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34 votes
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Rupert Murdoch steps down as chairman of Fox Corporation and News Corp
44 votes -
New York City pension funds sue Fox Corporation Board for breach of fiduciary duty in connection with defamatory broadcasts
21 votes -
China behind ‘largest ever’ digital influence operation
15 votes -
Reflections on a strike as turning point - How to destroy a creative industry and how to save it
13 votes -
How Barstool built an empire by swiping sports highlights and music clips online
14 votes -
Media reviewers?
I've had this problem come up so many times. I'll be watching a review on a movie/series and partway through the reviewer will make some rude comment about something they perceived as 'political',...
I've had this problem come up so many times. I'll be watching a review on a movie/series and partway through the reviewer will make some rude comment about something they perceived as 'political', or how it was made worse by feminism, or 'woke-ism'. Sometimes it's just a tiny little comment that rubs me the wrong way, and I'll realize: This review is being done by someone with opinions I want nothing to do with. And I especially don't want to further their YouTube career with my watch time. It's become such a pattern at this point that I don't even bother with YouTube media reviews anymore.
I'm not savvy in the landscape of media reviews, I'm relying on what the algorithm serves me, and so far it's only serving up slop. I'm trying to chew through my media backlog and also discover new things, and I'd like to see some perspectives on what's out there. Does anyone here have any recommendations for enthusiastically queer-friendly media review channels? (Not horror focused please, that's not for me.)
13 votes -
Gannett stops using AI to write articles for now because they were hilariously terrible
20 votes -
Report: Potential New York Times lawsuit could force OpenAI to wipe ChatGPT and start over
75 votes -
Four former VICE Motherboard journalists founded an independent news company
41 votes -
How one company owns color
18 votes -
Marion County Record newspaper raid: the sworn affidavit for the search warrant is essentially just the text of the search warrant
31 votes -
The death spiral of Hollywood monopolies
26 votes -
Mundane participation: Power imbalances in youth media use
5 votes -
SS Baychimo: The unsinkable Arctic ghost ship
7 votes -
The BBC on Mastodon: Experimenting with distributed and decentralised social media
31 votes -
Spaceship of fools: Behind every conspiracy theory lies a golden opportunity for companies and hucksters to make money. UFOs are no exception.
21 votes -
‘Not for machines to harvest’: Data revolts break out against AI
40 votes -
I interviewed the researcher behind the Misinformation Susceptibility Test
https://youtu.be/vodNabH5qoM But some important context: Earlier this month I saw a post regarding a Misinformation Susceptibility Test and was curious how 20 binary questions could be an...
https://youtu.be/vodNabH5qoM
But some important context:Earlier this month I saw a post regarding a Misinformation Susceptibility Test and was curious how 20 binary questions could be an indicator of someones media biases.
I started digging into the related paper and while the methods and analysis was interesting, there was still a lot of questions. So I reached out to Dr Rakoen Maertens who headed the study and we agreed to a discussion on the assessment and his experiences in social psychology.
The video above is an unlisted, unedited cut of the interview and I'd love to get some feedback:
Firstly: I have offered the Dr a tildes invite and he may engage with any questions or discussion. Time was limited and there were a lot of topics that was only briefly touched on or overlooked. Here is the original paper and supplementary resources if you want to see some of the language model work and bigger 100 question tests.
Secondly: I am going to do a more through edit and posting this on a dedicated channel. Since cutting off reddit, twitter and tiktoc; I've sort of rediscovered a love learning and investigations. I'd like to know if people like this form of engagement and discussions. No fancy production, just simply engaging with the research and academics behind topical and interesting ideas.
I'm already reading into fandom psychology, UV reflective paint, children's TV and CO2 scrubbing technology.
72 votes -
Nonprofit trust buying Press Herald, other Maine newspapers in landmark deal
22 votes -
The New York Times will close sports desk, sending readers to The Athletic
18 votes -
Austria's 'Wiener Zeitung' newspaper goes to print one last time
11 votes -
Does anyone read a weekly printed news publication? If so, which and why?
I was nervous to post this in ~news, because it's more of a question than a story, but here goes. I'm looking to turn down the temperature, pace, and volume of my news consumption habits, as well...
I was nervous to post this in ~news, because it's more of a question than a story, but here goes.
I'm looking to turn down the temperature, pace, and volume of my news consumption habits, as well as limit how much time I stare at a screen (I do that enough professionally). I've recently experimented with subscribing to fewer, higher-quality news sources and getting them delivered via RSS*. This works pretty well, but I'm still left looking for something even slower. Something like a weekly news publication, which is delivered once a week in a print format that I can read away from a screen.
