“People who are savvy about how the Internet works don’t even try to find breaking news on the Net.” — Richard W. Wiggins —The Effects of September 11 on the Leading Search Engine (First Monday)
Wiggins made this throwaway statement in an article published October 1, 2001. How quickly things change!
In his defense, Wiggins was very quick to publish a thoughtful analysis of the ways Google changed during the crisis, paving the way for the introducton of Google News.
Wiggins was not wrong. I didn’t expect to be able to find breaking news on the internet until I first used Google News.
Similar:
In September, 2003, I was blogging about the emerging fad of internet plagiarism, ethnical...
In September, 2003, I was blogging about...
Culture
The crisis in local journalism has become a crisis of democracy
The paucity of reporters has triggered a...
Culture
NYT: G.W. Bush is "super-overexposed" and "so far to our right" -- so they omitted his pre...
The quotes in my headline are accurate, ...
Amusing
On teaching coding to English studies students
Because this is a practical, hands-on, i...
Academia
And yes, that's her picture in the program (from the PPT Shakespeare contest).
At PPT's The Diary of Anne Frank. ...
Culture
'Thought Leader’ gives talk that will inspire your thoughts
Saving this for the next time I assign a...
Amusing



Yes, fark and slashdot are good examples of meme-spreading sites. Often I first see a meme there, then it appears on Wired, and then it makes it into the more mainstream publications. But Wikipedia is also becoming a force for organizing breaking news stories.
What about meta sites like Fark.com? I often find news items there before any of the major networks have picked them up. There’s a lot of be said for a huge network of independent nodes gathering and submitting news stories. If signal/noise ratio is a little higher than on the networks, but it’s entertaining noise.