Using internet sources can be a time-consuming, ineffective procedure that can often not only be time-consuming but potentially inaccurate. However, by following the guidelines of Computer Assisted Reporting (CAR) the internet can be a vital journalistic tool.
Many people remain on the electoral register’s public database, and many websites, including 192.com, take advantage of this. They provide access to information about particular individuals that would be otherwise unavailable. This service is very accurate and useful, unless the person has their name withdrawn from the public database under the Representation of the People Act 2000. This is becoming more and more common, and as a result such websites are becoming more and more obsolete.
Advanced google searching allows for more accurate searches when looking for particular sources. For example, public opinions voiced on facebook can be studied by typing in a key word followed by ‘site:facebook.com/topic’, whilst academic experts can be found through searching with ‘site: ac.uk’. Furthermore, the usage of ‘site: gov.uk’ would only search governmental sites. These searches will save time, and can be a vital way to quickly gain information that could otherwise take a long time to find. The disadvantages of using these methods include the small possibility that websites could be hacked into and altered. This happened to the website www.crimereduction.homeoffice.gov.uk in June 2008.
When using sites like Wikipedia, it is important to note that whilst a large proportion of the stories are correct, and there are large teams of moderators working to ensure that people do not post incorrect information, it can still be incorrectly listed online at the time that a journalist looks up a story. This makes the site too unreliable for a journalist to use as a source, although it can still be useful to get a basic overview of something if no other source is available.
The internet can be used to access contemporary newspaper stories online, alongside large archives hosted at websites such as www.lexisnexis.com, which can save time finding a hard-to-access story from an old paper.
User Generated Content can be a potential journalistic pitfall. Whilst it can be a useful way to gather public opinion via blogs, podcasts, and comments, it can also lead a gullible journalist astray with unsubstantiated claims and extremist viewpoints. These claims could be made by innocent members of the public who do not attempt to deceive, but the journalist would be at fault if they printed them.
There are also those who attempt to deliberately deceive journalists, such as the photoshopping of photos that were published on the Sky News website by members of a football forum, which included inserting pictures of Madeline McCann into a picture of a storm.
This means that a journalist must be diligent and suspicious of internet based sources, whilst at the same time aware that they can be both useful and time-saving, something that is vital in modern journalism.