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Misinformation is a global problem. One of the solutions might work across continents too.
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Misinformation is a global problem. One of the solutions might work across continents too.
Plus: What Africa’s top fact-checkers are doing to combat false beliefs about Covid-19.
By Sarah Scire
Some questions (and answers) about the Local Journalism Sustainability Act
If the proposed legislation becomes law, it would offer substantial help to many local newsrooms at a critical time.
By Sarah Scire
“This shit is just embarrassing”: The New Yorker’s archive editor breaks down the print mag’s dismal diversity stats
“As someone who’s done the research, seen all the numbers, I can tell you that things are simply not changing quickly enough to present real, concrete progress.”
By Laura Hazard Owen
A new NYU report finds that Facebook is part of the polarization problem, but not all of it
But its recommendations to reduce polarization don’t target the people who might have the most direct influence.
By Joshua Benton
How “engagement” makes you vulnerable to manipulation and misinformation on social media
“The heart of the matter is the distinction between provoking a response and providing content people want.”
By Filippo Menczer
An Australian court ruling makes publishers legally responsible for every idiot Facebook user who leaves a comment
Is a defamatory comment left on your Facebook page more like graffiti on a wall, a streaker on live TV, or a hand-delivered telegram? Whatever your metaphor, Australian courts now say publishers are legally liable for words they neither wrote nor published.
By Joshua Benton
This news consortium aims to cover rural America from coast to coast
With more than 50 participating newsrooms led by The Daily Yonder and the agribusiness-focused Investigate Midwest, the multi-year effort will be the nonprofit group’s largest collaboration ever.
By Sarah Scire
“I didn’t feel wanted by student media”: Few Black and Latinx students are editors of top college newspapers
Of the 73 editors-in-chief at award-winning college newsrooms in the Spring 2021 semester, less than 6% were Black, and approximately 10% were Latinx — significantly less than their share of the college population.
By Janice Kai Chen, Ilena Peng, Jasen Lo, Trisha Ahmed, Simon J. Levien, and Devan Karp
Misinformation is a global problem. One of the solutions might work across continents too.
Plus: What Africa’s top fact-checkers are doing to combat false beliefs about Covid-19.
By Sarah Scire
Some questions (and answers) about the Local Journalism Sustainability Act
If the proposed legislation becomes law, it would offer substantial help to many local newsrooms at a critical time.
“This shit is just embarrassing”: The New Yorker’s archive editor breaks down the print mag’s dismal diversity stats
“As someone who’s done the research, seen all the numbers, I can tell you that things are simply not changing quickly enough to present real, concrete progress.”
What We’re Reading
Politico / Ruby Cramer and Alex Thompson
The mysterious reporter on the Biden beat
Kyle Mazza “said he relies on earnings from his freelance work and money from his parents, who he says own their own data processing company, to underwrite UNF News. ‘They’re very invested in my career,’ he said. ‘It’s something that I’ll always thank them for. All of that help, that funding — that really is the driver for my career.'” (UNF stands for “Universal News Forever.”)
Washington Post / Ashley Fetters and Gerrit De Vynck
How wellness influencers are fueling the anti-vaccine movement
“It’s those with anywhere between 10,000 and 50,000 followers — sometimes known as ‘microinfluencers’ — who are believed within the marketing industry to have an especially outsize impact on their followers.”
Des Moines Register / William Morris
Appeals court rules that article about Devin Nunes’ family farm wasn’t defamatory, but tweeting about it might have been
“University of Iowa law professor Cristina Tilley said the decision represents ‘a fairly new and unusual position that tweeting out an article that has already been published can make a speaker vulnerable to libel liability if the subject of the article has denied the original allegations in court.'”
The Wall Street Journal / Corrie Driebusch
The Tokyo-based SmartNews app raises $230 million
SmartNews (here’s our overview of the company from 2019) “plans to use the money from its latest funding round to add employees in the U.S. and launch features focused on consumer health and safety.”
The New York Times Company
The New York Times is launching an initiative to explore how it “can continue to evolve to convey our values”
The team will “take on the challenge of developing innovative ways of deepening our audience’s trust in our mission and in the credibility of our journalism, no matter where it is encountered.” If you’re confused about what exactly this means, you’re not the only one, but they say they’ll share more details soon.
Metro / Emma Kelly
CNN / Kerry Flynn
Clubhouse, the live audio app, has hired an NPR veteran as its first head of news
“Nina Gregory, senior editor for NPR’s Arts Desk who worked for the nonprofit media organization since 2006, is joining Clubhouse as its first head of news and media publishers.”
The New Republic / Eleanor Cummins
The chilling popularity of anti-vax deathbed videos
“At this point, every news outlet, from The New York Times to MSNBC, seems to have its own representative anecdote, and some go to great lengths to unearth new ones: In August, CNN’s Don Lemon flew to his hometown of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to shove a mic in the faces of the sick and ask, ‘Do you regret it?'”
Twitter / Tubby & Coo's
Why it’s so hard to get print books right now, explained
“If a store doesn’t have a book in stock/sells out, it could be 6-8 weeks before we can get more. If we have a book in stock that we can immediately ship out, delays will be less, but there will likely still be shipping delays, especially as we get closer to the holidays.”
Vanity Fair / Joe Pompeo
“I’m drawn to underdogs”: Kevin Merida wants to reinvent the Los Angeles Times
“‘I want to get into partnerships, and documentaries, and broaden the podcast slate, and experiment in all of the forms you can experiment with,’ [Merida] said. Of course it doesn’t hurt that the Golden State is full of major stories from climate change to the streaming wars. ‘You could argue that California is a country unto itself.'”
Nieman Lab is a project to try to help figure out where the news is headed in the Internet age. Sign up for The Digest, our daily email with all the freshest future-of-journalism news.