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5 votes
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Google will license content from news providers
7 votes -
Scott Alexander has deleted his Slate Star Codex blog due to the New York Times planning to reveal his real name in an article
48 votes -
Moroccan journalist targeted with network injection attacks using NSO Group’s tools
2 votes -
America needs a ministry of (actual) truth
10 votes -
The digital archives of the oldest Black newspaper in America show a long struggle for justice
5 votes -
'Facebook doesn't care': Activists say accounts removed despite Mark Zuckerberg's free-speech stance
8 votes -
Facebook and Google refuse to pay revenue to Australian media
10 votes -
Microsoft lays off journalists to replace them with AI
15 votes -
Don't fall for Bloomberg's effusive Elon Musk profile
16 votes -
CNBC reporter makes fake news website with plagiarized content, gets approved by ad tech companies
10 votes -
New York Times phasing out all third-party advertising data
21 votes -
NewsGuard and Microsoft team up to make NewsGuard free for Microsoft Edge users, Bing integration
5 votes -
Australia to make Google and Facebook pay for news content
6 votes -
The uncensored library: A digital library containing suppressed articles, built inside Minecraft to bypass internet surveillance and censorship
16 votes -
Hank Green - The "38% of Americans wouldn't buy Corona beer" reported by CNN is misleading
10 votes -
Protocol, a new media company from the publisher of Politico, focusing on the people, power, and politics of technology
12 votes -
How computers wrote BBC election result stories
6 votes -
Inside the hate factory: how Facebook fuels far-right profit
12 votes -
Facebook includes Breitbart in new 'high quality' news tab
31 votes -
Pando sold to BuySellAds - Sarah Lacy reflects on 8 years building the company, and 20 years in tech journalism in Silicon Valley
6 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg is struggling to explain why Breitbart belongs on Facebook News
27 votes -
An analysis of the implications of using Google's G Suite products in a newsroom
10 votes -
Can a machine learn to write for the New Yorker?
6 votes -
One year after ‘The Big Hack’
9 votes -
Let’s go further and hope for every last drop of joy to be drained from the world
11 votes -
Forty rebuttals to the media’s smears of Julian Assange – by someone who was actually there
8 votes -
There's An Underground Economy Selling Links From The New York Times, BBC, CNN, And Other Big News Sites
12 votes -
The fall of Mic was a warning - Lessons from the death of a venture-backed, Facebook-dependent, millennial-focused news site
8 votes -
Craigslist's nerdy founder wants to change the world -- starting with your daily news
11 votes -
Beware the Cheapfakes: Deepfakes are troubling. But disinformation doesn’t have to be high tech to be damaging.
5 votes -
A state-of-the-art defense against neural fake news
6 votes -
When a fatal grizzly mauling goes viral - How much does the world need to know about a deadly bear attack?
7 votes -
"Betrayed by an app she had never heard of" - How TrueCaller is endangering journalists
17 votes -
Everyone is framing 5G as a "race", but nobody seems to be able to explain why it matters who wins
10 votes -
Should the media quit Facebook?
3 votes -
Julian Assange's prosecution is about much more than attempting to hack a password
10 votes -
Why your newsfeed sucks
5 votes -
The Intercept shuts down access to Snowden trove
9 votes -
The Verge is sending out copyright strikes to people who criticized their PC build
For those of you not in the loop, the Verge created a PC build guide back in September, and it was...bad, to put it lightly. They took down the original video after a storm of criticism, but this...
For those of you not in the loop, the Verge created a PC build guide back in September, and it was...bad, to put it lightly. They took down the original video after a storm of criticism, but this guy reuploaded it, if you want to see it.
Kyle (aka Bitwit) created a response video to it, which got copyright striked (which is more severe than a claim and has to be done by a human, unlike content ID claims), in addition to ReviewTechUSA. Ironically, the Verge published an article about abuse of the copyright system just 3 days ago (2 days when the videos were taken down yesterday).
The Verge should have taken more responsibility to begin with, now that the dust have settled they seem bent on reminding everyone how bad their video was.
Edit: Bauke pointed out Kyle's video is back up! This is not because the Verge retracted their claim, but because YouTube actually had a human review it and determine it was fair use (which usually isn't the case from what I've heard).
41 votes -
Facebook moves to block ad transparency tools- including ours
8 votes -
Microsoft Edge browser flags Daily Mail Online as untrustworthy
24 votes -
After audit, no Chinese surveillance implants in Supermicro boards found
10 votes -
Time is different now
12 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 -
Apple CEO Tim Cook is calling for Bloomberg to retract its Chinese spy chip story
13 votes -
How Facebook’s Chaotic Push Into Video Cost Hundreds of Journalists Their Jobs
11 votes -
Internet taxes are sweeping sub-Saharan Africa — and silencing citizens
9 votes -
Facebook punishes liberal news site after fact check by right-wing site
10 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