How to choose your news Damon Brown

How do you know what’s happening in your world?

The amount of information just a click away

may be limitless,

but the time and energy we have

to absorb and evaluate it is not.

All the information in the world won’t be very useful

unless you know how to read the news.

To your grandparents, parents,

or even older siblings,

this idea would have sounded strange.

Only a few decades ago, news was broad-based.

Your choices were limited

to a couple of general interest magazines

and newspaper of record,

and three or four TV networks

where trusted newscasters delivered the day’s news

at the same reliable time every evening.

But the problems with this system soon became apparent

as mass media spread.

While it was known that authoritarian countries

controlled and censored information,

a series of scandals showed that

democratic governments were also misleading the public,

often with media cooperation.

Revelations of covert wars, secret assassinations,

and political corruption

undermined public faith in official narratives

presented by mainstream sources.

This breakdown of trust in media gatekeepers

lead to alternative newspapers, radio shows, and cable news

competing with the major outlets and covering events

from various perspectives.

More recently, the Internet has multiplied the amount

of information and viewpoints,

with social media, blogs, and online video

turning every citizen into a potential reporter.

But if everyone is a reporter, nobody is,

and different sources may disagree,

not only opinions, but on the facts themselves.

So how do you get the truth, or something close?

One of the best ways is to get the original news

unfiltered by middlemen.

Instead of articles interpreting a scientific study

or a politician’s speech,

you can often find the actual material and judge for yourself.

For current events, follow reporters on social media.

During major events, such as the Arab Spring

or the Ukrainian protests,

newscasters and bloggers have posted updates and recordings

from the midst of the chaos.

Though many of these later appear in articles or broadcasts,

keep in mind that these polished versions

often combine the voice of the person who was there

with the input of editors who weren’t.

At the same time, the more chaotic the story,

the less you should try to follow it in real time.

In events like terrorist attacks and natural disasters,

today’s media attempts continuous coverage

even when no reliable new information is available,

sometimes leading to incorrect information

or false accusations of innocent people.

It’s easy to be anxious in such events,

but try checking for the latest information

at several points in the day,

rather than every few minutes,

allowing time for complete details to emerge

and false reports to be refuted.

While good journalism aims for objectivity,

media bias is often unavoidable.

When you can’t get the direct story,

read coverage in multiple outlets

which employ different reporters and interview different experts.

Tuning in to various sources and noting the differences

lets you put the pieces together

for a more complete picture.

It’s also crucial to separate fact from opinion.

Words like think, likely, or probably

mean that the outlet is being careful

or, worse, taking a guess.

And watch out for reports that rely on anonymous sources.

These could be people who have little connection to the story,

or have an interest in influencing coverage,

their anonymity making them unaccountable

for the information they provide.

Finally, and most importantly,

try to verify news before spreading it.

While social media has enabled the truth

to reach us faster,

it’s also allowed rumors to spread

before they can be verified

and falsehoods to survive

long after they’ve been refuted.

So, before you share that unbelievable

or outrageous news item,

do a web search to find any additional

information or context you might have missed

and what others are saying about it.

Today, we are more free than ever

from the old media gatekeepers

who used to control the flow of information.

But with freedom comes responsibility:

the responsibility to curate our own experience

and ensure that this flow does not become a flood,

leaving us less informed than before we took the plunge.

你怎么知道你的世界正在发生什么?

只需点击一下

即可获得的信息量可能是无限的,

但我们

必须吸收和评估它的时间和精力却不是。 除非您知道如何阅读新闻,否则

世界上所有的信息都不会很有用

对于你的祖父母、父母,

甚至是年长的兄弟姐妹来说,

这个想法听起来很奇怪。

仅在几十年前,新闻还具有广泛的基础。

您的选择仅限

于一些大众感兴趣的杂志

和记录报纸,

以及三四个电视网络

,值得信赖的新闻播音员

每天晚上在相同的可靠时间播报当天的新闻。

但是随着大众媒体的传播,这个系统的问题很快就显现出来了

众所周知,威权国家

控制和审查信息,

但一系列丑闻表明,

民主政府也在误导公众,

通常与媒体合作。

秘密战争、秘密暗杀

和政治腐败的揭露

削弱了公众对

主流来源所呈现的官方叙述的信心。

这种对媒体看门人的信任崩溃

导致替代报纸、广播节目和有线新闻

与主要媒体竞争,并

从不同的角度报道事件。

最近,互联网使信息和观点的数量成倍增加

,社交媒体、博客和在线视频

将每个公民都变成了潜在的记者。

但是,如果每个人都是记者,那么没有人是

,不同的消息来源可能不同意,

不仅是意见,而且是事实本身。

那么你如何得到真相,或者接近的东西呢?

最好的方法之一是让原始新闻不

被中间人过滤。

您通常可以找到实际材料并自行判断,而不是解释科学研究或政治家演讲的文章。

对于时事,请在社交媒体上关注记者。

在阿拉伯之春

或乌克兰抗议活动等重大事件期间,

新闻播音员和博主发布

了混乱中的最新消息和录音。

尽管其中许多后来出现在文章或广播中,但

请记住,这些经过修饰的版本

通常将在场人员的声音与不在场

的编辑的意见结合在一起。

同时,故事越混乱,

你越不应该尝试实时关注它。

在恐怖袭击和自然灾害等事件中,即使没有可靠的新信息,

今天的媒体也试图持续报道

有时会导致信息不正确

或对无辜者的诬告。

在此类事件中很容易感到焦虑,

但请尝试

在一天中的几个时间点检查最新信息,

而不是每隔几分钟检查一次,

以便有时间出现完整的细节

并驳斥虚假报告。

虽然好的新闻以客观为目标,但

媒体偏见往往是不可避免的。

当您无法获得直接的故事时,请

阅读多个网点的报道,这些网点

雇用不同的记者并采访不同的专家。

调整各种来源并注意差异

可以让您将各个部分放在一起

以获得更完整的画面。

将事实与意见区分开来也很重要。

诸如认为、可能或可能

意味着该出口正在小心,

或者更糟糕的是,猜测。

并注意依赖匿名来源的报告。

这些人可能与故事几乎没有联系,

或者有兴趣影响报道,

他们的匿名性使

他们对所提供的信息不负责任。

最后,也是最重要的,

在传播新闻之前尝试验证新闻。

虽然社交媒体让真相

能够更快地到达我们身边,

但它也让谣言

在得到证实之前就传播开来,

而谎言

在被驳斥后还能存活很长时间。

因此,在您分享令人难以置信

或令人发指的新闻之前,

请进行网络搜索以查找

您可能错过的任何其他信息或上下文

以及其他人对此的看法。

今天,我们比以往任何时候都

摆脱了过去控制信息流的旧媒体守门人的束缚

但随着自由而来的是

责任:管理我们自己的经验

并确保这种流动不会成为洪水的责任,

让我们比冒险之前更缺乏了解。