Saturday, August 6, 2011

Google News gets a new human touch, launching publisher-curated Editors’ Picks as a standing section

NiemanLabs reporting:
When Google News launched in 2002, it did so with some declarations: “This page was generated entirely by computer algorithms without human editors.” And: “No humans were harmed or even used in the creation of this page.”
That core approach — computerized curation, algorithmic authority, NoMo sapiens — has served Google News well in the nearly-a-decade it’s been around, providing users with the multifaceted view of human events that is the news site’s hallmark. (Not to mention a reach that, Google News claims, sends over 1 billion clicks a month to news publishers worldwide.)
But the thing about humans is that, occasionally, they’re helpful to have around. Especially when it comes to the increasingly difficult task that is keeping track of the world as it twists and turns. Which is why, starting today, Google News is introducing a new section to its U.S. edition: Editors’ Picks, a display of original content that journalists (human ones!) have selected as editorial highlights from their publications.
The feature, which will live on the right-hand column of the Google News page, “is the latest addition to recent improvements we’ve made to the variety and presence of stories and multimedia on Google News,” software engineer Yogita Mehta notes in a blog post announcing the section. But “because Google News relies on algorithms, Editors’ Picks will always be just that — picks provided by publishers themselves, and not by Google.”
http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/08/google-news-gets-a-new-human-touch-launching-publisher-curated-editors-picks-as-a-standing-section/?utm_source=Daily+Lab+email+list&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=542fae5616-DAILY_EMAIL

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