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       The Internet is a Game Changer, a Paperless 
	World  
	By Ramzy Baroud
  Al-Jazeerah: CCUN, May 31, 2010 
	   The debate is no longer confined to a few academics in distant 
	universities. It is now a widely prevalent, mainstream topic of discussion. 
	  How will the news of the future be distributed? The jury is still out, 
	but not completely. Increasingly, we are driven to believe that the future 
	will be paperless. Some argue that the “paper” will be taken out of the 
	“newspaper” within a few years. Their logic might have come across as 
	far-fetched in the late 1990s, but it can hardly be dismissed in 2010.   
	Two American intellectuals added their voices to the chorus of those 
	predicting that the print media would not continue to define the news for 
	long. In October 2009, Leonard Downie Jr., vice president at large and 
	former executive editor of The Washington Post, and Michael Schudson, 
	professor of Communication at Columbia University’s Graduate School of 
	Journalism, co-authored a 98-page paper entitled, “The Reconstruction of 
	American Journalism.”    Here, they made the assertion that: 
	“Newspapers and television news are not going to vanish in the foreseeable 
	future ... But they will play diminished roles in an emerging and still 
	rapidly changing world of digital journalism, in which the means of news 
	reporting are being re-invented, the character of news is being 
	reconstructed, and reporting is being distributed across a greater number 
	and variety of news organizations, new and old.”   The idea is not a 
	new one. In August 24, 2006, The Economist published an article entitled, 
	“Who killed the newspaper?,” which claimed that, “Of all the ‘old’ media, 
	newspapers have the most to lose from the Internet. Circulation has been 
	falling in America, Western Europe, Latin America, Australia and New Zealand 
	for decades ... in the past few years the Web has hastened the decline.” 
	  While we freely refer to the digital media revolution as “new media,” 
	few dare classify print newspapers as “old.” The Economist did, nearly four 
	years ago. Considering the speed at which the digital media world is moving 
	— with the introduction of new gadgets and the level of Internet penetration 
	throughout the world — print papers are now most definitely old and aging. 
	  The magazine also made an interesting reference to Philip Meyer, whose 
	works include, “Precision Journalism: A Reporter’s Introduction to Social 
	Science Methods and Newspaper Ethics in the New Century: A Report to the 
	American Society of Newspaper Editors.”   In his most recent book, 
	“The Vanishing Newspaper,” Meyer calculates that “the first quarter of 2043 
	will be the moment when newsprint dies in America as the last exhausted 
	reader tosses aside the last crumpled edition.”   More, digital media 
	are making waves not just in the constant improvement of news and 
	information technology, but also influencing the level of trust readers have 
	in the new media. Indeed, it is not just about how the news is conveyed — 
	digitally or on paper — but how our perception of the news is changing 
	altogether.   American intellectual and best-selling author John 
	Mearsheimer didn’t neglect to refer to the Internet in one of the most 
	important and honest assessments on “The Future of Palestine.” In his recent 
	speech, he stated that “The Internet is a game changer. It not only makes it 
	easy for the opponents of apartheid to get the real story out to the world, 
	but it also allows Americans to learn the story that the New York Times and 
	the Washington Post have been hiding from them.”   Those familiar with 
	the book Manufacturing Consent, by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky 
	understand well that traditional media coverage of news is largely 
	determined by “filters” which allow competing interests to determine what we 
	read and watch, and thus our perception of the world. The Internet, despite 
	all its shortcomings, is much more equitable and democratic. That should not 
	discount the fact that poorer countries still do not have the kind of 
	Internet availability, speed and access that is common and widespread in the 
	developed world. But the fact that an online community newspaper has a 
	fighting chance, like any other mainstream newspaper, is certainly worth 
	celebrating as an achievement.   There is also another reason why we 
	will continue to go digital, and why it will only be a matter of years 
	before the pendulum turns in favor of paperless media world.   The 
	latest Climate Change conference in Copenhagen failed to set limits on 
	carbon emissions or to come up with any serious or binding agreements. It 
	was a colossal disappointment. But that failure was political more than 
	scientific. Very few still argue that global warming is a hoax, or believe 
	that the environment is sustainable, considering our long-unchecked way of 
	life. More, recycling is no longer a fad. Some countries are debating laws 
	that make recycling mandatory, and to punish violators. Considering all of 
	this, it is difficult to imagine that years from now we will continue to use 
	and discard newspapers so readily, as if the paper on which news is printed 
	doesn’t come from trees, and as if discarded papers don’t constitute 
	landfill.   Bob Dylan continues to be right. “The Times They Are a-Changin.” 
	And it’s time that we also appreciate that change, not resist it; work with 
	it, not against it. There is no shame in embracing change. When the first 
	commercially successful trans-Atlantic telegraph cable was completed in July 
	1866, some must have thought that humanity had reached the zenith of 
	achievements as far as the field of communications was concerned. Now 
	telegraphs are only found in museums and are coveted collectors’ items. 
	Instead, hundreds of millions of people routinely and conveniently send 
	texts, sounds, images and videos through their cell phones without much fuss 
	or excitement. Although the concept is still the same, the medium has 
	changed dramatically.   The same can be said about news. The news 
	industry will never die; in fact, in a globalized and interconnected world, 
	we will seek news more than ever before. But the medium will inevitably 
	change, and there is nothing we can do to stop it. It is telling that the 
	most featured and best-selling item from Amazon.com is the Kindle digital 
	reader, and that iPad has been topping news related to publishing technology 
	all around the world.   The Times They Are a-Changin’. And we’d better 
	change accordingly.   - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is "My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story" (Pluto Press, London), now available on Amazon.com. 
	 *****   Visit my website: 
	www.ramzybaroud.net. Also watch Aljazeera's documentary about my latest 
	book: My Father was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story. (Pluto 
	Press; Palgrave Macmillan, 2010). The subtitled program is available at 
	YouTube in two parts: 
	Part I &
	
	Part II. Then, check out this short film (in
	English and
	Arabic) 
	about the book. The book is available from
	Pluto 
	Press (UK),
	
	Amazon UK and
	
	Amazon. 
	  
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