1. Introduction
With each communications revolution, journalists have always needed to adjust to learning new technologies in order to communicate accurate information to mass audiences. When the radio was invented, journalists mastered the skill of speaking to a mass audience in real time, and when television was invented, they learned to effectively communicate information to a mass audience through video. However, the development of the Internet completely transformed the way people worldwide are connected and destroyed the concept of “the masses.” With the development of the Internet and mobile technologies, it is no longer possible for journalists to survive by simply learning the art of technology.
To see why, consider the profit structure of traditional journalism. In short, journalists served as gatekeepers, connecting the world and the masses. The public had to pay for subscriptions to gain access to journalistic media, e.g., read newspapers or magazines or watch TV. Companies had to advertise their products by renting space in a given journalistic medium. The journalistic media monopolized or oligopolized the channel connecting the world and the public, which made it easy to earn money [
1]. However, the Internet has given individuals a window to connect directly with the world. Google and Facebook have given users much more options, and consumers have adapted easily to a platform that can tailor to their tastes. Journalists, as one of these options, could not help but notice the unreasonable high advertising costs assigned to the platform operators.
Fake news and phishing articles not only create public opinions that cloud people’s objective judgment of politics, but can also arouse public distrust of journalism [
2,
3]. Fake news and phishing articles appear and spread more frequently on the Internet and in mobile environments [
4]. Of course, going back to the birth of news, the delivery of true information has often been accompanied by political instigation and gossip. Since it is easier to earn advertising revenue with just one click, it may be argued that there is no reason why we should not manipulate the news. However, the value of journalism, i.e., its credibility, is at the heart of what makes journalism a sustainable industry in this society. Journalists have persuaded people that they are the ones who regulate power based on accuracy and speed, and who act as the defenders of civil liberties, thereby creating the reason for their existence. However, fake news and biased articles have reduced the sustainability of the industry by overlooking the trust of citizens.
Sometimes, disruptive innovation, which completely breaks down the existing industrial structure and creates a new structure, can have more influence than sustaining innovation, which complements the disadvantages but maintains the existing structure [
5]. The journalism industry, which is rapidly collapsing, needs new structures and markets. Innovation in the emerging blockchain technology opens up new market possibilities in many areas. This innovation is not only sufficiently applicable to the field of journalism, it can also improve the problems discussed above. In this paper, we propose a journalism model that provides completely personalized news based on a distributed system by moving away from centralized control.
Personalized journalism based on blockchain aims to accomplish three things: First, it delivers articles with value to share. It prevents article abuse, filters out fake news, and produces more useful news. Second, it automates the process of setting the agenda. It aims to minimize the power held by both traditional journalism and new platform operators. Finally, it creates a public area, the agora (an ancient Greek term for a public open space used for assemblies and markets), where opinions are collected. By achieving these goals, critical voices can monitor power and contribute to social development.
This paper is developed as follows:
Section 2 introduces related work.
Section 3 describes the design of the overall architecture and hybrid blockchain with journalism.
Section 4 describes more specific models. The proof-of-sharing concept is presented and personalized journalism and the agora are mentioned.
Section 5 presents a scenario for the flow from proof of sharing to personalized systems.
Section 6 concludes the paper.
3. Overview of the Proposed Model
3.1. Centralized Sand Distributed Systems for Journalism
Figure 1 shows a schematic of the journalism ecosystem before the development of the online environment. When a small number of publication houses monopolized the journalism market, their strength was absolute. The press had authority over setting agendas, and readers had no choice but to receive the news that the press decided was important for them. At that time, the press called readers “the masses” and treated them as one mass. A mass by definition is not able to choose the news according to personal wishes. Despite the emergence of new media companies, they can consistently monopolize the market because of the unique characteristics of media products. Media products are subject to network externality. After the initial entry, the press secured some readers, and the media gained readers by being heavily advertised and capitalized. Due to quality articles produced by the capital-rich press, readers were gained again. This made it difficult for media companies that entered later to survive [
34]. For example, in certain regions of the United States, there is now only one local newspaper left. The exclusive press was afraid of business, and even the government. When media attention turned to them, the companies were at a disadvantage. Under these circumstances, the press had no opponents to check its operations, only itself. In other words, they could manipulate the information as much as they liked, or lead public opinion in the direction they wanted [
35].
However, as the Internet developed, the situation gradually reversed.
Figure 2 shows a schematic of the relationship between the newly emerging platform operators and the heavily competitive press.
