Media | New York Times WikiLeaks Shifting Media Balance of Power New kind of 'global investigative journalism' emerging By Rob Quinn Posted Nov 30, 2010 4:45 AM CST Copied The New York Times had to ask a foreign paper for access to WikiLeaks' latest leak after incurring its wrath. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II, File) WikiLeaks' document dumps are pushing old media into a new role, a Politico analysis finds. Papers like the Guardian and the New York Times—which was left out of the latest round of leaks after publishing a profile critical of Julian Assange—are starting to work together across borders to act as conduits for material gained by others. Such collaboration is unprecedented in journalism, experts note. A "new balance of power" is emerging, says an NYU professor, pointing to a Times request for WikiLeaks to keep harmful documents under wraps. "In the revised picture we find the state, which holds the secrets but is powerless to prevent their release; the stateless news organization, deciding how to release them; and the national newspaper in the middle, negotiating the terms of legitimacy between these two actors.” Read These Next Trump grants wave of pardons to ex-NFL players. Kristi Noem won't like this Wall Street Journal exposé. New details revealed about suspect in Nancy Guthrie abduction. Salesforce CEO's ICE joke leaves employees fuming. Report an error