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    Spot.Us Merges With Public Insight Network

    by David Cohn
    November 29, 2011

    Spot.Us launched in
    November of 2008, making this our three-year anniversary. Counting the months of planning (and applying for the
    Knight News Challenge) that went into the launch, I’ve been working
    on Spot.Us, a journalism crowdfunding project, for almost four years. In that time, we’ve pushed boundaries,
    and have had many successes and shortcomings which I’ve tried to share along the
    way. As I’ve always said, Spot.Us will never be perfect. It will never
    be “done,” and as long as we can strive for something, we’re making
    progress.

    Today we are taking a big stride by formally being acquired by the Public Insight Network. There is a lot to suss out with this merger, but when you sit and think about it, it makes a lot of sense. The official press release is here.

    SPOT.US + PIN = ROCKING

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    The Public Insight Network (part of American Public Media) was co-founded by my friend Michael Skoler,
    now at Public Radio International. It’s a software platform (similar to
    Spot.Us) that has long been at the forefront of how Public Media can
    interact with and take cues from the public by giving them a means to
    inform journalism. Individuals can provide insight to make stories more
    informed, insightful, and reflect the community in a truer sense. Spot.Us
    is built on a relationship with the public, giving them a kind of
    editorial control and influence over what stories should be done. Both
    create a media that is more responsive and responsible to the public’s
    needs according to their own volition. Combined we offer both
    opportunities to readers, creating a more nuanced relationship between a
    news entity that uses PIN/Spot and the public.

    Creating
    and managing a more nuanced relationship — that’s what “public media”
    should do. I hope that as Spot.Us and PIN merge, we can continue to push
    the boundaries in transparency and participation in the process of
    journalism so that media organizations can better serve the public.

    All
    of this is under the backdrop of my gig at UC Berkeley’s J-school, which
    is a blast. Spot.Us is my baby, but just as it is time for it to grow up and move
    out of the house, it was time for me to tackle new problems. Through
    this merger both are happening.

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    I
    will continue working at Berkeley’s J-school and will remain the
    founder and a part of the Spot.Us team moving forward. But it is high
    time for Spot.Us to grow wings and move beyond what any small team can
    accomplish. I believe under the PIN leadership of Joaquin Alvarado, Spot.Us can grow to accomplish much more, and I intend to be there as we reach for higher goals and aspirations.

    There
    will be much to write about in the coming months (years). I’m happy to
    say that Spot.Us is able to fund itself as a project for the first year
    of this merger, and if revenue grows, could do so indefinitely. But I want to keep this post short and sweet. Spot.Us will
    continue. For the moment, it will be status quo. There will be changes
    moving forward, but we will remain an open platform that will fund-raise
    for independent journalists and news organizations.

    And to close it off — an excerpt from the first IdeaLab post I ever wrote about Spot.Us:

    As
    I see it — community funded reporting is low-hanging fruit. The Knight
    News Challenge is all about doing research and development — the kind
    that isn’t done elsewhere in the industry.

    Now,
    it may turn out that this low-hanging fruit is poisonous. But aren’t
    you glad that somebody is at least going to give it a good honest bite
    to find out? More importantly — aren’t you glad it’s somebody who shares
    the values of the news industry? Fact is, this idea is going to be a
    learning process. My goal isn’t to solve the business woes of
    journalism. I don’t think anybody can do that. But I do intend to taste
    the fruit of community funded reporting and report back as clearly as
    possible how it tastes. Fact is, this idea is going to be tried by
    somebody. My fear, however, is that those who get to it first
    successfully don’t have journalism’s best interest in mind — but the
    bottom line.

    I’m happy to report back that the fruit isn’t poisonous. In fact, I think it’s time we begin to harvest at a larger scale.

    crowdfouding cartoon

    (Image Credit: Jules Brelaz)

    Tagged: journalism media merger participation pin public insight network spot.us transparency

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