Well, my guess on the tip off is the first line. As far as I know, only public companies have to make security filings. There's no chance in the world that a company like Brilliant Digital Entertainment is public.
Will journalism in the new media age ever adapt appoaches towards delivering the news that stray away from the tradition epistolatory form? In other words, for the most part, most news organizations (e.g. msnbc.com, salon, reuters...) still tend towards the a-to-z format, where you have a strong lede, followed by the who, what, when, where. Reading something at CNN.com is not too different than reading something in the morning paper. Will news organizations ever start experimenting with forms that are steeped in the potential of a networked architecture?
Well, my guess on the tip off is the first line. As far as I know, only public companies have to make security filings. There's no chance in the world that a company like Brilliant Digital Entertainment is public.
Will journalism in the new media age ever adapt appoaches towards delivering the news that stray away from the tradition epistolatory form? In other words, for the most part, most news organizations (e.g. msnbc.com, salon, reuters...) still tend towards the a-to-z format, where you have a strong lede, followed by the who, what, when, where. Reading something at CNN.com is not too different than reading something in the morning paper. Will news organizations ever start experimenting with forms that are steeped in the potential of a networked architecture?