From 1975-1981, the South Carolina Museum Commission published a semi-annual News publication with information about events, museum and art pieces around the state, events, local history publications, and other items of public interest. This issue, volume 4, number 3 is from Fall 1978 and has articles on the military collection of Dr. Francis A. Lord , the South Carolina Gazette, Technical Assistance Workshop Series, Drayton Hall bibliography and museum happenings around the state.
Irregular news releases from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. ; Latest issue consulted: 97/40 (June 30, 1997). ; Description based on: 71/7 (Jan. 8, 1971); title from caption. ; Includes the annual report: New car assessment program results. ; Issues are designated by date of news release, not date of publication. ; Irregular news releases from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Issued by: Dept. of Transportation, Office of Public Affairs, ; Dept. of Transportation, Office of Public and Consumer Affairs, ; Dept. of Transportation, Assistant Secretary for Governmental and Public Affairs, ; Dept. of Transportation, Office of Public Affairs, ; Dept. of Transportation, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs
This article seeks to explain variation in news sharing patterns on social media. It finds that news editors have considerable power to shape the social media agenda through the use of "story importance cues" but also shows that there are some areas of news reporting (such as those related to crime and disasters) where this power does not apply. This highlights the existence of a social "news gap" where social media filters out certain types of news, producing a social media news agenda which has important differences from its traditional counterpart. The discussion suggests that this may be consequential for perceptions of crime and engagement with politics; it might even stimulate a partial reversal of the tabloidization of news outlets.
On 1 January 2017, a Russian federal law (208-FZ) came into force that holds news aggregators liable for spreading fake news. Links to news items that originate from registered media outlets - a state-regulated category - are, however, exempt from liability. As a result, news aggregators, such as Yandex News, have revised their algorithms to avoid legal claims. This article argues that the law has created a mechanism of indirect media control enabling the Russian state to influence online news dissemination through existing media regulation structures. It conceptualises five ways in which this mechanism can affect media pluralism in Russia's online news environment, given news aggregators' function as algorithmic gatekeepers directing traffic to news websites. The article argues that the law 'On news aggregators' exemplifies the diversification of Russian regulation of online news from controlling content and targeting content producers towards governing the algorithmic infrastructures that shape news dissemination. ; Peer reviewed
28 July - 2 August, 2009, Budapest, Hungarian National IUHPS, International Congress of History of Science and TechnologyThe Hungarian National IUHPS Committee XXIII International Congress of History of Science and Technology in Budapest between 28 July - 2 August, 2009.The XXIII International Congress of History of Science and technology will be supported by the Hungarian Government, the Hungarian Academy [.]24/08/2009 - 25/08/2009 - Newcastle upon Tyne (UK), Approaches to Ancient Medicine Organisé par: Newcastle UniversityProf. Philip van der Eijk, Newcastle University, School of Historical Studies, Northern Centre for the History of Medicine, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 [.] 2nd-5th September 2009, Tranmillis University College, BelfastThe 23rd Congress has been in Belfast in September 2009, Wed 2nd Sept to Sat 5th Sept. The Congress took place at Stranmillis University College, a college of Queen's University Belfast. Stranmillis was founded in 1922 to provide state funded teacher training but now provides other courses [.]
International audience ; Popularisé par Donald Trump durant la campagne électorale de 2016 pour qualifier ses opposants et également les journaux qui lui sont critiques, la formule de « fake news » – fausses nouvelles – s'est diffusée au travers des réseaux sociaux et des médias à partir de l'année 2017 pour atteindre un pic d'attention en 2018 (GoogleTrends, 2019). La campagne présidentielle française de 2017 véhiculera également son lot de « fake news » dont nombre de personnalités politiques deviennent cette fois-ci les cibles : entre la prétendue Rolex de Jean-Luc Mélenchon au compte dans les Bahamas d'Emmanuel Macron, des campagnes de dénigrement et désinformation se multiplient et circulent rapidement sur les réseaux.
International audience ; Popularisé par Donald Trump durant la campagne électorale de 2016 pour qualifier ses opposants et également les journaux qui lui sont critiques, la formule de « fake news » – fausses nouvelles – s'est diffusée au travers des réseaux sociaux et des médias à partir de l'année 2017 pour atteindre un pic d'attention en 2018 (GoogleTrends, 2019). La campagne présidentielle française de 2017 véhiculera également son lot de « fake news » dont nombre de personnalités politiques deviennent cette fois-ci les cibles : entre la prétendue Rolex de Jean-Luc Mélenchon au compte dans les Bahamas d'Emmanuel Macron, des campagnes de dénigrement et désinformation se multiplient et circulent rapidement sur les réseaux.
The article offers new insights for democracy and for news producers by mapping the use and users of today's cross-media news landscape, as the everyday consumption of news across the range of available news media and formats is shifting as a result of transformations of technology, culture and lifestyles. Theoretically the study is anchored in Habermas's notion of the public sphere, and its recent reconceptualizations in theories of 'cultural citizenship', 'civic agency' and 'public connection'. The project operationalizes these theories through the concept of users' perceived "worthwhileness" of news media, a user-anchored concept which incorporates the different functionalities of the situational cross-media use of news by citizen/consumers in everyday life. Empirically the article presents the findings of a large-scale survey that traces the imminent challenges facing players in the news market, as a consequence of accelerating divisions between 'overview' and 'depth' news media (across print, broadcasting and the internet). The project is carried out in a partnership of university-based researchers and analysts from one of the major newspaper publishers in Denmark, and presents the first user-based analysis of the relative position of each individual news medium in the entire news media matrix.
