voting presents a complex issue with such a platform. While reader voting helps quality, it also encourages silos. When it comes to news, people tend to “like” what they like – or at least what they agree with — even when it isn’t of particularly high quality.
Some new platforms are leaning into this dynamic. Steemit is a website in the vein of a community-owned Reddit, which uses blockchain technology to reward users for content generation, indicated by upvotes/downvotes. That is, users liking or disliking content, regardless of its relative quality.
In another example, Po.et is building an open platform for managing rights in creative digital media. Po.et raised eyebrows last year when they poached the Washington Post’s key digital strategist Jarrod Dicker, as CEO.
But how successful will it be? There’s been some exploration of readers using blockchain to drive micro-payments for individual stories, these seem to have hit the wall of most micro-payment ideas: publishers want the regular flow of subscription dollars, not an unreliable aggregation of small, one-off payments.
And of course, blockchain has its own constraints — the sheer amount of electricity it consumes and its hash rate (time to solution). Right now, it’s less efficient than the traditional web. But solving the trust conundrum, for the internet as much as journalism, is a powerful driver for change.
journalism is like the snake that ate itself, by only propagating the 25% extreme right wing ideology they`ve destroyed more than half their base, imagine a shop that will only serve Catholics or only people with blue eyes, how long would they stay open for business, the media should only distribute the news, not just print the owners opinions views or wishes, and must always defend the public interest fearlessly, the servile and submissive attitude of most journalist is killing their industry so really they have no one to blame but themselves, and the share holders of companies like news corp should also understand that the value of their companies are also diminished by this action of only representing the extreme right and should also take more control of who is running their company and who sits on the board.
Yep, ABC is a good example… Benign stories & safe / populist “progressive” causes only.
Fast losing public relevance when stiflingly journalism of quality
Another attempt to find something useful for blockchain which as the author finally admits in the last paragraph chews power and is slow and clunky. The problems facing journalism are mainly the final destruction of an always dubious business model. How many other goods or services do we buy funded by a once removed process, be it advertising or anything else? The rivers of gold have gone for good and now commercial journalism will have to slug it out directly with consumers just like everyone else.
The pic misled me into thinking that the trust restoring technology was a pen & paper.
Alas, it was just more screen based brain solvent.
As noted above, journalists as a species sold their ‘souls’ for a mess of potage and now whine about having to survive in the world they extolled whilst feasting at the High Table.
In case this seems a new situation, it was back in the 80s that the number of journos. working as flaks for government & BigBiz exceeded those doing that quaint, olde worlde thing of investigative exposure of the comfortable for the glare of those afflicted.
Yeah every time this sort of thing comes up I just think ‘welcome to capitalism, mates’.
Technology will decide the truth for us, once and for all, no questions asked? Oh goody. I won’t have to think for myself now. Now that’s a new level of stupid.
Oh good, another superfluous use for blockchains: paying for the news