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Date:  Thu, 6 Mar 2003 23:50:26 -0500
From:  "Nick Moraitis" <nick@takingitglobal.org>
Subject:  [communication 598] Re: Fw: [CI] Online Newspaper Shakes Up Korean Politics
To:  <communication@wsisasia.org>
Message-Id:  <000601c2e465$15d7cfd0$6401a8c0@nicklaptop>
In-Reply-To:  <004001c2e450$f02701c0$0400a8c0@ed>
X-Mail-Count: 00598

Just in case people are interested, I actually photocopied and distributed
100 copies of this article, which originally appeared in the International
Herald Tribune during the Prepcom, at the meeting in Geneva :) I thought it
was a pretty cool example of the information society in action!

So at least some of the WSIS crowd would have seen it before....

--Nick

-----Original Message-----
From: Alan G. Alegre [mailto:alalegre@fma.ph] 
Sent: March 6, 2003 9:26 PM
To: wsis-asia
Subject: [communication 595] Fw: [CI] Online Newspaper Shakes Up Korean
Politics


Got this on another list (Thanks Michael Gurstein)

What do PatchA, Oh, MJ, YJ and our other Korean colleagues think about this
article?

>
> http://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/06/international/asia/06SEOU.html?tntem
> ail1
>
> Online Newspaper Shakes Up Korean Politics
> By HOWARD W. FRENCH
>
>
> EOUL, South Korea - For years, people will be debating what made this 
> country go from conservative to liberal, from gerontocracy to youth
culture
> and from staunchly pro-American to a deeply ambivalent ally - all
seemingly
> overnight.
>
> For most here, the change is symbolized by the election in December of 
> Roh Moo Hyun, a reformist lawyer with a disarmingly unfussy style who 
> at 56 is youthful by South Korean political standards. But for many 
> observers, the most important agent of change has been the Internet.
>
> By some measures, South Korea is the most wired country in the world, 
> with broadband connections in nearly 70 percent of households. In the 
> last
year,
> as the elections were approaching, more and more people were getting 
> their information and political analysis from spunky news services on 
> the
Internet
> instead of from the country's overwhelmingly conservative newspapers.
>
> Most influential by far has been a feisty three-year-old startup with 
> the unusual name of OhmyNews. Around election time the free online 
> news
service
> was registering 20 million page views per day.
>
> Although things have cooled down a bit, even these days the service
averages
> about 14 million visits daily, in a country of only about 40 million
people.
>
> The online newspaper, which began with only four employees, started as 
> a glimmer in the eye of Oh Yeon Ho, now 38, a lifelong journalistic 
> rabble rouser who wrote for underground progressive magazines during 
> the long
years
> of dictatorship here.
>
> Its name, OhmyNews, a play on the expression "Oh my God!" which 
> entered
the
> Korean language by way of a comedian who popularized it around the 
> time
the
> online service was founded in 2000.
>
> Although the staff has grown to 41, from the beginning the electronic 
> newspaper's unusual concept has been to rely mostly on contributions 
> from ordinary readers all over the country, who send dispatches about
everything
> from local happenings and personal musings to national politics.
>
> Only 20 percent of the paper each day is written by staff journalists. 
> So far, a computer check shows, there have been more than 10,000 other
bylines.
>
> The newspaper deals with questions of objectivity and accuracy by 
> grading articles according to their content. Those that are presented 
> as straight news are fact-checked by editors. Writers are paid small 
> amounts, which
vary
> according to how the stories are ranked, using forestry terminology, 
> from "kindling" to "rare species."
>
> "My goal was to say farewell to 20th-century Korean journalism, with 
> the concept that every citizen is a reporter," said Mr. Oh, a wiry, 
> intense
man
> whose mobile phone never stops ringing - and who insists his name has 
> no connection with the newspaper's.
>
> "The professional news culture has eroded our journalism," he said, 
> "and I have always wanted to revitalize it. Since I had no money, I 
> decided to
use
> the Internet, which has made this guerrilla strategy possible."
>
> The kind of immediacy this brand of journalism can bring to a story 
> was brought home again in late January by the dispatches of a 
> firefighter from the central city of Taegu, who sent gripping accounts 
> of the subway arson disaster there, which killed nearly 200 people.
>
> More pertinent to the impact OhmyNews has had on the country's 
> political culture were reports the service ran last summer after two 
> schoolgirls
were
> crushed to death by a United States Army armored vehicle on patrol.
>
> OhmyNews's reports of the incident were widely seen as forcing the 
> hand of the mainstream media to pay attention to a story that 
> conservative
tradition
> here suggests they might have been inclined to ignore.
>
> The rest is, as they say, history: a series of demonstrations against 
> the Army presence here snowballed in the fall and winter, becoming a 
> huge national movement that many see as having propelled the candidacy 
> of Mr. Roh.
>
> The new president was, until then, a relative unknown and third in a 
> field of three major candidates. If no one else caught on to this 
> link, Mr. Roh appears to have. After his election, he granted OhmyNews 
> the first
interview
> he gave to any Korean news organization.
>
> For Mr. Oh, the story of the American military accident had echoes of 
> one
of
> his first big scoops, a story he wrote as a little-known freelance 
> journalist in 1994 on the No Gun Ri incident, a reported massacre of 
> South Korean refugees by United States military forces who opened fire 
> on them
at
> a railroad trestle in the summer of 1950, during the Korean War.
>
> The South Korean press made almost no mention of his reports after he
broke
> the story, but five years later The Associated Press wrote about the 
> incident, winning a Pulitzer Prize for its subsequent investigation 
> with American Army veterans.
>
> "Once the American media picked up the story, our mainstream 
> newspapers wrote about No Gun Ri as if it was a fresh incident," Mr. 
> Oh said. "This made me realize that we have a real imbalance in our 
> media, 80 percent conservative and 20 percent liberal, and it needed 
> to be corrected. My
goal
> is 50-50."
>
> After he broke the No Gun Ri story, Mr. Oh went away to school in the
United
> States, earning a master's degree at the conservative, explicitly
Christian
> Regent University in Virginia Beach, Va., whose president is the
evangelist
> pastor Pat Robertson. It might have seemed like an unlikely choice, 
> but
Mr.
> Oh said it was deliberate.
>
> "Pat Robertson and I are very different in temperament and ideology, 
> but
we
> are very similar in strategy," said Mr. Oh, who became what he calls a 
> serious Christian during his stay in the United States. "They are very 
> right-wing and wanted to overthrow what they saw as a liberal media 
> establishment. I wanted to overthrow a right-wing media establishment, 
> and
I
> learned a lot from them."
>
> Although OhmyNews pays its staff less than reporters earn at the top 
> South Korean newspapers, morale appears to very high. "Wherever I go, 
> people ask me, `What about the pay?' " said Son Byung Kwan, 31, a 
> reporter who helped break the story about the American soldiers' 
> accident. "I took a 30
percent
> pay cut to work here, but things couldn't be better. My company is so
famous
> that I have become well known, and best of all, my stories have real 
> impact."
>
>
>
>