RecSys 2007 Keynote Impressions

I had the pleasure of attending the ACM Recommender Systems Conference, as part of the research division of MyStrands (as well as a participant in the associated doctoral consortium). I was also offered the opportunity to discuss a few of the papers and “themes” of the conference in more detail here as a guest blogger.

There were too many ideas and themes that interested me this year, but in particular, I was very interested to hear Khrishna Bharat, principle scientist at Google, give the keynote. Greg Linden from Findory gives a good overview, which I won’t repeat. Dr. Bharat’s talk was a very detailed argument of journalism as a necessary cultural function, and not just a reflection (or exaggeration) of online novelty and whim.

His main argument was of journalism and free press being a necessary agent (and product of) democracy. While Google News has come under fire for potentially undermining the economic viability of online journalism, Krishna argues that Google News actually increases traffic to such sites.

However, much of his emphasis (and closing remarks), came in his discussion of the journalists who risk their lives to cover developments in hostile international countries and situations. Many people may have better tools and options for the exploration and discovery of relevant news items, especially in the realm of technical or entertainment journalism. However, the biggest threat to journalism as an agent of democracy may be the increasing number of reporters killed pursuing their trade.

Any sort of news is a function of three populations: Those who collect and distill the event into words, those who editorialize and sort these events into meaningful chunks of information, and finally those of us who consume this information. All of the technology in the world cannot replace a single journalist, and Bharat believes that this is actually one of the most important issues for journalism in general, both online or print.

Justin Donaldson, Researcher, MyStrands

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