It used to be that the ability to create
content and distribute it to an audience was limited to individuals and
organisations that owned the production facilities and infrastructure to do so.
In other words: ‘the media’.
If you were in the video creation and
distribution business you were called a TV station and employed thousands of
highly skilled individuals to write, film, edit and broadcast your content
through a relatively small number of channels to the public. Similarly, if you
were a newspaper, you hired a team of reporters and editors, designers, typesetters,
printers and delivery men, and had deals with a network of newsagents for them
to sell your product to your audience.
With the advent of digital technology and
the internet it became a lot easier for people to create their own content, be
it images, words, video or audio. But even five years ago, it was still beyond
most people’s technical skills to create and maintain their own website.
Today, the
ever-lower costs of computers, digital cameras and high-speed internet access,
combined with free or low-cost, easy-to-use editing software means that anyone
can have a live blog website up and running within minutes of deciding to do so.
With a little reading and fiddling they can upload video or sound too.
Source: What is Social Media?
(Antony Mayfield, iCrossing) e-book
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