Please review the document below. And the link as wellhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VWS4x0AxIk
COM 251
Communication,
Information, and Society
Chapter 7:
Mass Media Communication
MASS MEDIA
COMMUNICATION
Mass Media Communication
In this presentation, we will discuss:
What is Mass Media?
What are the types of Mass Media?
What is the role of Mass Media in Society?
What is Mass Media ?
All media technologies used for mass communications
Organisations which control these technologies
Types of Mass Media
Print (Newspapers/Magazines)
Recordings
Cinema
Radio
Television
Internet
Mobile phones
Power of Mass Media
Key role in political power
Shaping public perceptions on important issues
Shaping modern culture (belief, values, traditions)
Print Media
Paper and ink
Late 15th century
Newspapers, magazines,
classifieds, circulars, journals,
yellow pages, billboards,
posters, brochures, and
catalogues
Recordings
Use of storage media
Late 19th century
Gramophone records,
magnetic tapes, cassettes,
cartridges, CDs, DVDs
Cinema
Film: Story conveyed with moving images
Since around 1900
Cameras, animation, visual effects
Types of films
Comedy, Drama, Horror, Action,
Children’s, Suspense/Thriller, Fantasy,
Crime, Romance, Science Fiction,
Documentary, Family, Mystery
Radio
One-way transmission over radio
waves intended to reach a wide
audience
Since around 1910
College, Commercial, Community,
International broadcasting, Music,
Pirate, Public
Television
Telecommunication medium for
transmitting and receiving moving
images (usually with sound)
Since about 1950
News, Movies, Situation comedy,
Sports events, Audience
participation, Talk/conversation,
Music, Reality-based show,
Devotional/religious
Internet
World Wide Web (since about 1990)
Websites (news, blogs, social networking, wiki)
Forums/message board
Internet telephony (e.g. VoIP)
Email, Instant messaging and chat
Streaming audio (podcasts, Internet radio)
Streaming video (webcasts, podcasts, YouTube videos)
Mobile Phones
Make mobile telephone calls across a wide
geographic area
Since about 2000 (3G – mass media)
The first personal mass media
Permanently carried
Always on
Built-in payment mechanism
The most accurate audience measurement
Who are the biggest mass
media players?
The world’s largest media
corporations
The dark side of mass media
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Fake news – intentional fabrication of factually incorrect information.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Redistributing fake news – redistributing of fake news published by
other media outlet.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Spin – intentional attempt to steer public attention from a current
relevant event or
information.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Disinformation – false or selective presentation of existing
information.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Manipulation of facts – misleading interpretation of factually correct
information.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Pseudoscience – presenting non-scientific or pseudoscientific claims
as scientific facts.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Conspiracy theory – explicit or implicit claim of the existence of a
hidden malevolent plan, without presenting evidence for it.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Biased reporting – news coverage which advocates or openly favors
one side in a dispute or a controversy; and/or portrays another side in
a negative light without providing its perspective.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Censorship – relevant information intentionally unreported or
removed after being published.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Clickbait – misleading and/or exaggerated media headlines or social
media shares.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Hidden advertisement – promotional material presented as news.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Unverifiable – claims that can’t be verified, mainly due lack of cited or
verifiable sources.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Satire – clearly declared satirical content which has the potential of
being mistaken as genuine news, requiring clarification in such cases.
FALSE or MISLEADING MEDIA
• Error – incorrect information published as a result of an unintentional
mistake.
WHAT TO KEEP
• We are all exposed to mass media.
• Mass media is a way to get informed, entertained, and
persuaded.
• Mass media is one of the biggest business in the world.
• With great power comes great responsibility.
• It is important to know about the dark side of mass media.
• Mass media plays a role in our own perceptions of things.
Summary
COM 251
Communication,
Information, and Society
Chapter 5:
Digital Communication and MoJo
ONLINE COMMUNICATION
ONLINE COMMUNICATION & MOBILE JOURNALISM
In this presentation, we will discuss:
What is online communication?
Who are the digital natives?
What is mobile journalism?
ONLINE COMMUNICATION
How people as well as
computers communicate with
each other through a
computer network and the
internet.
TYPES OF ONLINE COMMUNICATION
Emails
SMS
Chats
Forums
Instant Messaging
VoIP
Social Media
Key benefits of social media
• Encourage participation, conversation, and community
– spread key messages, influence decision making, and promote
behavior change.
• Reach people when, where, and how it is convenient for them, which
improves the availability of content and might influence satisfaction
and trust in messages delivered.
• Build awareness and credibility.
Components of a social media post
•# before a relevant keyword or phrase (no spaces) in a post – to categorize those posts and help them
show more easily when searching
•@ @replies, @tags – auto-suggest dropdown based on what you’ve typed after the @ symbol
•Video/ Photo material
•Hyperlinks – www….
•Text, Text, Text….
Can you image what the future
will look like?
The term digital native describes a person
who has grown up in the digital age,
rather than having acquired familiarity
with digital systems as an adult, as a
digital immigrant.
Example of social
media
segmentation use…
Mobile Journalism
Began as a phenomenon known as Backpack Journalism
News outlets began to realize that literally millions of human
beings were walking around with video
cameras
They began accepting and then paying people for their video.
It’s a real thing
The Wall Street Journal trains all reporters to use their phone as still and video
cameras
CNN iReport is an entire website dedicated to citizen journalism
TV stations are equipping their reporters with apps that will push back content
from the field
Sites such as MobileVideoDIY and apps such as Storymaker help anyone with a
smartphone produce professional quality video packages
What is at stake?
• Legal responsibilities (Freedom of speech/press vs. responsibility):
– Copyrights.
– Defamation.
– Wiretapping.
– Invasion of Privacy.
What is at stake?
• Ethical and moral responsibilities :
– Blasphemy.
– Immoral content
– Disrespect for specific social groups.
(children, the elderly, victims etc.).
– Disrespect for one’s own family,
group of friends, colleagues etc.
What is at stake?
• Social Responsibility:
– Environmental responsibility.
– Human rights responsibility.
– Philanthropic responsibility.
– Economic responsibility.
What is at stake?
• Risks:
– Your own privacy.
– Your own security / safety?
(you may face threats and aggression)
– Psychological consequences.
– Plagiarism (vs. copyright).
WHAT TO KEEP
• Online communication shapes human societies.
• Types of online communication include email,
videoconferencing, chats and social media among many
others.
• Social media has revolutionized the way humans interact
through devices.
• Mobile Journalism is a revolutionizing Media.
Summary