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8 votes
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My journey down the rabbit hole of every journalist’s favorite app, Otter.ai
4 votes -
Paywalls everywhere you go? Get to the goodies with these two Paywall Ladder bookmarklets
9 votes -
China surveillance of journalists to use 'traffic-light' system
6 votes -
The Verge is updating their public ethics policy "to be clearer in our interactions with public relations and corporate communications professionals"
11 votes -
Twitter expands its subscription service to news articles
6 votes -
CBC is keeping Facebook comments closed on news posts
21 votes -
How AT&T helped build far-right One America News
13 votes -
Is it me or are "news" articles on the web getting more and more irritating to read
I've recently experienced something multiple times and wanted to see if others are seeing this. I'm seeing various news articles where the first few paragraphs basically say the exact some...
I've recently experienced something multiple times and wanted to see if others are seeing this. I'm seeing various news articles where the first few paragraphs basically say the exact some information over and over again 3 or 4 times in slightly different ways. My most recent experience was this article about some hackers selling information on billions of Facebook users.
The article starts off with the title "Personal Information of More Than 1.5 Billion Facebook Users Sold on Hacker Forum". Straightforward and to the point. Next we get this paragraph in bold:
The private and personal information of over 1.5 billion Facebook users is being sold on a popular hacking-related forum, potentially enabling cybercriminals and unscrupulous advertisers to target Internet users globally.
Next is a bullet list of the highlights of the incident:
Highlights:
- Data scrapers are selling sensitive personal data on 1.5 billion Facebook users.
- Data contains users’: name, email, phone number, location, gender, and user ID.
- Data appears to be authentic.
- Personal data obtained through web scraping.
- Data can be utilized for phishing and account takeover attacks.
- Sold data claimed to be new from 2021.
This rehashes the number (1.5 billion) and place (Facebook), but does contain new information like what was leaked, and some unsubstantiated claims about whether it's authentic and how it was obtained.
The next paragraph repeats the 1.5 billion number a fourth time, and repeats that the data is available on a hacker forum. Two paragraphs later, we get another list of bullet points which are identical to the 2nd bullet point above; namely that the info contains:
According to the forum poster, the data provided contains the following personal information of Facebook users:
- Name
- Location
- Gender
- Phone number
- User ID
At this point I stop reading because I mistakenly think that I'm re-reading the same paragraph over and over again. It's an incredibly unpleasant experience.
Is anyone else seeing this? I've been seeing this not just on smaller sites like the one linked here, but on major news sites like CNBC and CNN, too. I know that news sites are having their budgets slashed, etc., but I literally can't read articles like this. I mean my brain just won't let me complete them because it thinks it's caught in a loop or something. It's hard to describe.
18 votes -
Sophisticated exploits used to breach fully-patched iPhones of journalists, activists, as detailed by Amnesty International's Security Lab
24 votes -
The day I almost decided to hold the press to account
8 votes -
What newsrooms still don’t understand about the internet
4 votes -
Scroll has been acquired by Twitter
4 votes -
Substack is selling soap operas
8 votes -
Substack paid a secret group of writers to make newsletter authorship seem lucrative
9 votes -
Teen Vogue editor resigns after fury over racist tweets
13 votes -
Techworker.com launches, a new reader-funded site focusing on employees at tech companies
10 votes -
Facebook to lift Australia news ban after government agrees to amendments to proposed legislation requiring them to pay publishers
6 votes -
Silicon Valley’s safe space: Slate Star Codex was a window into the psyche of many tech leaders building our collective future. Then it disappeared.
25 votes -
Facebook will ban Australian users from sharing or viewing news
18 votes -
Years later, Bloomberg doubles down on disputed Supermicro supply chain hack story
11 votes -
Google threatens to pull search engine in Australia
15 votes -
The world's first internet bench
5 votes -
Twitter won’t let The New York Post tweet until it agrees to behave itself
13 votes -
Facebook and Twitter take unusual steps to limit spread of New York Post story
16 votes -
Linux Journal is back and operating under the ownership of Slashdot Media
7 votes -
A robot wrote this entire article. Are you scared yet, human?
21 votes -
Amazon deletes 20,000 product reviews written by seven of its top ten UK reviewers after a Financial Times investigation found they were written for profit
18 votes -
Can killing cookies save journalism? A Dutch public broadcaster got rid of targeted digital ads and its revenues went up 62-79%
31 votes -
Journalists’ Twitter use shows them talking within smaller bubbles
7 votes -
Slate Star Codex and Silicon Valley’s war against the media
16 votes -
Spies, lies, and stonewalling: What it’s like to report on Facebook
5 votes -
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 -
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 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 -
A spectacularly bad Washington Post story on Apple and Google’s exposure notification project
3 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 -
Protocol, a new media company from the publisher of Politico, focusing on the people, power, and politics of technology
12 votes -
Apple News no longer supports RSS
19 votes -
How computers wrote BBC election result stories
6 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