Guidelines for Content Aggregation and Curation

In this week’s New York Times, David Carr reports on a new committee to formulate standards for content aggregation. The committee, created by Ad Age columnist Simon Dumenco, has the support of some of the major media websites, but few prominent bloggers.

Dumenco decided to form the committee after writing a series of columns in protest over the Huffington Post’s aggregation of one of his articles.

However, the guidelines for aggregation have never really been in question. They are based, in part, on the Associated Press guidelines for covering scoops that have appeared in other periodicals. The reporter’s primary responsibilities are to give credit where credit is due and to refrain from co-opting another reporter’s work.

In a very clever meta example of aggregation, New York’s Joe Coscarelli covers Carr’s story, and in brackets lays out his personal guidelines. Coscarelli includes common practice — identify the original source, link, and don’t over-summarize — then adds a few additional rules — “sloppy metaphor,” “pithy conclusion” and “snark.”

Here are Coscarelli’s guidelines:

  1. Identify Source, and Potentially Author (Esp. With Columns/Opinion Pieces), Early on
  2. Briefly Summarize
  3. Link
  4. Refine Focus
  5. Disclose, if Necessary
  6. Link
  7. Snark
  8. Jump
  9. Opine Generally with Adjectives
  10. Block Quote (Not to Much)
  11. Analyze
  12. Sloppy Metaphor
  13. Link to Secondary Source
  14. Link Internally to Relevant Story
  15. Link Internally to Another Relevant Story
  16. Link to Tertiary Source
  17. Return to Original Article in Question
  18. Pithy Conclusion
  19. Snark
  20. Link to Source Again

It’s rare  to see the standard opinion-post template laid out in such a clear and funny fashion.  Carr responded to Coscarelli’s post via Twitter: “////A thing of rare (didactic) beauty.”

 

Via The New York Times and New York Magazine’s Daily Intel

 

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