People can access Internet platforms anytime and anywhere, and have more choices. Advertisers no longer need to meet consumers only through spaces provided by the press. Mobile developments have accelerated this phenomenon. As people spent more and more time on new media, they became more likely to receive articles on the Internet and mobile platforms. Subscription fees through traditional methods have dropped drastically. In addition, Internet media companies or individual content producers have entered the market, further competing for limited advertising expenditure. In this environment, it was a stimulus that the press chose to gain more attention. They wrote increasingly provocative articles to receive even one more click, and they did not hesitate to write fake news and phishing articles. Fake news spread quickly and easily on the high-speed Internet network. At the same time, the public’s trust in the press dropped. Another problem is that a small number of platform operators have become too strong. Although it looked like an individual choice, article layouts and recommended algorithms were tightly locked to the secrecy of the platform operators. There was also a problem with privacy protection.
The traditional press had the power to manipulate public opinion. The present press prints a large volume of inferior articles swayed by platform operators. Both have led to a crumbling of public confidence in the press. The common point of both problems is that centralized power has the editing rights. Blockchain opens up the possibility of a decentralized network. We propose that if centralized editing fails in journalism, the solution could be to distribute editing rights using blockchain technology.
Figure 3 shows a schematic of the ecosystem of journalism on a blockchain. In distributed journalism, readers and journalists can meet directly. In addition, readers own the data for all articles generated, and they can receive news through automated recommendation algorithms.
3.2. Journalism on Hybrid Blockchain
In journalism on blockchain, the data stored in the chain are articles, thus it is a database composed of linked articles. The reason why we utilized hybrid blockchain, not public blockchain or private blockchain, is that journalists and consumers who participate in the network have different properties. The hybrid blockchain is appropriate when there are heterogeneous participants, as we have seen above. The process of verifying facts and generating information is not something that anyone can do, like financial transactions, and it is professional. For this reason, participants allowed to perform the work should have prior approval. At the same time, the created article blockchain should be accessible to anyone participating in the network. In other words, both journalists and consumers have the right to read the article blockchain, while only journalists have the right to write articles.
It is possible, with the consensus of preapproved participants or journalists, to create new articles on a journalism hybrid blockchain. This process of consensus is different from the mining activities, or proof of work, of the public blockchain, because journalism has different characteristics from the general transaction process. An article includes a viewpoint of the reporter looking at the facts. Putting a reporter’s viewpoint in the article does not mean that the article is false, it just conveys one aspect of the facts. Journalists can write about various aspects of the same fact. Therefore, we should not censor article writing by prior consent. On the other hand, not all information is worth sharing with people. For example, the news that my dog died may not be of any benefit to other people. The proof of sharing process is the process of authenticating whether or not a share is worth writing an article.
4. Proof of Sharing, Self-Regulating, Personalization, and the Agora
4.1. Proof of Sharing
Proof of sharing is the process of getting certified by preapproved journalists to link to an existing article chain when an article is created.
Figure 4 shows a schematic of the simple process of proof of sharing.
Journalist A creates a new article. The article goes through a redundant verification procedure for journalist B. This is the process of preventing similar articles from appearing many times. Journalist B checks whether the article is truly new. In order for journalists and consumers to have different access rights to the article blockchain, and to function as a journalist, the node should undergo a reliability verification process. This process assumes trust in journalist B. Duplicate verification consists of simple comparisons between new and existing articles. This does not require any subjective judgment. Therefore, a single randomly extracted journalist with an automatic duplicate check can sufficiently judge it. Since all journalists will also verify the value of sharing after duplicate screening operations, this has to save time and shorten the process of article creation.
All journalists will be able to receive confirmed articles immediately. Journalists who receive an article may leave brief comments, which may be positive or negative, or not comment at all. The more comments that are left in a limited amount of time, the more valuable the article is, and the more it is worth sharing. The time for commenting should be limited to ensure timeliness.
Comments are stored together in a block of the article that cannot be modified, but only added to by authenticated users. At this time, the criteria for judging what it is worth sharing are determined by the rules developed when the article blockchain was created. This is a consensual rule, not a decision made by a particular leader or delegate. Therefore, network participants can change the rules by consensus. In a more sophisticated model, different criteria may apply, depending on whether the article is breaking news or not. As mentioned earlier, the right to write to the article blockchain is in the hands of trusted journalists. Finally, journalists link articles that they think are worth sharing to an existing article blockchain.
