Press Gazette / Dominic Ponsford
TechCrunch / Kyle Wiggers
The New Yorker / Doreen St. Félix
Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni, and the collapse of the Hollywood #MeToo era →“The late 2010s genre of #MeToo reportage cannot thrive on today’s volatile internet. Information is misinformation and vice versa. Victims are offenders and offenders are victims. The word that comes up again and again in all the internet litigation of Lively v. Baldoni is ‘narrative.’ Abuse seems to be far from anyone’s mind.”
Platformer / Casey Newton
Meta just flipped the switch that prevents misinformation from spreading in the United States →“When the company announced on Jan. 7 that it would end its fact-checking partnerships, the company also instructed teams responsible for ranking content in the company’s apps to stop penalizing misinformation, according to sources and an internal document obtained by Platformer. The result is that the sort of viral hoaxes that ran roughshod over the platform during the 2016 US presidential election — ‘Pope Francis endorses Trump,’ Pizzagate, and all the rest — are now just as eligible for free amplification on Facebook, Instagram, and Threads as true stories.”
Rest of World / Kinling Lo and Viola Zhou
The Guardian / Joanna Partridge
The New York Times / Matthew Goldstein and Kate Conger
S.E.C. sues Elon Musk over securities violations →“The S.E.C. contends that in buying Twitter in 2022, Mr. Musk violated securities laws by amassing a large stock position in the social media company without filing the proper notification. The complaint said he had waited 11 days before filing the required disclosure with the S.E.C.”
Los Angeles Times / Noah Goldberg
He posted videos of the start of the Palisades fire. Then the internet blamed him. →“The five men, including Beni Oren, a 24-year-old who runs a glamping business, were the first to spot the Palisades fire in its earliest stages….The next day he posted the videos on X and TikTok. They quickly went viral and over the next few days, Oren and his friends became the targets of internet detectives who found it suspicious that the men carrying backpacks were so close to the origin of the fire.”