RJI Student Innovation Competition 2020 | RJI

Deepfake videos, fabricated photos and audio are among the biggest challenges the news industry faces today as it tries to keep the public informed with accurate information. In the U.S., lawmakers have considered legislation against false images, but how long will it take for policies to be implemented and will they be able to solve the problem? 

This year’s RJI Student Innovation Competition challenge is to create a program, tool or prototype for photo, video or audio verification. 

Students who plan to enter the competition have the next three months to build their tool, prototype or program before submitting their finished project for consideration by Dec. 1, 2019.

A free seminar series organized by the Innovation & Futures Lab will be held over the next three months at the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute at the Missouri School of Journalism. The series is meant for students who want to learn more about product development, marketing research, scrum methodology, design and other topics that could assist them in their projects. Please sign up to be on the invitation list for these seminars here

Second place: $2,500

Third place: $1,000

Deadline: Dec. 1, 2019 by 11:59 p.m. CT 

Entries must be presented in a Google slide format on the prototype, tool or program that you created for our competition. Your project cannot be something that already exists or has been entered in past competitions, you must have built it for this competition specifically. If your team is chosen as a finalist, you will have six weeks to polish your presentation and project based on our feedback before presenting on Feb. 8, 2020. 

ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS 

JUDGING CRITERIA & TIMELINE 

Innovation lab staff at the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute will narrow the entries to a group of finalists who will be invited to present at RJI at the Missouri School of Journalism in Columbia, Missouri, on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2020 in front of a panel of industry judges and the public. 

Projects will be judged on four main criteria:

Finalists must be able to present in person and cover their own travel costs. If a team is unable to be present, that entry will be automatically withdrawn from consideration. 

Questions? Email Kat Duncan: [email protected] or submit your question here.

Kat Duncan

 




 
 




Senior Editor