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Home > Online & Multimedia
12:00 AM
Jun.
10,
2008
More in this series
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| Previous: 1997 / Next: 1999 View all of the years in the New Media Timeline
| | | | THE MEDIA - News Example:
Jan. 1998 -- The story of President Clinton and Monica Lewinsky demonstrates how the Web is changing journalism. After the Drudge Report breaks the news, a media frenzy follows in both the online and traditional press. (Source: Poynter's Links to the News) - "Video Comes to The World Wide Web." AJR, Jan./Feb. 1998.
- March 1998 -- The New Century Network and its NewsWorks search engine are closed down. This consortium of newspaper companies was founded in 1995.
- "Internet News Takes Off."
Pew Research Center, June 8, 1998. - News Example:
Aug. 26-28 -- The Charlotte Observer uses a weblog to report the story of Hurricane Bonnie. (Source: "Dispatches from Along the Coast." and "Blogging Bonnie", Chip Scanlan and Jonathan Dube, Poynter Online, Sept. 18, 2003.) - Sept. 13, 1998 -- The New York Times website is attacked by hackers calling for the release of Kevin Mitnick, an imprisoned computer criminal. Times officials shut down the site after the break-in is discovered, and they restore most of their site within nine hours.
- A variety of meta news search engines such as TotalNews and NewsTrawler are available on the Web in 1998. These services regularly index current content from Web news sources. A few of these search engines also serve as archives.
- Nov. 18, 1998 -- The AvantGo mobile information company announces that it will provide news from Knight-Ridder's Real Cities network to handheld devices such as the PalmPilot. Additional news providers include The New York Times, C/NET, and the Wall Street Journal.
- "Finally, A Peek at Profits:
Some News Sites Find the Formula." CJR, Nov./Dec. 1998. Awards Statistics - Nov. 1998 -- A Jupiter Communications survey reports that more than 80% of U.S. online consumers trust online news as much as they trust newspapers, broadcast television, and cable news outlets.
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Dec. 1998 -- The Pew Center reports that the number of people who get news online at least weekly continues to grow, starting from 4% in 1995 to between 15% to 26% in 1998. Statistics fluctuate related to what is happening in the news. There are approximately 74 million Internet users in the United States.
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The America Online dial-up service has 15,000,000 subscribers. (Source: AOL)
- There are approximately 1280 television stations with sites on the Internet or dial-up services.
(Source: Editor & Publisher) - There are approximately 3250 newspapers with sites on the Internet or dial-up services.
(Source: Editor & Publisher) | | | | |
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