FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — When global news organizations report “wrong” news, how should it be corrected and at what point does the public find out? Poynter.org wrote about those dirty, big, secrets. The Center for Ethics in Journalism Visiting Distinguished Professor Alicia Shepard is quoted in the article: “Major news organizations demand accountability from government officials, corporations and others involved in powerful positions, but aren’t nearly as accountable about their processes or mistakes.”
What online information can you trust and how much personal time do you want to use to learn about certain topics? A new Pew Research Center survey explored five broad dimensions of people’s engagement with information.
People are looking at their wrists a lot, and it’s usually not about checking time, but about getting some type of news alert. A Pew report shows the gap between getting news online versus television is narrowing. Pew Research Center
Should undercover journalists tell the interviewee they are being recorded, or videotaped? Here’s what happened to one journalist from India who did not disclose that information. Poynter