Scoop (news website)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Scoop is a New Zealand internet news site with a readership of 25,000 unique visitors a day, delivering 2,000,000 pages of information per month.[1]

Scoop specialises in aggregating "raw news content" in the form of press releases, speeches and transcripts, while also providing deeper "magazine style" reporting and opinion pieces. News Channels include: Politics, Business, Science & Technology, Education, Health and Culture. Scoop is seen as a resource of the 'unfiltered' news, with no journalist editing but instead being straight from the source. Scoop does not discriminate what it publishes (except for legal reasons such as defamation) and endeavours to provide a reference for what "was said" by the parties reported on in traditional media.

Scoop has won several awards for their work as a 'democratic' news organisation. They have also received praise from the United Kingdom-based The Guardian[2] and media critics.[3]


[edit] References

[edit] External link

  • Scoop - New Zealand News
  • Scoopit - Independent news, your way: Scoop's new service combines news syndication, social bookmarking, blogging, and a democratic editorial system enabling Scoopit users to collaboratively submit and vote on articles. Scoopit was influenced by popular social news sites, Reddit and Digg.