-
10 votes
-
The rise of Ksenia Sobchak - from TV presenter to politician | Unreported World
4 votes -
Inside China's audacious global propaganda campaign
10 votes -
How to keep the news coming
4 votes -
Australian Cardinal George Pell convicted of child sex abuse offences - but reporting of this is banned in Australia.
So... here's an article I read in my newspaper earlier this week: "Why the media is unable to report on a case that has generated huge interest online". As you might imagine, this left me quite...
So... here's an article I read in my newspaper earlier this week: "Why the media is unable to report on a case that has generated huge interest online". As you might imagine, this left me quite unenlightened. I had no way of knowing or guessing what this case was, or who was involved. It was only a few days later, in conversation with some people I work with, that I found out what had happened.
And this is the first chance I've had since then to sit down and research the story for myself.
In short, Cardinal George Pell, the most senior Catholic Church official to stand trial for sexual abuse, has been convicted of sexual abuse offences relating to his time as Archbishop of Melbourne in the late 1990s.
-
From the National Catholic Reporter: "Cardinal Pell found guilty of sex abuse, expected to appeal, reports say"
-
From the Washington Post: "Australian court convicts once-powerful Vatican official on sex-abuse-related charges"
-
From the Daily Beast: https://www.thedailybeast.com/vatican-no-3-cardinal-george-pell-on-trial-for-historical-child-sex-charges (I can't confirm this one - it's reportedly geo-blocked for Australian readers)
However, the Victorian court hearing the case has imposed a suppression order on the case, which applies in every jurisdiction in Australia. We have seen no reporting of the case as it proceeded, and no reporting of the outcome.
Before some people start assuming that this is protecting the Church, it's related to the right of an accused person to a free trial. Cardinal Pell is facing another trial in a few months for further charges of sexual abuse on a minor (relating to his time as a priest in Ballarat in the 1970s), and the court feels that reporting the outcome of this trial will potentially influence any possible jurors for that trial. Those possible jurors should go into that trial without any preconceived ideas of the accused person's guilt - and reporting that he is guilty of similar charges will undermine his right to a fair trial.
-
From the Washington Post: "A top cardinal’s sex-abuse conviction is huge news in Australia. But the media can’t report it there."
-
From the New York Post: "Australian media barred from covering cardinal’s conviction for sex abuse
All that we in Australia are being told is "George Pell removed from Pope Francis's cardinal advisory body". It's obvious why he was removed... if you know about the conviction.
32 votes -
-
Ben Hunte named first LGBT correspondent for BBC News
6 votes -
After audit, no Chinese surveillance implants in Supermicro boards found
10 votes -
A news consumer’s guide to ‘astroturf’ sources
7 votes -
Time is different now
12 votes -
Trump-Russia is too complex to report. We need a new kind of journalism
10 votes -
Fairfax Media shareholders vote for Channel Nine merger
3 votes -
'White' magazine shuts down after refusing to feature same-sex weddings
A news article: 'White' magazine shuts down after refusing to feature same-sex weddings The farewell message: Farewell
10 votes -
Former Macedonian strongman's escape to Hungary triggers a flood of disinformation
8 votes -
I found the best burger place in America. And then I killed it.
20 votes -
Katharine Viner: 'The Guardian's reader funding model is working. It's inspiring'
15 votes -
Should the press boycott Trump? Political strategists weigh in
8 votes -
We Wish to Plead Our Own Cause: The past and future of America’s black press
7 votes -
‘As Someone Who Has Had My Press Credentials Denied by Authoritarian China, I Never Thought I’d See This Crap Happen in the US’
10 votes -
White House revokes press pass from CNN's Jim Acosta
30 votes -
A Financial Times editor calls for a Fox News advertiser boycott
9 votes -
'Journalism while brown': Why Sunny Dhillon quit The Globe and Mail
6 votes -
Amazon pulls ads from Bloomberg, and Apple did not invite Bloomberg to its Oct. 30 event—both allegedly over China hacking story
18 votes -
I feel like one of the biggest digital losses of the last five years was the rise and fall of independent news networks
There was a brief (an oh-so-brief) period in youtube history where all types of non-corporate content thrived. I'm referring, if memory serves, to the timespan from around 2011 - late 2014. This...
There was a brief (an oh-so-brief) period in youtube history where all types of non-corporate content thrived. I'm referring, if memory serves, to the timespan from around 2011 - late 2014.
