Icelandic Online Media
As the country with the world’s deepest penetration of internet use (86.3% of the population) and highest literacy rate (around 99%), it’s no surprise that
The print, broadcast and online environment
Iceland’s population of just over 300,000 have a choice of three national Icelandic-language newspapers – all with online editions - plus several domestic English-language titles aimed dually at tourists and the growing útlendingur (foreigner) population.
The broadsheet Morgunblaðið (The Morning Paper) is the country’s daily ‘paper of record.’ Its content-rich online edition www.mbl.is is a resource of the day’s international, national and local news with additional links to sections including Viðskipti (Business), Fólk (People) and Íþróttir (Sport), along with a link to Enski boltinn (English football) news (Icelanders follow English football and current affairs with considerable attention). The website also has a sizable and searchable Myndasafn (photo store).
The main paid-for competition comes in the form of tabloid DV (Dagblaðið Vísir). Its online edition www.dv.is is considerably more limited than its rival’s and focuses on the day’s main Fréttir (news) with just over a dozen international, national and local stories featured each day. The DV website also provides a window to its publisher’s magazines - such as the celebrity and readers’-true-story magazine Séð og Heyrt (Seen and Heard). These magazine sub-sites highlight the latest issue’s headline stories.
The young pretender in the Icelandic media scene is Fréttablaðið (The Free Paper) which has been distributed to most Icelandic homes since 2001 and is now the largest circulation newspaper in
RÚV,
Finally the irreverent
Blog, bloggers and blogging
Icelanders love to blog, and blogging has been absorbed into mainstream culture to such an extent that personal blogs are now incorporated into all the main newspaper websites. While there has always been a view that if you write in Icelandic you can write what you like (on the grounds that very few non-Icelanders speak Icelandic), the growing number of foreign speakers of the language and the realisation that private comment has a global reach in the blogosphere, means that some Icelanders are learning to temper what they write.
www.mbl.is has a Bloggið (The Blog) page which publishes the day’s Icelandic
blog posts – on a typical day it can feature over 100 blog posts and comments. Meanwhile, in common with the newspaper’s theme of providing a sizeable online resource, the site publishes Icelandic blog entries listed by both creator and tag, along with RSS feed information. Here it’s possible to discover that over 300 blog posts have been written (in Icelandic) on Formula One and that over 5,000 have been written on Stjornmal_og_Samfelag (Politics and Society).
Likewise, www.visir.is also lists hundreds of Icelandic blog posts – again by tag - on its Blogg page. There is a link to 365’s own blog on this page – a very corporate affair – and it its journalists’ own blogs.
Meanwhile, www.dv.is uses its writers to create blog entries on its Blogg pages.
Interestingly, although there’s little attempt at founding social networks via any of these websites, its not because Facebook and MySpace are unpopular – both are widely used, with the Icelandic network on Facebook having over 17,000 members. There is an Icelandic social networking site, www.minnsirkus.is, but it doesn’t have the popularity of Facebook among Icelanders.
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