相當有意思
許多政要名人都需要它
其實
Google公司應該從自己的要人之新聞報導跟蹤做起......
Google lets subjects of news stories comment on articles about them
International Herald Tribune - France
AP SAN FRANCISCO: Google is giving the subjects of news stories a way to comment on articles written about them. The online search leader introduced an ...
Misquoted? Hit back with Google
By Emma Thelwell
Google has launched a new service allowing people that are quoted, or mentioned, in news stories the right to reply to the articles.
In a move that will no doubt please anyone ever misquoted by a journalist, the comments are to be published alongside the article for all to see.
The search engine has begun the experimental service on its US Google News homepage, its central news page which displays stories from the world's media. If the trial proves successful, it will be rolled out in other languages and editions.
Dan Meredith and Andy Golding, software engineers from the Google news team, revealed the group's plans in a blog.
Promising "perspectives about the news from people in the news", they added: "Our long-term vision is that any participant will be able to send in their comments, and we'll show them next to the articles. Comments will be published in full, without any edits."
They will be marked as "comments", in order to distinguish them from the journalists article.
However, the group raised fears that the new service could invite bogus comments from people posing as others. While it promised to "work with each author to confirm their identity individually" - by the traditional methods of contacting the organisation affiliated with the author, contacting local officials, or collaborating with journalists - it did admit "no method is foolproof". In which case, anyone wrongly attributed should contact news-comments@google.com.
Mr Meredith and Mr Golding said the service, "reader comments with a bit of a twist", would "test the hypothesis that a personal view can sometimes add a whole new dimension to the story".
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