The Networked Utilisation of Satellite Images and Geospatial Technology in Journalism
Ikonen, Pasi; Hokkanen, Jere; Uskali, Turo; Manninen, Ville J. E.; Kuusniemi, Heidi (2022-05-05)
Ikonen, Pasi
Hokkanen, Jere
Uskali, Turo
Manninen, Ville J. E.
Kuusniemi, Heidi
Editori(t)
Manninen, Ville J. E.
Niemi, Mari K
Ridge-Newman, Anthony
Palgrave Macmillan
05.05.2022
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2022060643572
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2022060643572
Kuvaus
vertaisarvioitu
© 2022 Palgrave Macmillan.
© 2022 Palgrave Macmillan.
Tiivistelmä
Satellite technology has become increasingly affordable and accessible in the past few decades. This has enabled many newsrooms to engage with genuinely remote journalism.
This chapter explores the networked nature of satellite journalism and investigates its inclusion of experts and citizens outside newsrooms. Satellite journalism uses satellite-borne technology either as a (1) part of storytelling or (2) source of information. Academic research on the topic is scarce, so this chapter builds a base of knowledge on the contemporary practices, limitations and ethics—as well as directions of future development—of satellite journalism.
By interviewing six journalists and one earth observation expert, and by analysing the case of the Bellingcat group, we shed light on how satellite journalism works. We argue that journalist–audience collaboration has the potential to deepen further as satellite technology develops, thereby rewarding organisations that participate in networked co-creation. Developing technologies, however, will also introduce new ethical considerations.
This chapter explores the networked nature of satellite journalism and investigates its inclusion of experts and citizens outside newsrooms. Satellite journalism uses satellite-borne technology either as a (1) part of storytelling or (2) source of information. Academic research on the topic is scarce, so this chapter builds a base of knowledge on the contemporary practices, limitations and ethics—as well as directions of future development—of satellite journalism.
By interviewing six journalists and one earth observation expert, and by analysing the case of the Bellingcat group, we shed light on how satellite journalism works. We argue that journalist–audience collaboration has the potential to deepen further as satellite technology develops, thereby rewarding organisations that participate in networked co-creation. Developing technologies, however, will also introduce new ethical considerations.
Kokoelmat
- Artikkelit [3284]