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More and more, by Google

Google expanded its controversial Google News service yesterday, adding an archive of articles spanning more than 200 years, including stories from the Guardian, Washington Post and New York Times.
Google News Archive Search allows users to look up articles from publications dating as far back as the 18th century. Users will be able to read stories reporting the assassination of President Kennedy, the unfolding of the Watergate scandal and England's 1966 World Cup victory.
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Full article in Guardian Unlimited.

Citizen journalism, a new development

In an experiment in collaborative journalism, Wired News is putting reporter Ryan Singel at your service.
This wiki began as an unedited 1,059-word article on the wiki phenomenon, exactly as Ryan filed it. Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to do the job of a Wired News editor and whip it into shape. Don't change the quotes, but feel free to reorganize it, make cuts, smooth the prose or add links -- whatever it takes to make it a lively, engaging news piece.
Ryan will answer questions from the comments page, and, when consensus calls for it, conduct additional reporting. If there's something he missed, let him know, and he'll get on the phone and investigate, then submit new text to the wiki for your review.
Readers can also submit headlines for the story, and write and edit the "deck" -- a blurb for our front page and RSS feed that promotes the article.
To make any changes, you'll first need to create a free account at Socialtext.
We'll release the results under a Creative Commons license, and, if the whole thing doesn't turn into a disaster, run the final story on Wired News on Sept. 7, 2006.

Check it here.