How a Photo of a File Cabinet Led to a Fascinating New York Times Correction | Washingtonian

An unusual correction now rides below the New York Times’s major story about Russian hacking in the November 8 election: “An earlier version of the main photograph with this article, of a filing cabinet and computer at the Democratic National Committee headquarters, should not have been published,” it says. That’s a significant admission from any publisher….

Read More

Stop worrying about fake news. What comes next will be much worse | Jonathan Albright | Opinion | The Guardian

In my exploration of “fake news”, I’ve found some troubling things. And it’s not just the rightwing news network that’s worrying. I’ve recently gone back and taken a preliminary look at the leftwing media ecosystem, trying to map the hyperlinks between these sites – so I’m not trying to establish causation or assign blame as…

Read More

Everybody Lies on Social Media—Just Ask Bankruptcy Asset Hunters – WSJ

This October, when Ido Alexander saw photos a young man had posted on social media, he thought he had hit the bankruptcy jackpot. Mr. Alexander, a Florida lawyer working for a court-appointed trustee, dispatched an appraiser to the man’s home to inspect the expensive-looking gold chains and other jewelry he had been posing in, which he hadn’t…

Read More

Telegraph paywall initiative is an interesting strategic shift | Media | The Guardian

The decision by the Telegraph Media Group (TMG) to introduce a paywall for “premium content” is an interesting strategic and philosophical shift. Although it will initially involve only 15% of the output of the Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph, it is an acknowledgement that readers should pay for its journalism and, more importantly, that its…

Read More