State mulls online news service
The State Department may be tuning in to the online news business. The foreign policy department has asked contractors to devise what a 'cyberstation' newsclipping service would look like and present ideas to State officials in midDecember.
The State Department may be tuning in to the online news business. The
foreign policy department has asked contractors to devise what a "cyberstation"
news-clipping service would look like and present ideas to State officials
in mid-December.
Contractors would then operate the sites for four weeks while State
decided whether to pursue the concept. If officials like what they see,
State could issue a request for proposals for designing a fully operational
service.
In researching the idea, State calls for a maximum of two cyberstations — online news channels operating 24 hours a day — that would carry news
articles drawn from local, state, national and international sources. The
stations would be designed and operated by contractors, according to State's
synopsis in Commerce Business Daily.
A State spokeswoman said the agency would not discuss the clipping service
concept. However, a published synopsis and several sources within the department
described some goals for the cyberstations. They would:
* Serve as a clipping service for State and other federal officials.
* Provide the public — worldwide — with a central location for foreign
policy-related articles from what State considers "quality" sources.
* Be a forum wherein State could publish overseas reports authored by
U.S. officials.
The proposal "is still...conceptual," a State source said. "A lot of
people are trying to figure out what we're doing."
Another State official said the department also could use the site to
feature news that may not get highlighted in the mainstream press.
One example might be responding to a health crisis in Africa or Asia.
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