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20 Winners Emerge From African News Innovation Challenge

In May 2012,  Google announced that it would award $1 million to innovative journalists who through digital tools could find new ways to report the news and tell stories.

The winners of the Africa News Innovation Challenge were announced at the African Editors’ Forum annual meeting in Kigali, Rwanda on November 28.

Here are the winning projects below:

1. actNOW – Ghana

A mobile application that empowers audiences to act on investigative reportage, by providing simple tools for citizens to organize themselves into civic action groups around issues reported by the media, or to petition government or corporations in response to journalistic exposés.

2. AdBooker – South Africa

An open-source, streamlined workflow management system for planning and managing media advertising. It will generate ad rates and manage bookings, artwork production and ad placements.

3. Africa Check – South Africa/Nigeria

A pan-African, non-partisan and crowdsourced fact-checking service that systematically verifies claims made in media reports. The project is intended to improve the accuracy and quality of reporting by exposing incorrect assertions by sources quoted in the media as well as errors in news stories.

4.   africanDRONE (renamed skyCAM) – Kenya/Nigeria
A pilot project that establishes Africa’s first newsroom-based “eye in the sky” drones and camera-equipped balloons to help media that cannot afford news helicopters cover breaking news in dangerous situations or difficult-to-reach locations.

5. Africa’s Wealth (renamed NewsStack) – Nigeria/Namibia

A project to integrate a new generation of forensic data analysis tools such as DocumentCloud, Poderopedia,Overview and Mapa76, into a unified and reusable journalist toolkit. The kit will be used in a year-long, pan-African investigation by 10 media organizations into the continent’s extractive industries.

6. Citizen Desk – Mozambique

This toolkit that allows news organizations to create a mobile-optimized platform for aggregating, verifying, publishing and rewarding citizen journalism. The platform will be integrated into the widely used Superdesk production management system and serve as a way to incorporate citizen journalism into a news organization’s core workflow.

7. Code4Ghana – Ghana

This “kick-starter program” helps Ghanaian media experiment with data-driven journalism. It will provide access to data scientists and programmers, specialized training and a series of public “hackathons” designed to build news tools that take advantage of the new Ghana Open Data Initiative.

8. ConvergeCMS – Kenya/Tanzania/Uganda

An open-source and data-optimized editorial content management system and technical support program designed specifically for African media houses. It will help newsrooms centralize and manage content creation, dissemination, archiving and workflows.

9. CorruptionNET – South Africa

An open-source mobile platform that gives citizen reporters a step-by-step toolkit for filing journalistic reports to newsrooms about corruption or other abuses of public resources. The citizens can report using SMS or MXit, Africa’s largest social mobile network.

10. DataWrapper – Nigeria/Senegal/Tanzania

An initiative that establishes a network of full-fledged data visualization desks in forward-thinking newsrooms across Africa. It will help improve the use of interactive infographics and data-driven visual news apps, using the open-source DataWrapper toolkit plus other powerful graphic tools.

11. End-to-End (renamed First Mile Crowdmapping) – Liberia/Ghana/Kenya

A crowd-sourced reporting tool built on top of the SourceMap.com platform to help African journalists and citizens tell complex investigative stories. This tool will visually map the people, places and events behind the “first mile” of supply chains, so that consumers can understand where goods originate in African industries such as cocoa or logging.

12. FlashCast – Kenya

This platform will beam hyper-local news to commuters in taxis and buses, using smart, location-aware LED displays. It also allows the audience to use their mobile or other digital devices to engage in conversation about news items with viewers in other taxis and buses.

13. Green Hornet – South Africa

A plug-and-play toolkit for journalistic sources and whistle-blowers, developed in collaboration with the Tor Project for use by investigative reporters in African newsrooms.

14. ListeningPost – South Africa

Africa’s first social media-focused newsroom will produce actionable information from citizen reporters. It will establish a customized Storyful dashboard that aggregates social media posts and will include mobile apps that commission and sell crowd-sourced photos and news.

15. MoJo: Keeping media honest by monitoring online journalism – South Africa

A user-friendly toolkit of analytical software for African media-monitoring projects and other civic watchdogs. It will help improve media professionalism by keeping the media honest, detecting online censorship and exposing plagiarism.

16. openAFRICA – Kenya/Nigeria/Rwanda/South Africa

A digital document and knowledge management toolkit, coupled with the creation of a pan-African online archive, to house and search documents for investigative pieces. This kit will streamline freedom of information (FOI) requests to government agencies and then use semantic search and analysis tools to help journalists and the broader public assess these documents.

17. ODADI (renamed Code4SouthAfrica) – South Africa

An incubator for watchdog journalism that embeds data scientists and programmers into newsrooms to build new data desks and news APIs. The group will receive additional support from a local civic technology lab, which will provide trainers who help the reporters use data in stories.

18. Oxpeckers – South Africa

A narrative mapping project that uses satellite imagery and geographic data analysis in stories to expose cross-border criminals and syndicates damaging the environment through logging, poaching and ecological degradation.

19. Wikipedia Zero – Cameroon/Ivory Coast/Tunisia/Uganda

An initiative designed to boost original content from African news media for the new Wikipedia Zero mobile platform that is available free of charge to hundreds of millions of Africans, in 37 African languages, via either SMS or mobile phones.

20. ZeroNews – pan-African

A simple tool for African news publishers to disseminate their content, free of charge, on mobile channels, including Facebook Zero and various Google platforms, so that they can reach a new generation of mobile news consumers in a cost-effective way.

You may find more information from the Africa News Innovation Challenge

Source: TechLoy

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