• Technosailor.com
  • Desk of the Editor
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Web Marketing
  • Tech Policy
  • Contenido Español
Technosailor
  • Blog
  • Authors
  • Twitter Pitch Me!
  • Disclosures
  • Advertise on Technosailor.com
Mar
19
2008

Qué Pasa con Latinoamérica y los RSS

Posted by: Carlos Granier-Phelps

Parece que aquel viejo dicho de “La información quiere ser libre” no aplica en Latinoamérica. Un breve estudio de medios latinoamericanos con presencia en Internet parece indicar que la gran mayoría todavía no adopta un modelo de distribución abierto.

Preparando el website inicial de NotiLat.com visité 115 websites de medios latinoamericanos en Argentina, Chile, Colombia y Venezuela y encontré que sólo 37 de ellos -un 32%- ofrecían algún tipo de canal RSS para distribuir sus noticias. Algunos de estos canales RSS no funcionaban correctamente, se encontraban en alguna carpeta protegida o no se ajustaban a las especificaciones del formato.

RSS in Latin American Media

Adopción del formato RSS dentro de los Medios Lationamericanos

Del 68% restante (78 medios), pude salvar 27 creando un canal RSS artifical con Dapper. El resto de los websites permanece escondido detrás de arcáicos formatos HTML, links que funcionan con javascript y modelos cerrados de suscripción. Es una lástima, pues lo que realmente les hace falta es exposición. A medida que facilitemos la distribución de la información que generamos, facilitamos la publicidad de nuestro servicio.

Y ustedes, ¿qué medios utilizan para mantenerse informados de lo que ocurre en Latinoamérica? ¿Cuáles te facilitan la tarea de compartir su información? ¿Se justifica un modelo cerrado?

Technorati Tags:
breaking-news, digital-media-strategy, globalización, intellectual-property, mainstream-media, medios, news, noticias, propiedad-intelectual, rss

  • Add to Mixx!
  • Stumble it!
About the Author: Carlos Granier-Phelps es consultor en networks sociales y medios digitales. En el 2000 fundó PorMiCuenta.com, unos de los primeros networks sociales profesionales y actualmente colabora en proyectos como TubeMogul.com. Puedes contactarlo a través de su blog, RED66.com y seguirlo a través de Twitter. --- Carlos Granier-Phelps is a social media consultant. Back in 2000 he founded PorMiCuenta.com, one of the first professional social networks and currently advises on projects like TubeMogul.com. You can contact him through his blog, RED66.com or follow him on Twitter.
Tagged: breaking-news, digital-media-strategy, globalización, intellectual-property, mainstream-media, medios, msm, News, noticias, propiedad-intelectual, RSS at 7:00 am -
discussion by DISQUS

Add New Comment

  • Subscribe:  This Thread
  • Go to:  My Comments ·  Community Page
  • Thanks. Your comment is awaiting approval by a moderator.

    Do you already have an account? Log in and claim this comment.

    discussion by DISQUS

    Add New Comment

    close Joe Chill(joechill)
    konvict

    status via twitter

    Murdering the Wayne parents, creating Batman · 2 minutes ago

    recent comments (follow comments)

      View Profile »
      Powered by Disqus · Learn more
      blog comments powered by Disqus
      • Recent Posts

        • Fantasy Football for Charity
        • Findability is a Legitimate Concern for Bloggers
        • Search and Findability
        • Will I See you in Boston? Or in San Francisco? Or in Boulder? Or in Vegas?
        • The Psychology of Gap Marketing
      • Recent Comments

        Powered by Disqus
      • Tags

        Aaron Brazell Advertising Apple b5media Blogging book conferences Design entrepreneurship Facebook Finance and Funding Google guest_blogging holidays humor hurricanes_and_natural_disasters interesting job Links Marketing Music nfl Op-Ed Perfect Pitch personal politics pr Predictions productivity Programming Security Social Issues Social Media Social Networking social_issues Sports Tech Industry Technology Technosailor Travel twitter unix Venture Files WordPress you_can_blog

      • License Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 | Copyright © 2004 - 2008 - Aaron Brazell | Lisa helped out | Privacy Policy

        Twitter Pitch!

        <p>Twitter pitching is a form of pitch that requires succint "what does this mean for me" kind of pitching. It is the ultimate efficiency of words. You have 140 characters or less to tell me why your pitch matters to me or my readers. Please include a means of contacting you. This is included in your 140 characters. If you send successive pitches, you will likely be ignored, unless it's obvious that the first pitch was a case of "accidental send", etc.</p> <p>This form of pitching does not mean I'm being a diva. It means that my time is valuable, and you want a piece of it. It's good practice for you, and delivers your pitch in a format I want. Win-win.</p>


        (X) Close

        Twitter Pitch Me!