This article was published on June 18, 2012

Knight News Challenge: And the winners are…


Knight News Challenge: And the winners are…

The Knight Foundation announced the winners of its 2012 Knight News Challenge at the MIT-Knight Civic Media Conference in Boston today. While the competition exists since 2007, this is the first year Knight is hosting three separate thematic challenges; after Networks, it is now calling for applications on Data.

According to Knight, the purpose of this challenge is to reward innovation ventures that build on existing networks to create new ways for informing and engaging communities. As a matter of fact, the winning projects range from an aggregator of live mobile video streams of breaking news to a platform that coordinates community disaster recovery.

Prestige aside, the 6 awarded companies are sharing a sizable prize: a $1.37 million grant aimed at accelerating their growth. In addition, they will also receive support from Knight’s network, which already benefited to recent News Challenge’s winners such as the Chilean data journalism project Poderopedia and the British open-data initiative ScraperWiki.

Over the last six years, News Challenge saw the foundation invest $28 million in 82 projects, several of which managed to gain traction in the media segment. For instance, DocumentCloud is being used in 200 newsrooms across the US, while Tim Berners-Lee’s hNews has been integrated into more than 1,200 news sites.

The <3 of EU tech

The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol' founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It's free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!

For Knight Foundation’s President Alberto Ibargüen, this isn’t only about information, but also about democracy itself:

“The future of our democracy depends on the quality and reliability of the generally shared information communities receive. How that information is received and shared will depend on innovative uses of digital technology that is rapidly evolving.  Since we’re just at the beginning of that technological revolution, it is hugely important to support innovators like these, who are pushing the boundaries of our understanding of news and community information.”

Without further ado, here’s the full list of winning ventures:

  • Peepol.tv – Leveraging streaming networks like Ustream and TweetCaster, Peepol.TV will aggregate live mobile video streams of breaking news events into an easily searchable world map, connecting users directly to global events as they unfold.
  • Recovers.org – After a tornado destroyed their Massachusetts home, two sisters created an online organizing platform that helps disaster-stricken communities quickly launch recovery efforts. In the immediate aftermath of a disaster, Recovers.org enables communities to launch a website that ensures that heightened news attention translates into donations, volunteers and more.
  • Signalnoi.se – Enabling newsrooms to monitor what is resonating with readers and make smarter editorial decisions about which stories get covered and promoted, Signalnoi.se is a dashboard that tracks stories through social networks and across competitor sites.
  • Watchup – An iPad app that makes it easier to find and watch high-quality news videos, Watchup speeds the search for relevant content by offering a curated playlist that aggregates news reports into a simple interface.
  • Behavio – Behavio is an open-source platform that turns phones into smart sensors of people’s real world behavior – from how they use their phones to how they communicate with others. Funding will be used to help programmers build apps with smarter sensors, create tools for journalists that uncover trends in community data and launch a mobile application that allows individuals to explore data about their lives.
  • Tor Project – With journalists and their sources increasingly threatened by governments, criminal organizations and others who monitor their mobile and online communication, the Tor Project will use its vast network of volunteers to create a tool kit that will enable journalists to communicate more safely with sources by using the organization’s secure Web browser, an anonymous upload utility and more.

If you prefer, you can also hear about each project from the horse’s mouth:

You may already be familiar with some of these names, such as Tor, which is well known for its anonymity tools. In addition, two projects (Signalnoi.se and Watchup) are also receiving an undisclosed amount of early-stage funding from the Knight Enterprise Fund, and we will make sure to follow all of them over the next few months.

Get the TNW newsletter

Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.