AP targeting smart
phone users with distribution network launching this summer
Cooperative also fine-tunes
other apps; hooks up with iCopyright.
By Marcelo Duran
Associate
Editor
WASHINGTON — The Associated Press said it would launch a news service targeted
at smart phone users as the cooperative further diversifies its stable of
offerings.
The
Mobile News Network, developed by the AP Digital Cooperative, will launch this
summer, said Tom Curley, The AP’s president and chief executive officer.
“The
Mobile News Network will provide a national platform for smart phone users to
access local content from brands they trust,” he said. “Members can participate
by providing local news that will appear alongside their logos.”
The
network will give mobile users a single point of access through which they can
gather news from hundreds of local publishers, Curley said.
MNN is
currently being tested.
Additionally, AP is working with mobile phone manufacturers and carriers to
develop a user interface to support the news, photos and video segments MNN will
distribute.
Meantime,
The AP released information about updated versions of its AP WebFeeds and
WebFeeds Manager applications.
WebFeeds,
formerly known as AP Internet Syndication Feeds, allows members to pull their
satellite text, pictures and graphics across the Web.
Editors
can create customized news and multimedia feeds based on specific search
criteria in AP Exchange. The content is supplied as XML in the AP ATOM format
along with additional proprietary metadata.
WebFeeds
Manager is a free program provided by the AP to manage and route AP Web Feeds to
content management systems. It supports text, photos, audio, graphics and video.
AP said
that it is working with 17 software vendors to make it easier for member papers
to mesh WebFeeds Manager with their content management systems.
In other
developments:
•AP
unveiled the Member Marketplace, a free service that lets members share text,
photos and graphics with each other. The program was launched in six states last
month and will be available nationwide by the end of summer.
•AP said
it will use copyright licensing from iCopyright, giving online users of AP
content a Web-based method to license and share AP stories.
•AP said
the more than 1,900 media affiliates participating in its Online Video Network
will now be able to share their local video content with other members within
the network.
Finally,
AP said it would slash further its newspaper members’ basic service assessments
in 2009, totaling up to $21 million or 10 percent of their total AP service
fees.