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User:GRuban/Shankbone

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Shankbone
Shankbone in 2006
Born
David Miller
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Colorado, Fordham Law School
Occupationparalegal
Known foramateur photography and amateur journalism
Websitehttp://blog.Shankbone.org

David Shankbone is the pseudonym of David Miller, an amateur journalist, photographer, and editor for the online encyclopedia Wikipedia.

Shankbone has been called Wikinews star reporter by the Columbia Journalism Review and a leading Wikipedia editor by Haaretz and the Jerusalem Post.[1][2][3] His Creative Commons-licensed photographs of over 500 people illustrate an estimated 4000 Wikipedia articles, and have been reused on numerous blogs throughout the Internet.[4][5] In December 2007, Shankbone became the first citizen journalist to interview a sitting head of state, Israeli President Shimon Peres.[6]

Before Wikipedia

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Shankbone graduated from the University of Colorado at Boulder, and has lived in three countries (U.S., Spain, and U.K.), six U.S. states, and 17 cities.[7]

In 2006, he dropped out of Fordham Law School, due to being unable to afford the tuition for his final year.[8] He returned to his work as a paralegal, for Herrick, Feinstein, a major New York City law firm, and for a hobby, took up editing articles and taking photographs for Wikipedia with a digital camera his sister had given him for his birthday.[1]

I fell in love with Garrett Hardin’s essay about the Tragedy of the Commons. More, I fell in love with the notion of "The Commons," like a public park or street. I wanted to create a body of work of high enough quality, and of enough relevance to people, that they could make use of it. Authors writing books who need them illustrated. Small town newspapers who can’t afford Getty Images. Artists who want to create multi-media works.

— David Shankbone, Interview with with Colleen Asper, Brooklyn Rail, April 2008.

Career and coverage

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Colleen Asper, writing in the Brooklyn Rail, described Shankbone's photographs as "incredibly wide ranging in their scope."[9] Shankbone began contributing to Wikipedia in June 2006, and in 2007 he was noted as a "leading Wikipedia editor" in Haaretz.[2]

In December 2007, he became the first of Wikinews's citizen journalists to interview a sitting head of state, Israeli President Shimon Peres.[6] Miller was also profiled in the Columbia Journalism Review in January 2009,[6] where his interviews were described as a "throwback to a time when Oriana Fallaci published long transcripts of her interviews in book form and David Frost broadcast a six-hour sit-down with Richard Nixon.”[1] When Shankbone became the first Wikinews citizen journalist to interview a sitting head of state, it was seen by some as a milestone in the development of the site.[6]

Shankbone with Israeli president Shimon Peres in 2007.

In 2007 Shankbone was invited to Israel by the Foreign Ministry and the America-Israel Friendship League, as part of a delegation of technology writers, including representatives from BusinessWeek, USA Today, PC Week and Salon, to review the Israeli technology sector. David Saranga, spokesman at the consulate in New York explained, "More than once we have faced editors connected to Israel that appear on Wikipedia in English that do not represent the reality in Israel. We decided to initiate a visit by Shankbone to describe Israeli reality as it is."[3] While there, he requested an interview with Israeli President Shimon Peres, which to his surprise was granted. However, Shankbone later admitted he considered it to be one of the worst interviews he had undertaken.[1]

He returned to Israel in 2009 to take photographs of the country and the Negev desert.[10]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Rose, Adam. "The Wikinews Ace: Why Shimon Peres Sat Down With David Shankbone", Columbia Journalism Review, January-February 2009; also see here.
  2. ^ a b Liphshiz, Cnaan. "Your wiki entry counts", Haaretz, December 25, 2007.
  3. ^ a b Kienon, Herb. Leading Wikipedia editor to visit Israel, The Jerusalem Post, December 8, 2007.
  4. ^ "Images | David Shankbone", photograph collection on Shankbone's site. Retrieved 2009-11-14.
  5. ^ Jim Acho, "Bloggers, You Might Wanna Thank David Shankbone (He’s Probably The Reason Your Blog Has Photos)", Sports Review Magazine, July 7, 2007. Archived at the Internet Archive.
  6. ^ a b c d Jones, K.C. "Wikinews Gets Big Interview", Information Week, January 14, 2008.
  7. ^ David Shankbone, "About David Shankbone", official site. Retrieved 2009-11-16.
  8. ^ David Shankbone, "Nobody's Safe in Cyberspace", The Brooklyn Rail, June 2008.
  9. ^ Asper, Colleen. "David Shankbone with Colleen Asper", Brooklyn Rail, April 2008.
  10. ^ Udasin, Sharon. "Photo Editing Israel's Online Image", The Jewish Week, April 3, 2009.
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