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6 votes
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‘Orphan counties,’ and a battle over what local news really means
4 votes -
Facebook acknowledges Pelosi video is faked but declines to delete it
22 votes -
Should a Colorado library publish local news?
11 votes -
“We’re drinking now”: The oldest newspaper in New Orleans just fired its entire staff
11 votes -
How the media launders fossil fuel propaganda through branded content
10 votes -
'I hate what they’ve done to almost everyone in my family' (An article about Fox News poisoning.)
36 votes -
How Lachlan Murdoch went from studying philosophy at Princeton to exploiting white nationalism at Fox News
5 votes -
Crazy idea to help stop the spreading of untruthful news
One of the main issues with news on social media is the spread of fake or false news. This happens on every platform that allows sharing news. If Tildes continues to gain popularity, this will...
One of the main issues with news on social media is the spread of fake or false news. This happens on every platform that allows sharing news. If Tildes continues to gain popularity, this will likely happen on Tildes. I had an Idea: what if tildes had a group of fact checkers that check to see if the news is truthful, and block posts that link to untrustworthy new sites? could be like a 3 strikes thing, where if a new source has 3 articles posted that have misinformation, they would be blocked (the post also removed).
This is just an idea, feel free to highlight any issues with it.
10 votes -
[David Matheson, the Mormon] ‘Gay conversion therapist’ comes out: Exclusive interview [to Channel 4]
8 votes -
Why your newsfeed sucks
5 votes -
The cigarette company that reinvented television news
3 votes -
The eerie absence of viral fakes after the New Zealand mosque attacks
12 votes -
How the American media fuels a cycle of violence
3 votes -
Advertisers ditch Carlson and Pirro’s Fox News shows; protesters urge other companies to join them
7 votes -
In unearthed audio, Tucker Carlson makes numerous misogynistic and perverted comments
11 votes -
Did a former minister in Cameroon really burn embezzled money?
5 votes -
YouTube is rolling out a feature that shows fact-checks when people search for sensitive topics
18 votes -
'Fake news' on India-Pakistan crisis raises fears before election
6 votes -
The making of the Fox News White House
19 votes -
Farmers markets lies exposed
6 votes -
PSA: Disinformation and the over-representation of false flag events on social media.
I've noticed lately that on certain social media websites, particularly Reddit and Facebook, there has been an uptick in articles about fake hate crimes and false rape reports. The comments on...
I've noticed lately that on certain social media websites, particularly Reddit and Facebook, there has been an uptick in articles about fake hate crimes and false rape reports. The comments on these articles especially fan the flames on the subjects of homophobia, racism, and sexism. While the articles themselves are still noteworthy and deserving of attention, the amount of attention that they've been receiving has been disproportionately high (especially when considering how fairly unknown the individuals involved are) and the discourse on those articles particularly divisive.
On top of that, there are clear disinformation campaigns going on to attack current Democratic presidential candidates in the U.S. It seems pretty clear that we're having a repeat of the last presidential election, with outside parties stoking the flames of discrimination and disinformation on social media in order to further ideological divisions, and the consumers of that media readily falling for it.
I would caution readers to be mindful of the shifting representation of historically controversial or contentious topics moving forward. Even if the articles themselves are solidly factual, take note of how frequently you're seeing these articles, whether or not they're known to be contentious topics, and how they're affecting online discourse.
In short: make sure that you can still smell bullshit even when it's dressed up in pretty little facts.
30 votes -
Chihayafuru Season 3 Delayed Until October 2019
3 votes -
What are reliable sites for thoughtful content from a non-American perspective?
I came across a site about Chinese tech and video gaming and found it very Buzzfeed-y with its headlines and writing. It made me wonder what are the websites that curate a standard of thoughtful...
I came across a site about Chinese tech and video gaming and found it very Buzzfeed-y with its headlines and writing. It made me wonder what are the websites that curate a standard of thoughtful articles, essays, discussion, etc. and aren't part of the American internet scene.
