10 free leads on us
California Watch
Headquarters
Emeryville, California Office
Berkeley, California Office
California Watch has distributed stories for print, radio, TV broadcast and online-only publication to roughly 200 news partners since September 2009. Last month, someone breached our confidentiality. But first, a little background on how we work with our media partners. Our story lists are shared with our network members, outlining our developing stories weeks and sometimes months before we publish or go on the air. We typically distribute embargoed content two weeks prior to the publication date to give our partners time to offer feedback and plan for the space needed to accommodate rather large packages that often include photos, graphics, video and multimedia elements. It takes a lot of faith and trust to do what we do. I never would have imagined doing things this way as little as three or four years ago. Investigative journalists in particular are typically guarded - even paranoid. Some keep even their own colleagues at arm's length, worried that they will lose a scoop or compromise a source if information falls into the wrong hands. But at California Watch, we've operated on trust - trust that newsrooms won't steal our stories, mishandle our planning memos or break embargoes. Trust is a two-way street. Many news organizations have shared details about their stories and plans - placing faith in us to keep these details confidential. This mutual trust has paid off for us and for our partners. We wouldn't do anything to jeopardize it. Over the past couple of years, we've seen partners break an embargo or two - nothing major and nothing malicious. In those rare instances, it typically has happened when a newsroom's web staff jumps the gun on posting a story because the editor handling the story inside the news organization hadn't passed along embargo times to his or her colleagues. Those problems were easy to fix. But it's not a perfect world. After distributing scores of stories without incident, we experienced our first major problem a few weeks back. A full version of our story on PG&E's ClimateSmart program was leaked to a key source a couple of days before the embargo. Journalists traditionally frown upon sending drafts, or even sections of a draft, to a news source. It gives the source a feeling of power and control. The act itself gives the source - at a minimum - a sense that he or she has some editorial say in what you publish. We were able to deal with the source and deal with the situation.
...Read MoreCalifornia Watch
California
the California
CaliforniaWatch.org
California Watch Co
36
2009
Here's a list of some of the top trending technologies and APIs used by California Watch.
(1 Technologies)
(1 Technologies)
(1 Technologies)
(1 Technologies)
Company | Employees | Revenue | Top technologies |
---|---|---|---|
Direkt36 | 28 | $5.3 M | |
PublicSource | 20 | n/a | |
Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism | 12 | n/a | |
WhoWhatWhy | 34 | n/a | |
ProPublica | 140 | $72.2 M |