4.2. Self-Regulating Rule
This section discusses the attacker who can reduce the platform’s reliability and proposes a rule for solving the problem. Even if an article passes a comment rule (which, according to proof of sharing, can only be stored in an article chain when a certain number of comments is received), the article may still be fake news or undesirable content. If fake news continues to circulate through comment rules, the platform may be unreliable. In order to prevent this, the platform should continue to validate journalists.
We already ask journalists to go through the verification process through comment rules themselves before an article is distributed. However, the comment rules only determine whether the article is worth sharing and distributes articles that are of interest to the majority of readers. The reason why we cannot completely exclude fake news before it is distributed is freedom of expression. We can never give clear criteria for what fake news is. To judge the veracity of an article, therefore, it is preferable to use follow-up measures rather than advance actions.
The journalism model based on blockchain includes the forced exit rule, whereby journalists who debase the platform by continuously distributing fake news must leave. Journalists who may be stakeholders should not proceed with this verification. This is because if a group with the same interests evaluate it, objectivity may deteriorate. In order words, groups that grant journalists status and groups that deprive journalists should be different. In
Section 3.2, we state that granting journalist status is possible by consensus among journalists participating in the network. Then, the qualification to deprive journalists of their status should be by consumers who become exclusive groups with journalists. For example, if consumer judge that an article is fake news, they may warn the journalist who wrote the article. Journalists who receive these warnings across multiple articles will automatically no longer be able to write articles. The self-regulating rule cannot block all journalists who distribute bad quality articles, but it can be at least a supplement to the ecosystem to self-regulate itself.
4.3. Personalized Journalism
The following discusses the matter of article distribution. This is the agenda setting, and it is the ultimate reason why the press of the platform holds such great power. Until now, organizations that published articles had difficulty knowing all their readers’ personal information, so they delivered common articles to everyone, or provided articles targeting groups whose characteristics could be predicted. Personalized journalism provides everyone with the news they really need. It becomes possible for every individual to access the distributed article blockchain. The process of making personalized journalism through distributed article blockchain is as follows:
Any articles contained in an article blockchain are likely to be listed for the participants. All participants can view all the articles in the blockchain. However, the final set of articles is selected individually according to the digital identities of the network consumers. The provider of such a service is a journalist. Personalized recommendation systems will run almost automatically, unlike platforms or media outlets that have authority over all the agenda settings. This is because the above process is completely independent of agenda settings. Given that a third party cannot control all journalists participating in a blockchain and cannot manipulate all the individual agenda settings, it is virtually impossible to control the media and manipulate public opinion in personalized journalism.
Furthermore, the personalized journalism model is also meaningful as a business model. Until now, the media’s main source of revenue has been advertising. Personalized recommendation systems are highly attractive to advertisers that want to increase the effectiveness of their advertising by targeting suitable consumers. Paid services that receive content fees in exchange for providing articles to consumers can be a business model for journalism, but may also offer free services along with advertisements through a personalized recommendation system.
4.4. The Agora
The agora was a public space where citizens voiced their opinions in ancient Athens. The role that citizens expect of the media is not just information delivery, but also criticism by the intelligence that authorities are leading citizens in the wrong direction. They must construct the agora of public opinion and make the citizens’ handpicked power fear their voices. The agora organically connects with the preceding article blockchain, but it is obviously a different space. The public space for the agora can be created as a public blockchain, and the data stored in the agora blockchain are the arguments of participants. Anyone can participate, and read and write freely. Even robots can form a node. A robot certified as a journalist in the article blockchain may function as a journalist collecting public opinion from the blockchain and generate new articles. The detailed structure of the agora blockchain is outside the scope of this paper, but we will reinforce it in later studies.
5. Scenario
5.1. Scenario
We discussed the process of creating articles through proof of sharing and the possibility of personalized distribution. In this section, we look specifically at various situations that can arise in the process of proof of sharing and personalized recommendation systems.
Figure 5 is a schematic of how to store articles in an article blockchain and deliver them to customers. It is based on proof of sharing and a personalized recommendation system, but it does not give an absolute direction. Participants can change the rules by consensus, further developing the system.
In
Figure 5, the red shapes depict the process of proof of sharing and diagram a flow to store articles in an article blockchain. This makes sure that articles do not duplicate existing articles before checking their timeliness. Breaking news articles should be stored and be immediately visible to consumers. As the articles do not go through the process of verifying shared values, a solid standard is required that can be categorized as a breaking news item. Even if it is not breaking news, the timeliness of the article is still important. Time-setting is the process of limiting the time within which journalists can leave comments. Any article that does not have sufficient comments within that time is discarded. The next step is to judge whether the amount of comments is sufficient or not. The example above stores articles that have more than the average number of comments. Journalism model participants decide by consensus how to determine the storage criteria. For example, one criterion can be an average number of comments.