I don't care what language it's in, what it's about, what country specifically it's centered on, if it's community-centric or not. If you have a suggestion, let's hear it.
Edit: An example I have is The Blizzard. It's really a subscription-model digital magazine (about soccer) but you can read various articles online.
21 votes -
This school district in Texas may create its own police force
6 votes -
How fake news was weaponized in Nigeria's elections
5 votes -
Do racists like Fox News, or does Fox make people racist?
14 votes -
Microsoft Edge browser flags Daily Mail Online as untrustworthy
24 votes -
Macedonia's former ruling party organized a trolling apparatus for spreading hate speech, threats
8 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 -
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 -
Migrant caravan faces false accusations as it crosses Mexico
3 votes -
Tucker Carlson says he can't go to restaurants anymore
12 votes -
The fake abortion clinics of America: Misconception
12 votes -
How companies can use fake websites and backdated news articles to censor Google’s search results
7 votes -
Can you spot the deceptive Facebook post?
29 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 -
Chibi Maruko-chan Manga Creator Momoko Sakura Passes Away at 53
9 votes -
Danah Boyd - The messy fourth estate
5 votes -
Fox News violates Poland's holocaust law with reference to "Polish death camp"
14 votes -
The Correspondant - A different business model for organizations producing journalism.
I just watched an interesting This Week in Startups interview with the CEO of a nascent but successful new "news" organization from the Netherlands called De Correspondent. They are launching a...
I just watched an interesting This Week in Startups interview with the CEO of a nascent but successful new "news" organization from the Netherlands called De Correspondent. They are launching a new US-based company called The Correspondent, which has some high profile supporters. This list includes Nate Silver, William Julius Wilson, Rosanne Cash, and some others.
Their business model allows them to attract high-quality journalists by optimizing for journalistic integrity and independence. They have around 60,000 members paying around $70 per year in the Netherlands. They do no advertising business and are a for-profit corp with a dividend cap of 5% to make themselves unattractive to VC-type investors. The CEO claims they "ignore the news," meaning that they try to avoid the sound-bite quips that can be very distracting. They do not report on individual's scandals, instead focusing on systemic issues.
Journalists are required to share their stories with the members as they are developing. Stories are not guarded secrets while in development unlike traditional news organizations. This allows members to contribute to the stories via a form of curated crowdsourcing. For example, they reached out to members when doing a story on Shell, and found a few members who had access to the company which led to discovery of Shell's own internal Inconvenient Truth type video which was made in 1991.
The CEO also mentioned that he always includes a developer or designer in story discussions so that the latest investigation and presentation tools can be used on a story from day one.
Please take a look at the links and let me know what you think of this model, and its chances in the US market. I am pretty excited for anyone trying anything new in this space. What do you think? Would you pay for something like this?
Edit: I'm not sure if there is a better ~group for this topic, please move it if there is. Also, formatting, phrasing, and clarity.
Here is a direct link to the CEO's Medium account with more information.
15 votes -
How Cambodia’s prime minister rigged an election
3 votes -
Facebook bans 196 pages in Brazil, attempting to rein in abuse and disinformation
5 votes -
New "Toaru project" will be revealed on the next Dengeki Festival(Fall)
3 votes -
SSSS Gridman will be 12 episodes long.
@wowow_anime: \放送決定/ 『SSSS.GRIDMAN』10月放送スタート予定(全12話) ※第1話無料放送⇒https://t.co/7uIaOSAZ81 あの頃の未来が今になった2018年、グリッドマンがアニメーションの世界で蘇る!! #雨宮哲 #広瀬裕也 #緑川光 #斉藤壮馬 #宮本侑芽 #上田麗奈 #wowow #SSSS_GRIDMAN
2 votes -
New project Date a Live (Season 3) is in production.
@zerods_: New Anime project for Date A Live (Season 3) in production.
1 vote -
Truth, disrupted
8 votes -
Russian influence campaign sought to exploit Americans' trust in local news
16 votes -
The endless reign of Rupert Murdoch
12 votes