This was after youtube initially got big, but before Google decided that it wanted to step in and maintain the cultural status quo rather than redefine it. Ad revenue paid creators fairly-ish in most cases, and the talk of the town was machinima assfucking it's segment of poor souls that signed into it, rather than youtube pulling the same moves universally as it did a few years later.
(Suffice to say I have no love for the platform).
It's important to note that at this time, Youtube was a bit like a small-scale television enterprise, before it dreamed of deliberately becoming one. Youtube had everything from animations to product reviews, news to reality programming to VFX extravaganzas.
One of the most incredibly important innovations of the time, and one that's been all-but-lost, was the birth (and subsequent heat-death) of youtube news channels.
These channels mirrored cable news, but without the influence of corporate sponsors getting in the way, and without the ravenous need to appease political parties and harebrained cable tv viewers. They were biased - good god were some of them biased - and they weren't perfect, but they were set up in such a way that, had youtube not fucked it up (sigh...) they might've someday dethroned CNN, MSNBC and Fox.
With the next election coming up and shaping up to be a small-scale repeat of 2018s (you're kidding yourself if we're every going to go any other direction than further down at this point - after all, it works!) it's important to remember that there was, for a beautiful gleaming moment, a chance for not a corporation, but a community, to rise up and redefine the way people received news in a way that hadn't been seen since the conception of the newspaper.
Instead, youtube squandered it. Real events and engaging content don't generate views. People can't sit and watch hours of current events like they do for whatever-the-hell youtube trends nowadays (list videos and toy openings, I guess?), and why would they? If you get on youtube to watch today's news, you're not going to stick around for yesterday's. So youtube's 'algorythm', a word I've come to absolutely detest, doesn't favor them just like it doesn't favor basically anything else that once made youtube great.
The icing on the cake: rather than embrace even a tertiary aspect of the community, they went for the safe option and the ad revenue. No Phillip Defranco for you, we'll show you Jimmy Kimmel. No TYT, we'll fill trending with clips of CNN, MSNBC and Fox News. The only real survivor of the era was infowars.
Here's to you, youtube news. Dead and gone, but not forgotten.
9 votes -
Two more bombs found, addressed to Cory Booker and CNN in the US
23 votes -
Not real news: The Associated Press reports on this week's most shared fake news
19 votes -
Apple CEO Tim Cook is calling for Bloomberg to retract its Chinese spy chip story
13 votes -
Six red carnations and one severed ram’s head: Deadly threats sent to Russian independent newspaper
6 votes -
How Facebook’s Chaotic Push Into Video Cost Hundreds of Journalists Their Jobs
11 votes -
Tucker Carlson says he can't go to restaurants anymore
12 votes -
One man’s (very polite) fight against media Islamophobia
5 votes -
Stop press: has a journalist revolt at Forbes Russia saved the magazine’s independence?
7 votes -
Why you should be skeptical of the latest nutrition headlines
11 votes -
Turkey: Post contributor Jamal Khashoggi was killed by ‘murder’ team
4 votes -
Financial News presenters Kai Risdal And Molly Wood are currently doing an AMA
4 votes -
The NY Times has an option in their store to pick out favorite recipes that have been posted on the site (and in the paper) and print them in a cookbook
5 votes -
As Comcast takes control of Sky, Rupert Murdoch could yet bounce back. Mogul’s influence on worldwide news is unlikely to be weakened by latest defeat.
5 votes -
UN chief urges Myanmar government to free Reuters journalists
6 votes -
We now know more about the apparent poisoning of the Pussy Riot member Pyotr Verzilov
11 votes -
Five important stories that were lost in last week’s news dump
8 votes -
Internet taxes are sweeping sub-Saharan Africa — and silencing citizens
9 votes -
Media Manipulation, Strategic Amplification, and Responsible Journalism | danah boyd at the Online News Association conference
11 votes -
Facebook punishes liberal news site after fact check by right-wing site
10 votes -
Remembering The Onion’s 9/11 issue: ‘Everyone thought this would be our last issue in print’
16 votes -
Why are newspaper websites so horrible?
23 votes -
BBC admits ‘we get climate change coverage wrong too often’
18 votes -
Elon Musk and the meaning of ‘off the record’
14 votes -
I am part of the resistance inside the New York Times opinion desk
11 votes -
China officially bans ABC website, claims internet is 'fully open'
9 votes -
A study on the online "filter bubble" found that liberals and conservatives were actually recommended similar stories on Google News, representing a fairly homogeneous set of mainstream news sources
8 votes -
Suspected Iranian influence operation leverages network of inauthentic news sites and social media targeting audiences in US, UK, Latin America, Middle East
12 votes