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Blockchain – it’s early days but never too early for publishers to get involved

“Blockchain is a community-driven effort. The idea is that it’s only as successful as the people that are engaged with it and who are joining it.” That is from Jarrod Dicker, the CEO of Po.et. “The people” he’s referring to? That’s you, publishers.

by Nicole Frankenhauser nicole.frankenhauser@wan-ifra.org | June 19, 2018

Dicker (in the photo above) had a great gig at the Bezos-booming Washington Post as the iconic newspaper’s Innovation Chief, helping to roll out such products as the Arc CMS. But earlier this year, he bolted WaPo to head up the blockchain-backed platform Po.et, essentially created “to help save publishing.”

Blockchain is undoubtedly the biggest tech buzzword used today. Across all industries people are talking about this innovative technology, but what are the opportunities for publishers? At WAN-IFRA’s recent World News Media Congress, a session was dedicated to  blockchain – and its growing impact in the news industry – featuring a panel of experts. They sought to demystify the complexity of blockchain and debated its USP in the media landscape.

The conference session, “Blockchain: Help, Hype or Disruption?” was moderated by Guillaume Vasse, CDO/CMO, Groupe Sud Ouest, France, and featured Dicker as the keynote speaker, joined by Dr. Jana Moser, Data Privacy Innovator and Lawyer, Germany, and Jérémie Albert, Co-founder of inBlocks, France.

Blockchain as an opportunity or a threat?

Dicker said the actual technology of the blockchain is simple, basically a decentralised ledger, but the philosophy of its application is where some of the confusion comes in to play. To understand blockchain and its application, Dicker suggested that the audience conceptualize its development to “the tracks that the trains are going to be built on top of to run. These are the early days of foundational structures that we are going to be able to learn and leverage from and build on top of.”

Dean Roper@DeanRoper

This is the very early days of blockchain, much like what the Internet might have looked like in 1968, but the industry has the power to start laying the foundations together of what the blockchain media economy could look like – Jarrod Dicker of http://Po.et  #wnc18

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12:12 PM – Jun 7, 2018

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Dicker, who was previously the Innovation Chief at The Washington Post, said blockchain can influence and build a better media business. He highlighted the “Napster effect” which famously disrupted the music industry and forcibly pivoted it to streaming, but suggested that publishers should seize the opportunity that blockchain technology and its token economy bring.

Dicker emphasised that “blockchain should not replace journalism” but rather offered it as the technology that could accelerate a change in how the business side of media is managed.

Understanding the implications of blockchain in news media

In his presentation, Dicker offered three practical elements of the blockchain with potential to positively influence the current media landscape.

  • Attribution: A person can identify, vet and verify the source of immutable content, bringing total transparency to publishing. One has the ability to stamp ownership information onto the blockchain and leverage it to put contract rules in place to license the content and put a price on it if someone wants to re-publish, for example.
  • Reputation: Even though many media houses around the world have established themselves over decades as trusted news sources, the reality is that trust in news is at an all-time low – thanks in large part to social media and other dubious sources online. In a decentralised media economy where everything is built on reputation, Dicker relayed that the community is encouraged to “stomp out bad actors and rise good actors and this will elevate the entire media system because the incentivisations are financial” and not being truthful could be costly. Essentially, Dicker said the blockchain can help publishers to build a reputation benchmark.
  • Discovery: This pertains to how content is distributed and where it can be found. To explain the connection between discovery and security, Dicker used an example of IP blocking. He said, “there’s a company called Inkrypt that’s building on top of Po.et, which is working on fragmenting hosting so that when information is being blocked by IP there is now an opportunity to fragment information securely and be able to deliver it so it can’t be blocked from a single database.” This is a good example of how blockchain technology can be deployed to circumvent the dangers of censorship.

Where do publishers go from here with the blockchain?

Despite its promise, Dicker was candid in his assessment of how widespread blockchain is in media organisations at the moment: Many discussions are taking place, but there are not so many publishers yet on board. One of the more publicised initiatives is Civil, which announced during Congress that Vivian Schiller is joining its Foundation as CEO, and shortly after Congress that it has launched its first newsrooms.

Joanne Lipman@joannelipman

Everybody talks about #blockchain – and now @Vivian is going to show us how it can transform journalism Congrats!! #WNC18 https://twitter.com/vivian/status/1004671007548936192 …

Vivian Schiller@vivian

Some news https://blog.joincivil.com/why-im-joining-civil-ca474d8b7440 … @Join_Civil

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12:02 PM – Jun 7, 2018 · Cascais, Portugal

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Unsurprisingly, ad tech companies have been early adopters of the technology because they implement it as an ad fraud controller, he said.

Moser suggested the notion that blockchain could open new business opportunities where traditional monthly subscription plans could be rethought. For example, directly pay the journalist or author. However, it is unlikely that publishers are looking now to overhaul their subscription strategies, but the idea is that they should not be resistant to change looking ahead. “Media companies want to be digital,” Moser said, “but don’t want to disrupt themselves. As long as they try to hold onto the old structure, we won’t see any new business idea, business model or use case based on blockchain.”

While publishers are at the beginning of understanding blockchain’s transformative abilities, there is a lot to learn in this experimental stage. If you’re interested in learning more about this topic then please stay tuned for the upcoming WAN-IFRA Report, “Blockchain in News Media” brought to you by Arcada University of Applied Sciences in Finland and the Global Alliance of Media Innovation (https://media-innovation.news).

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