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Turning to Digital to Save Newspapers

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Scott Raynovich
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Re: Filter Bubbles
Scott Raynovich   3/27/2012 10:23:21 AM
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Yeah, but aren't you glad you didn't go get nuked?

Noreen Seebacher
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Re: Filter Bubbles
Noreen Seebacher   3/27/2012 10:16:53 AM
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Let me tell you how biased newspapers can be. You can either laugh or cry about this.

In case you forgot or are too young to remember, there was an accident at the Three Mile Island Unit 2 (TMI‑2) nuclear power plant near Harrisburg, Pa., on March 28, 1979. It  was the most serious in U.S. commercial nuclear power plant operating history.

The accident occurred on a Tuesday or Wednesday, as I recall, Someone asked the (late) executive editor at the (late) Pittsburgh Press -- four hours west of the plant -- if a team should be dispatched to cover this major news event.

The response: "Nah. Let's wait. If it's still important on Friday, we'll write something for Sunday."

That is bias at its finest.

Noreen Seebacher
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Re: Pharma shrinking
Noreen Seebacher   3/27/2012 10:04:49 AM
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The information is fascinating, but you have to keep in mind the limitations of the data. The CEA worked with LinkedIn to get a different twist on employment statistics. As the Economist noted earlier this month, "OFFICIAL statistics can tell you how many workers were jobless last month, how many had college degrees and how many worked in construction. But they cannot tell you how many know Hadoop, a software for managing data that is much in demand these days."

The CEA acknowledges that LinkedIn's 50 million US members are not a nationally representative sample of the US workforce. But because they tend to work in sectors of the economy that require higher levels of education, the information embodied in the changing distribution of the industries and occupations in which members are employed has the potential to inform the decisions of individuals considering specific educational and career paths.

Is pharma shrinking? Not necessarily. But growth is dependent on regulatory approval. Google pharma jobs in any given month and the news might be good. Or bad.

Take January 2011:
  • Arena Pharmaceuticals (ARNA), stung by its inability to win regulatory approval for its experimental obesity drug lorcaserin, slashed  its workforce by 25 percent or 66 employees.
  • Elan (ELN) laid off 130 people or about 10 percent of its workforce.
  • Abbott Laboratories (ABT) cut 1,900 jobs, or 6 percent, of its U.S. workforce following setbacks in its development pipeline that led to a restructuring.

So it goes.

Scott Raynovich
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Re: Filter Bubbles
Scott Raynovich   3/27/2012 9:23:12 AM
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I also spent about 10 years in newspapers before I saw the light -- fortunately well in advance of the train coming through the tunnel.

To Noreen's point, newspaper people are personalities. And editors are personalities. And publishers are personalities. So inevitably their filtering confirms to the biases in the newsroom and are shaped by the community and the person in the corner office. There is no such thing as a purely objective media operation. Even Google's news results are programmed by sombody who has injected bias into the algorithm.

Scott Raynovich
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Pharma shrinking
Scott Raynovich   3/27/2012 9:14:10 AM
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Joey, great chart, but I wonder about some of the data. For example is the Pharma industry really shrinking? I don't think that's true.

Noreen Seebacher
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Re: Filter Bubbles
Noreen Seebacher   3/26/2012 11:07:39 PM
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Yes Broadway, but as a former newspaper editor I can assure you we had perfect filters. We based all of our selections on everything we saw on TV.

Broadway
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Re: Filter Bubbles
Broadway   3/26/2012 11:04:56 PM
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@mlnvestor, hate to break this to you, but editors have always selected what to show their readers. Newspapers and magazines have finite space. Sometimes editors have to shovel garbage to fill the space, sometimes they have to trim down to the muscle to make the space. And sometimes editors have political and other alterior motives driving how they fill their space.

cat tail
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Re: Filter Bubbles
cat tail   3/26/2012 10:48:13 AM
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The same creepy juvenile one that i am apparenly tapping @Noreen. I was getting a little worried too.

Noreen Seebacher
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Re: Filter Bubbles
Noreen Seebacher   3/26/2012 9:06:22 AM
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Yes, I always wonder how they decide that these particular videos are just right for me. Actually makes me a little nervous. What demographic am I tapping?

PredictableChaos
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Re: Filter Bubbles
PredictableChaos   3/26/2012 12:11:22 AM
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Maybe 'filter bubbles' are why popular YouTube videos are so bad.

After we've already watched 6 short videos, each worse than the last; our filter bubble presents choices for us that have millions of views.  But, for some unknown reason, they are they all about car accidents, embarassing noises or the Kardashians. 

We click.  Only to be disappointed.

PC

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