Two assumptions are necessary for the proof of sharing mechanism to work smoothly. First, there is no immediate reward for the tasks required for the process, i.e., confirming duplication and determining whether an article is worth sharing. Second, these tasks are essential to the formation of the platform, and participating journalists should be mandated to accomplish them. For example, journalists should immediately review whether their articles duplicate other articles, and they should make comments on whether there is shared value for any articles. Based on the current situation, where an average of 6.42 articles are posted on the Internet per minute (1,109,028 articles published from January to April 2018 [
36]), if six journalists each comment on an article, then the probability that the article will get a comment is 0.16. As another example, suppose that 120 journalists each produce two articles in a day. When articles produced in a day are distributed evenly over time, 10 articles per hour are issued. Within a one-hour time frame and comments on two articles by each journalist, each article receive 20% of the comments, on average, as shown in the above assumption. If a journalist comments on one article each time he or she creates an article, the article gets an average of 10% comments. As such, the frequency of occurrence of articles is closely related to the number of comments. However, apart from this, journalists must reach a consensus on how many articles to evaluate each time they create an article. Even if an article receives an average of 20% of comments, journalists must agree whether the average value is the basis for storing articles in the blockchain.
The green diamonds in
Figure 5 describe the flow process of personalized delivery. Personalization is performed in many ways, based on the digital identities of consumers. Consumers can selectively display information about themselves when they access the article blockchain. For example, consumers A to D provide examples of criteria that consumers can choose based on the characteristics of the article blockchain, while consumer E shows personalization in terms of the content of articles. Personalized service for consumer E becomes possible when the classification according to the content of the article is included as an element of the article block. This model requires further refinement. Consumer A wants to see articles that are more favorable to journalists. No matter how many times the article receives comments, when there are more negative comments than positive comments, consumer A cannot receive the article. Consumer B wants articles that receive more attention than what the criteria in the blockchain allow. Consumer B cannot receive articles that do not have more than half the number of comments. On the other hand, consumers who do not present any information, such as consumer C, can see all saved articles. However, as information about the consumer’s preferences accumulates, the model will recommend articles based on information about features of preferred content or other consumers’ preferences with similar choice. Consumer D wants opinion-activated articles. If comments show the significance of the article as determined by journalists, the agora is the importance of the article as judged by the public. In addition, there could be a variety of consumer preferences.
All the figures presented in the scenario above and the information about consumers A to E are assumptions. These assumptions can fluctuate over time. However, by providing several scenarios, we can see the effectiveness of journalistic models when they are on the blockchain. First, only articles that have undergone duplication testing can start the journalism blockchain storage process. Second, the editorial right to the news is distributed to all journalists in the blockchain. Journalists can decide whether to comment on an article or not, and they may agree on the standard for the value of sharing, e.g., the average in the above example. In other words, no journalist has absolute authority over the platform. Third, consumers read the article blockchain through different windows. Each consumer has a different arrangement of articles, which is subject to various digital identities, so no third party can control them.
5.2. Experimental Setup and Simulation
As we discussed in
Section 5.1, receiving comments is the most important criterion for article distribution. In this section, we provide an analysis that can be referred to when setting the criteria for linking an article to an article chain (in the example in the previous section, receiving an average number of comments or more was the criterion). In the preceding scenarios, judgments about whether an article is commented on and distributed are influenced by three variables: the number of published articles per minute, the number of comments per article, and time setting. The number of published articles per minute refers to the assumption about the average number of articles per minute. The number of comments per article is the number of comments that journalists must leave in order to publish articles. Time setting refers to the maximum amount of time that comments can accumulate before determining whether or not to issue an article. Only articles that obtain the number of comments that meet the rule after the set time are automatically distributed. When a journalist publishes an article, the time setting delays the time until the model distributes it to consumers and sequentially attaches it to an existing node in chronological order. This solves the problem of the validity of node replication in existing blockchains. The model distributes articles published first, and if there are chains with different time sequences, the model replicates chains in sequential order.
