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Who wins when Facebook becomes a new platform?
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Facebook announced this week that it is in negotiation with media outlets like Buzzfeed, The New York Times and National Geographic to host content within Facebook's site and app. - photo by Chandra Johnson
Facebook announced this week that it is in negotiation with media outlets like Buzzfeed, The New York Times and National Geographic to host content within Facebook's site and app.

As Newsonomic's Ken Doctor reported, this sharing agreement could shake out differently for different business models from traditional, "legacy" institutions like the Times to free-content, web-only approaches like Buzzfeed.

"BuzzFeed gets an astounding 75 percent of its traffic from social overall. More than 60 percent of the Times revenue now comes from readers. Its paying digital audience of about 900,000 now outnumbers its daily print paying audience," Doctor wrote. "Facebook is the place of the moment. The key is finding a comfortable place in its uncertain firmament."

But as Yahoo News' Mathew Ingram pointed out, it's what news outlets don't yet know about the potential bargain that should give them pause.

"The details of whose content gets recommended or not recommended would be totally under Facebooks control," Ingram wrote. "The unfortunate reality of dealing with Facebook is that, as with Google, its algorithm is a black box."

To do business with Facebook, Ingram suggests, could mean surrendering control to the social media site entirely a practice many traditional journalism institutions avoid on principle.

Yet choosing not to participate in Facebook's plan might prove just as dangerous a game, as Vox's Timothy B. Lee reported, because traditional media outlets risk becoming irrelevant by clinging to a business model the Internet is tearing apart: Namely, deciding what people should read and well as the content itself.

"We're not used to thinking about these as separate functions because in traditional news organizations especially newspapers and magazines they were always packaged together," Lee wrote. "The Internet is pulling them apart. And once you start to think about these as distinct functions, the apparent dangers of Facebook-hosted content no longer seem so threatening."
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Georgia Motorcycle Safety Program announces grant
Funds earmarked for Share the Road initiatives
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Grant funding totaling $93,458 has been awarded to the Georgia Motorcycle Safety Program (GMSP) by the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety. The approved funding will be used to increase motorcycle safety awareness and outreach by encouraging all motorists and motorcyclists to Share the Road.

“The need for motorcycle safety programs is greater than ever, and this support from GOHS enables motorcycle safety programs and impaired riding initiatives to reach riders and non-riders alike” said Commissioner Spencer R. Moore. “Thank you GOHS for helping (the Department of Driver Services) and GMSP educate and encourage all Georgia drivers to ‘Share the Road.’”

The grant allows DDS to further develop the Motorcycle Safety Outreach Program by continuing to fund a position to promote state and national safety initiatives. The GMSP outreach coordinator researches, coordinates and helps maintain an adequate presence at industry events, local schools and colleges, regional meetings and festivals to increase awareness of motorcycles on the roadways and provide the most current information on motorcycle safety initiatives.

Visitors to a GMSP event display are also encouraged to sign up for regular newsletters which provide additional safety information, as well as review the motorcycle safety message on other social media platforms.

GMSP regulates motorcycle training for new riders, as well as seasoned riders, who want to learn how to ride a motorcycle legally and safely. The program is based on a continuum of learning and therefore offers three entry points to rider education.

Students participating in the Basic Riders Course do not need specialized motorcycle equipment, as the GMSP provides both a motorcycle and a helmet to class participants. Upon successful completion of the course, participants receive a 90-day license waiver card that exempts them from both the written and on-cycle skills tests needed to obtain a Class M license in the state of Georgia.

Please visit the DDS website at www.dds.georgia.gov for many online services including the convenience of enrolling in a GMSP training class and accessing many licensing services.

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