Online News Sites and Journalism 2.0: Reader Comments on Al Jazeera Arabic

The current paper investigates reader commenting on news sites as one facet of journalism 2.0. Specifically, the themes, frequency, and regional coverage of readers’ comments—and in general, their activity levels and distribution—are considered, with a goal to increase knowledge of convergent media...

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Main Author: Muhammad M. Abdul-Mageed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Paderborn University: Media Systems and Media Organisation Research Group 2008-12-01
Series:tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/78
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author Muhammad M. Abdul-Mageed
author_facet Muhammad M. Abdul-Mageed
author_sort Muhammad M. Abdul-Mageed
collection DOAJ
description The current paper investigates reader commenting on news sites as one facet of journalism 2.0. Specifically, the themes, frequency, and regional coverage of readers’ comments—and in general, their activity levels and distribution—are considered, with a goal to increase knowledge of convergent media and computer-mediated communication (CMC), as well as shed light on the interactivity strategies adopted by influential news producers. The corpus is collected from the Arabic news site of the controversial Middle East-based, bilingual network Al Jazeera. Reader commenting was found to be a regular occurrence on the site but distributed unevenly across stories. The stories focused mostly on themes related to military and political violence, politics, and foreign relations, and covered events related to the Arab world more than other regions. Also, patterns of commenting varied according to day of the week and position of the story on the web page. Overall, these findings suggest that citizen journalism—journalism is performed by lay persons—on Al Jazeera tends to be shaped by the coverage and layout of the news site. Moreover, citizen participation in online news sites such as Al Jazeera is still far from ideal, in that commenters are given neither the access nor the facilitation to use modalities other than written text. These limitations are critiqued in light of contemporary discourses about media convergence and journalism 2.0.
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spelling doaj-art-ecccd3ede09d4202ba53a07efe123df52025-08-20T02:55:10ZengPaderborn University: Media Systems and Media Organisation Research GrouptripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique1726-670X2008-12-016210.31269/triplec.v6i2.7878Online News Sites and Journalism 2.0: Reader Comments on Al Jazeera ArabicMuhammad M. Abdul-MageedThe current paper investigates reader commenting on news sites as one facet of journalism 2.0. Specifically, the themes, frequency, and regional coverage of readers’ comments—and in general, their activity levels and distribution—are considered, with a goal to increase knowledge of convergent media and computer-mediated communication (CMC), as well as shed light on the interactivity strategies adopted by influential news producers. The corpus is collected from the Arabic news site of the controversial Middle East-based, bilingual network Al Jazeera. Reader commenting was found to be a regular occurrence on the site but distributed unevenly across stories. The stories focused mostly on themes related to military and political violence, politics, and foreign relations, and covered events related to the Arab world more than other regions. Also, patterns of commenting varied according to day of the week and position of the story on the web page. Overall, these findings suggest that citizen journalism—journalism is performed by lay persons—on Al Jazeera tends to be shaped by the coverage and layout of the news site. Moreover, citizen participation in online news sites such as Al Jazeera is still far from ideal, in that commenters are given neither the access nor the facilitation to use modalities other than written text. These limitations are critiqued in light of contemporary discourses about media convergence and journalism 2.0.https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/78Al JazeeraAl-Jazeerajournalism 2.0computer-mediated communicationdigitally-mediated communicationhuman-computer interaction
spellingShingle Muhammad M. Abdul-Mageed
Online News Sites and Journalism 2.0: Reader Comments on Al Jazeera Arabic
tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique
Al Jazeera
Al-Jazeera
journalism 2.0
computer-mediated communication
digitally-mediated communication
human-computer interaction
title Online News Sites and Journalism 2.0: Reader Comments on Al Jazeera Arabic
title_full Online News Sites and Journalism 2.0: Reader Comments on Al Jazeera Arabic
title_fullStr Online News Sites and Journalism 2.0: Reader Comments on Al Jazeera Arabic
title_full_unstemmed Online News Sites and Journalism 2.0: Reader Comments on Al Jazeera Arabic
title_short Online News Sites and Journalism 2.0: Reader Comments on Al Jazeera Arabic
title_sort online news sites and journalism 2 0 reader comments on al jazeera arabic
topic Al Jazeera
Al-Jazeera
journalism 2.0
computer-mediated communication
digitally-mediated communication
human-computer interaction
url https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/78
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