En este artículo analizamos, desde la teoría del framing, la información ofre- cida por los dos canales de noticias 24 horas del grupo News Corporation, Sky News y Fox News, con relación a la crisis nuclear de Corea del Nor- te en el periodo 9 -23 de abril de 2013. Nos centramos en aspectos como la "foxificación", la presencia de expertos militares en los bloques de noti- cias y los encuadres informativos. En el caso de Sky News, la información se ofrece desde el prisma de los sucesos a nivel nacional debido al tiempo dedicado a la polémica con el documental del programa "Panorama" de la BBC. El tratamiento de la crisis nuclear en Fox News se traduce en cons- tantes críticas a las políticas militares llevadas a cabo por Corea, la exalta- ción patriótica de los Estados Unidos poniendo el acento sobre el sistema defensivo y todo ello rodeado de una crítica feroz a la Administración Obama por no promover una intervención militar en el conflicto. ; The information provided by News Corporation's two 24-hour news channels: Sky News and Fox News, concerning the North Korean nuclear crisis during April 9 -23, 2013 is examined in this paper from the standpoint of the framing theory. The authors focus on aspects such as "Foxificación", the presence of military experts on news programs, and the diversity of frameworks for the news. In the case of Sky News, information is made available through the prism of national events, given the time devoted to the controversy with the BBC's "Panorama" program. Treatment of the nuclear crisis on Fox News translates into constant criticism of North Korea's military policy and patriotic exaltation of the United States, with emphasis on the defense system, all cloaked in fierce criticism of the Obama Administration for not promoting military intervention in the conflict.
The information provided by News Corporation's two 24-hour news channels: Sky News and Fox News, concerning the North Korean nuclear crisis during April 9 -23, 2013 is examined in this paper from the standpoint of the framing theory. The authors focus on aspects such as "Foxificación", the presence of military experts on news programs, and the diversity of frameworks for the news. In the case of Sky News, information is made available through the prism of national events, given the time devoted to the controversy with the BBC's "Panorama" program. Treatment of the nuclear crisis on Fox News translates into constant criticism of North Korea's military policy and patriotic exaltation of the United States, with emphasis on the defense system, all cloaked in fierce criticism of the Obama Administration for not promoting military intervention in the conflict. ; En este artículo analizamos, desde la teoría del framing, la información ofrecida por los dos canales de noticias 24 horas del grupo News Corporation, Sky News y Fox News, con relación a la crisis nuclear de Corea del Norte en el periodo 9 -23 de abril de 2013. Nos centramos en aspectos como la "foxificación", la presencia de expertos militares en los bloques de noticias y los encuadres informativos. En el caso de Sky News, la información se ofrece desde el prisma de los sucesos a nivel nacional debido al tiempo dedicado a la polémica con el documental del programa "Panorama" de la BBC. El tratamiento de la crisis nuclear en Fox News se traduce en cons- tantes críticas a las políticas militares llevadas a cabo por Corea, la exaltación patriótica de los Estados Unidos poniendo el acento sobre el sistema defensivo y todo ello rodeado de una crítica feroz a la Administración Obama por no promover una intervención militar en el conflicto. DOI:10.5294/pacla.2014.17.3.12 ; Neste artigo, analisamos, a partir da teoria do framing, a informação oferecida pelos dois canais de notícias 24 horas do grupo News Corporation, Sky News e Fox News sobre a crise nuclear da Coreia do Norte no período de 9 a 23 de abril de 2013. Centrou-se em aspectos como a "foxificação", a presença de especialistas militares nos blocos de notícias e no quadros informativos. No caso da Sky News, a informação foi oferecida a partir do prisma dos acontecimentos no �mbito nacional devido ao tempo dedicado à polêmica com o documentário do programa "Panorama", da BBC. O tratamento da crise nuclear na Fox News se traduz e constantes críticas às políticas militares realizadas pela Coreia, a exaltação patriótica dos Estados Unidos que enfatizou o sistema defensivo e tudo isso rodeado de uma crítica feroz à Administração Obama por não promover uma intervenção no conflito.
Through a mixed methods research design, we address normative aspects of news recommendation engines by examining whether search personalisation and news diversity are evident on Google News in the UK. Firstly, in a quasi-experimental design, we asked a diverse set of participants (N=78) to search Google News using four search terms and report the first five articles recommended for each term. We found little evidence of news personalisation, which challenges the claim that news search algorithms contribute to weakened viewpoint diversity. We also found a high degree of homogeneity in news search results, with legacy media brands dominating. Secondly, we conducted a manual content analysis of the articles recommended by Google News for our search terms (N=192), focusing on favourability towards each term. We found that while there was little relationship between the favourability slant of the articles and political leanings of participants, there were two exceptions: self-identified right-wing participants were more likely to see unfavourable stories about 1) immigration, and 2) a left-wing politician. This reopens the question of news search engines' contributions to polarisation and viewpoint diversity for certain news consumers.
In the last decade, social media and the Internet have amplified the possibility to spread false information, a.k.a. fake news, which has become a serious threat to the credibility of politicians, organizations, and other decision makers. This paper proposes a framework for investigating the incentives to strategically spread fake news under different institutional configurations and payoff structures. In particular, we show under what conditions institutions that foster transparency in the media cause more fake news. Complementary, we study what kind of environments are particularly susceptible to the production of fake news.