J-Source on the web

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Find us on Facebook Start or join a discussion in the J-Source Group and meet others who share your interest in journalism issues. Or, follow our J-Source Page for highlights from the site. You can also make friends with CJF Programs to stay on top of J-Source news as well as other CJF programming activities. (Facebook account required).
J-Source on Twitter

J-Source on Friendfeed
Follow our condensed RSS feed on Twitter or Friendfeed (account required). We'll retweet anything of interest to our readers, and also tweet about events, work in progress, and other J-Source activity offsite.
J-Source on LinkedIn Join our LinkedIn group and connect with other journalism professionals (account required).

If you read an article you like, click on this button to save it or share it. You can e-mail it to a friend, add it to your bookmarks, choose a bookmarking site like del.icio.us or Digg, or post it to Facebook or other networks. Use the "jsource" tag so people can find similar content.
Click on the RSS link from any category page and you will be taken to the RSS feed for that category. You will then be asked to subscribe to that feed by choosing an RSS reader. Many browsers offer built-in RSS readers. Yahoo, MSN and Google also allow you to add feeds to your own customized homepage with news stories and articles from websites of your own choosing. How you decide to aggregate your RSS feed is up to you. The J-Source feeds can be read by any aggregator (no account required). Directory of all our feeds.

Comment Policy

J-Source invites comments on any content items or on any other topics relevant to journalism. Those posting comments are expected to adhere to standards of accuracy and fairness that would be recognized by those who practise, teach or study journalism.

  • Comments are restricted to registered users. You must register with your full first and last name in order to be eligible to comment.
  • Please communicate as effectively and intelligently as you would in a professional or academic forum, focusing on the issues at hand rather than the characters or characteristics of those involved.
  • This forum is intended for discussion of the craft of journalism, not of the issues of the day that journalists cover; please do not post story tips or press releases.
  • We moderate the forum for adherence to these standards of discourse, and reserve the right to decline any comment or restrict any user from commenting without giving reasons. Every effort is made to approve valid comments within 24 hours of submission.
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