I've subscribed to Sunday papers in the past, but it's too much and there's a lot in it - I think I'm looking for a little .. less. A slimmer publication, fewer pages. Almost as if someone selected the top five to seven stories covered on the Wikipedia current events page in the week, then wrote a few thousand words apiece on each. Something I can make it through with my coffee on Sunday mornings in a few hours.
Does anyone do this or have recommendations? If so, what do you read and how would you assess that publication? I think I've tried a fair number in the past, but I will take anyone's suggestions. Thank you so much in advance.
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*I use Reeder for macOS / iOS - which is great btw, and it's shocking how much of the modern web still supports RSS. Highly recommend folks reconsider RSS in general.38 votes -
Which newspapers/magazines do you read and why?
I recently obtained a access to a TON of different magazines and papers from Europe, US, UK and a few from Australia and New Zealand but I have no clue about the quality of stuff outside my native...
I recently obtained a access to a TON of different magazines and papers from Europe, US, UK and a few from Australia and New Zealand but I have no clue about the quality of stuff outside my native country so I would like to hear some suggestions.
Which ones do you read and would recommend to others and why?
13 votes -
National Geographic reportedly lays off its last US staff writers
52 votes -
US gay magazines and shopping by mail before Stonewall
10 votes -
Should we be going back and editing games for content that doesn't fit with a modern viewpoint?
Thinking about the recent incident where the devs for Skullgirls (current devs, not original devs) went and changed a bunch of artwork and other content for the fighting game, which released in...
Thinking about the recent incident where the devs for Skullgirls (current devs, not original devs) went and changed a bunch of artwork and other content for the fighting game, which released in 2012 after being Kickstarted. Aside from removing the sexualized imagery of an underage character, probably a good call, what about the other things they've decided are in 'poor taste' in 2023?
Should we be going back and editing games, or even movies, tv shows, and books to reflect more modern sensibilities? Is a game like Skullgirls even worth preserving its original content?
My opinion is no, unless it's something that is now illegal, I don't really enjoy the precedent that's been set lately where we go back and correct past mistakes in media. However, I also see the argument about removing media that may encourage racist or sexist thinking or put down minorities, but is it useful to see the media as it was and see how far we've come? Is that useful enough? Should only the original creators make that decision?
Just thought this was interesting. Tag as desired.
48 votes -
My retro recommendation -- "Hero", starring Dustin Hoffman
3 votes -
What was the best piece of content that came out as a result of the pandemic?
What's the best thing you've read, watched, heard or other that was created as a result of the pandemic. In your opinion of course.
41 votes -
Canadians will no longer have access to news content on Facebook and Instagram, Meta says
50 votes -
Towards a theory of the content creator
9 votes -
‘Don’t Look Up’ director Adam McKay wants to win the climate information war — with memes
16 votes -
Vice, decayed digital colossus, files for bankruptcy
21 votes -
Secret room inside popular game contains independent journalism forbidden in Russia
10 votes -
Speed trap | Google promised to create a better, faster web for media companies with a new standard called AMP. In the end, it ruined the trust publishers had in the internet giant.
14 votes -
Finnish newspaper hides Ukraine news reports for Russians – secret room in first-person shooter game Counter-Strike to bypass Russian censorship
7 votes -
Tucker Carlson and Fox News part ways
26 votes -
Substack opens up a $2 million community fundraising round
4 votes -
Former US President Donald Trump charged: How the world reacted to his arrest
7 votes -
Alternative facts - How the media failed Julian Assange
10 votes -
The system that fuels media negativity
12 votes -
How social media shapes our perceptions about crime
7 votes -
‘Dilbert’ author Scott Adams tells White people to get away from Black people, gets dropped from US newspaper
19 votes -
US local news outlets need tax breaks to help save democracy, says advocate
3 votes -
Warner Bros. Discovery to keep Discovery+, in strategy shift
4 votes -
Two journalists working for a large Finnish newspaper have been found guilty of revealing secret information on military intelligence
5 votes -
BuzzFeed says it will use AI to help create content, stock jumps 150%
8 votes -
How Finland is teaching a generation to spot misinformation
8 votes -
Barbara Walters, trailblazing TV news broadcaster, longtime ABC News anchor, dies at 93
10 votes -
Top Down News
2 votes