Table 1 is a comparison of six cases that vary depending on the number of articles issued per minute, time setting, and the number of comments needed to publish an article. We set three variables through algorithms and randomly extracted articles and required that comments be made. We set minimum and maximum values for the number of articles issued per minute based on the actual average number of articles published per minute per day [
36]. Time setting also considered the way in which actual articles were published and circulated. Based on the timeliness, we considered that 24 h would be the maximum. Finally, the number of comments required per article was set to at least two. This is because split-ticket voting can provide voters with an election insurance policy rather than a straight vote [
37]. Especially since it is not a vote to select the best articles, it should be possible to vote not only for articles favorable to voters but also for what they believe is necessary.
Table 1 also contains information about how many articles can be published in a year. The table gives us an idea of how many comments each article will receive, roughly, for the entire year. Histograms below show the distribution of articles according to the number of comments (
Figure 6). The x-axis of the graph represents the number of comments, and the y-axis represents the number of articles that received comments.
As a result, the average of the number of comments on an article converges to the number of comments required when a journalist publishes an article. Second, as the number of comments increases, the number of articles about the number of comments becomes a normal distribution. Third, the average number of articles published or the time setting does not affect the number of articles for the number of comments. However, we should be careful that as the number of published articles increases or the time frame becomes longer, the number of articles journalists should consider commenting on also increases. Finally, when we store an article based on the set number of comments, that is, the average number of comments an article can receive, we know that the model stores only about 60% of the articles published by journalists. If you want to increase or decrease the number of articles stored in the chain, you can adjust the blockchain under the agreement of the participants.
6. Conclusions
In this paper, we proposed a journalism model based on blockchain with sharing spaces. It is based on a society of common ownership with distributed ledger technology. The design of the model reflects the unique characteristics of journalism. First, we applied a hybrid blockchain to the journalism model. This is because the access rights of journalists and consumers involved in the blockchain network must be different. Preapproved journalists have both write and access rights to the blockchain. Consumers cannot create articles, but have access to the chain created by journalists. Second, we introduced the concept of proof of sharing, which is a kind of verification process for linking newly created articles to existing chains, and is conducted by preapproved journalists. Since journalists can write from multiple perspectives on the same fact, it is meaningless to verify the creation with a 51% rule. In this process, journalists verify that an article is worth sharing. Third, we proposed a rule that enables self-regulating action for blockchain journalism. The space where news is formed is inevitably threatened by false information. The self-regulating rule helps the platform’s self-regulatory behavior by allowing different groups to manage the inflow and exit of journalists, who are the main agents for publishing articles on the platform. Fourth, personalized journalism is a function that recommends articles to individuals in personal places with a distributed article chain. As the agenda is set up individually, it has the effect of dispersing the great power of the traditional media. Finally, the argument tag, attached separately from the article creation, serves as a sort of agora for people to exchange opinions. Through these functions, we hope to use it as a new, alternative journalism to solve the chronic problems of journalism today.
In this paper, we did not mention any incentive for journalists. There are two major areas where journalists can receive incentives: the cost of evaluating articles during the proof-of-sharing process and the cost of content they write. Until now, journalists have been paid to write articles by media companies or platform operators. Their role was to write articles. However, journalists gradually have to become the owners of the platform themselves. The reason journalists lose power in the media market is because the space where people gather is taken away by platform operators. Platform operators simply bring content together. Imagine a social networking site like Facebook or a portal site like Naver. They just collect the content in one space and then collect people in that space. When people gather there, businesses that want to sell information to people pay attention to it. Where many people gather, more people and businesses are concentrated. This is called network externality. It is hard to see why people gather on the platform simply because of the content. The reason why platform operators, not content creators, are able to earn more revenue is that they spent their time and effort building the space where people gather [
38]. However, we know that journalism has collapsed as the responsibility for the space in which people gather has been passed on to nonjournalists who are platform operators. Therefore, journalists starting in blockchain journalism are required to take responsibility for the platform at the same time. Compensation for proof of sharing is not measurable. Proof of sharing even considers not voting as a meaningful gesture. The process of proof of sharing is essential to maintain a blockchain journalism platform. If someone is given the necessary responsibility to maintain a platform, it should be a journalist who will generate revenue through the blockchain journalism platform.
In this paper, we did not discuss whether it would be better to pay journalists directly in the form of content subscription fees charged to consumers or via advertisers. That is because, although there is a direct connection between consumers and journalists, it is not certain that consumers who are already familiar with free content will pay to subscribe to the news. However, since the proposed journalism model eliminates the broker between advertisers and journalists, and it is difficult for advertisers to control all journalists participating in the network, the probability of providing biased articles to interest groups is very low. This paper describes the general structure of a blockchain-based journalism model but not the processing capacity or specific algorithms required for the network in question. We expect to develop these in subsequent studies.