The New York Times plans to add capabilities to the Web site of its flagship newspaper so that readers can submit more content
to it, like photos and reports from the field, the company's chairman said Tuesday.
"You'll see more citizen journalism" on NYT.com, Arthur Sulzberger, Jr., who is also publisher of The New York Times, said during the Web 2.0 Conference in San Francisco.
His comments came after an audience member said NYT.com trails Web sites from other newspapers in this area of user-generated
content.
"You can argue we've been slow, and I disagree," he said, adding that it's difficult to strike a balance between accepting
contributions from amateurs and upholding the editorial quality standards of the newspaper. He hinted that NYT.com will screen
these "citizen journalists" and work with a group it feels comfortable with and trusts.
Meanwhile, Barry Diller, chairman and chief executive officer of IAC/InterActiveCorp, who also participated in the panel,
said that user-generated content has its place in his company's Web sites, but that it's wrong to believe that amateurs will
be able to produce professional-quality, narrative programming.
IAC will invest in creating content with high production values for its Web sites, tapping professionals for the job, as Diller
is convinced that online video technology is now mature enough to justify the cost and effort to develop this type of programming
for the Web.
Asked by conference chair John Battelle about The New York Times' decision to charge for some of the Web site's content, Sulzberger
defended it, saying that quality journalism is expensive to produce.
Along those lines, he said the Web site is a sound business. Only the printed editions of The New York Times and The Boston
Globe generate more revenue than NYT.com and its fee-based TimesSelect service, he said.