The Guardian / Archie Bland
The New Yorker’s Lucy Letby story shows U.K.’s media-suppressing law needs an update →“The result is that a framework intended to insulate juries from undue influence can instead create chaos: news providers standing well back or barging over the line depending on mercenary risk-benefit analyses, international publishers running pieces that would be slam-dunk breaches if they were British, and a tombola of prejudicial posts online from people who really ought to know better….The ironic result of all this is that irresponsible coverage is sometimes easier to bump into than the other kind.”
Voice of America / Maya Jimenez
The Washington Post / Kara Voght
Jim VandeHei has had a pretty good life. But what’s the takeaway? →“The book’s advice boils down to this: Screw fancy degrees and where you came from and your SAT score and whatever other credential you think you need to succeed. All you need to do is ‘find your passions,’ VandeHei writes. ‘Then outwork everyone in pursuit of shaping your destiny.'”
The Verge / Lauren Feiner
Press Gazette / Clara Aberneithie
Al Jazeera Gaza correspondent accuses international journalists of not doing enough →“International journalists have not fought for the right to enter the Gaza strip and to cover the war. They have abandoned the right; they have for many years lectured about the freedom of speech that they have let go when covering the war in the Gaza strip…They [international media] have used the excuse of ‘lack of information’ or ‘not enough Western journalists entering the Gaza strip’ for not covering the war like they should.”
The New York Times / Jeremy White
See how easily AI chatbots can be taught to spew disinformation →“To understand how worrisome the threat is, we customized our own chatbots, feeding them millions of publicly available social media posts from Reddit and Parler. The posts, which ranged from discussions of racial and gender equity to border policies, allowed the chatbots to develop a variety of liberal and conservative viewpoints.”
Press Gazette / Aisha Majid
The Guardian / Ann Neumann
Press Gazette / Clara Aberneithie
CNN’s Christiane Amanpour: “We are not impartial…we should be truthful” →“‘I have a problem with the word impartial because I don’t really know what it means, is it neutral or objective?’ [BBC News CEO Deborah] Turness defined impartiality as: ‘Fairness and respect for audiences.’ But Amanpour explained: ‘What if World War Two was about to explode — would we say we’re impartial to the Nazis’ desire to overrun the world? No, we are not impartial, and we should not be, we should be objective and truthful.'”
The Verge / Jacob Kastrenakes
Pew Research Center / Athena Chapekis, Samuel Bestvater, Emma Remy, & Gonzalo Rivero