Nieman Foundation at Harvard
HOME
          
LATEST STORY
“AI reporters” are covering the events of the day in Northwest Arkansas
ABOUT                    SUBSCRIBE
Oct. 17, 2008, 5:01 p.m.

646-GET-FIRED

A new innovation for blogs sounds a lot like an old model for newspapers: Gawker unveiled a voice mailbox today for sources who don’t want to leave a digital trace of their gossip, leaked memos, and other tips. Publisher Nick Denton explained that “everybody’s more paranoid than ever that the boss’ IT agents are snooping.” Now, instead of emailing, they can call 646-214-8138. (That’s a third-tier New York City area code, which Gawker would be sure to mock if any other media company were using it.) We gave the number a ring this afternoon, and here’s the surprisingly corporate-sounding voice on the other end of the line.

Denton said callers should indicate if they don’t want the audio of their call published on the site. Otherwise, they could end up like some readers of the San Francisco Chronicle, which last year published voicemail messages left by irate or otherwise amusing callers. Does your news organization have a way for tips to be left by phone, anonymously or no?

POSTED     Oct. 17, 2008, 5:01 p.m.
Show tags
 
Join the 60,000 who get the freshest future-of-journalism news in our daily email.
“AI reporters” are covering the events of the day in Northwest Arkansas
OkayNWA’s AI-generated news site is the future of local journalism and/or a glorified CMS.
Does legacy news help or hurt in the fight against election misinformation?
Plus: One way local newspapers covered the pandemic well, how rational thinking can encourage misinformation, and what a Muslim journalistic value system looks like.
Ear Hustle’s new audio space is just the first step in a bigger plan
The studio, at the California Institution for Women, will bring more incarcerated women’s voices to the podcast — and kickstart an ambitious training program.