Current Affairs

NewsTrust is now part of The Poynter Institute

NewsTrust-Joins-Poynter-Banner-Slim

I am happy to announce that NewsTrust is now part of The Poynter Institute, a respected journalism training organization based in Florida.

The Poynter Institute has been a NewsTrust partner since 2009 and collaborated regularly to our social news network. They share our commitment to news literacy and journalism education. We think our tools and services will be a great addition to Poynter's News University, their innovative online journalism and media training site.

Effective immediately, Poynter is the new owner and operator of NewsTrust.net, and we are glad to donate our assets to help them further this worthy cause.

As a valued NewsTrust member, you will continue to enjoy the same level of service, and we hope you’ll keep reviewing and posting stories on our site, which will now be curated by Poynter.

If you haven't visited us in a while, come take a look. We have a great selection of news stories for you to review on newstrust.net.

We also invite you to visit Poynter.org and learn more about their programs. And check out News University, Poynter’s e-learning site, which offers hundreds of training modules to anyone who wants to improve their journalism-based skills -- from multimedia to writing, reporting and more. Most of this training is free or very inexpensive. Poynter’s news and media literacy programs are explained on this special page at News University.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank and introduce some of the folks at Poynter Institute who made this acquisition possible: Howard Finberg, Pam Hogle, Vicki Krueger, Kelly McBride, Julie Moos and Kathryn Rende, to name but a few. You will be hearing from them and their colleagues in coming weeks.

I would also like to thank the world-class team that made NewsTrust possible over the years. We have been incredibly lucky to work with a wide range of journalists, educators, technologists and other innovators, including these individuals: Kaizar Campwala, David Cohn, Bill Densmore, Gin Ferrara, Adam Florin, David Fox, Terry Gamble, Kristin Gorski, Dan Gillmor, Mary Hartney, Derek Hawkins, Andrew Hazlett, John McManus, Evelyn Messinger, Ellen Miller, Jon Mitchell, Craig Newmark, Hap Perry, Howard Rheingold, Subramanya Sastry, Debra Shelfo, Kim Spencer, Gene Takagi and Caleb Waldorf, to name but a few. My deepest thanks for all your wonderful contributions to our cause!

I founded NewsTrust in 2005 to help people find good journalism online and make more informed decisions as citizens. Over the past seven years, we have been honored to touch the lives of millions of visitors, and a dedicated community of over 20,000 members grew around this experiment, drawn together by a shared passion for news you can trust. It’s been a true pleasure and honor to curate a daily feed of quality journalism with you all.

In the process, we learned to pay attention to the quality of the news and information we consume every day, and we built better tools to help each other separate fact from fiction. 

Now that we are part of the Poynter community, we hope to reach an even wider network of experienced journalists and students to use our tools, so we may all join forces to “help maintain the integrity, the stability, the progress of self-government” -- a vision that we share with newspaperman Nelson Poynter.

I am deeply grateful to you all for helping us take NewsTrust this far -- and I look forward to our next steps with Poynter in this promising news literacy and civic media experiment. See you online!

All the best,



Fabrice Florin
Founder and Executive Director
NewsTrust Communications
fflorin-at-newstrust-dot-net



P.S.: On a personal note, I have joined Wikimedia Foundation to help engage readers to contribute productively to Wikipedia. It’s a great new assignment, where I am applying some of the lessons we learned together at NewsTrust over the years. You can track our progress here.

I am still active on NewsTrust and will keep sharing interesting stories on media, politics, psychology and technology on my favorite social news network, as I have in the past.

I hope to see you there very soon!

 

__________________________________

COMMUNITY RESPONSES

 Updated on June 20, 2012

 

Here are some of the responses we received from community members and partners after we made our announcement of Poyner's acquisition on June 16, 2012. 

"So glad NewsTrust will continue. I'll make a point of getting more active!" -- Walter Cox

"Fantastic news--and a standing ovation for making it all possible." -- Marsha Iverson

"Thank you Fabrice for dreaming up this experiment. I am a much better media consumer than I was before meeting you via NewsTrust.net. Congratulation for founding, guiding and ensuring the ongoing sustainability of this important resource. Bravo!" -- Dale Penn

"I'm so glad that you've lined up a solid organization to continue all of the good work that you started." -- Philippe Habib

"How prestigious for NewsTrust and how fortuitous for the public! Great news." -- Eve Harris

"Congratulations, Fabrice. A great home for NewsTrust. Good work." -- Bill Buzenberg

"You started something amazing and I would love to see it scale." -- George Polisner

"Congrats on making this happen! NewsTrust will be in very good hands." -- Keith Hammonds

Thanks for your kind words and good insights. We are very grateful for all the encouragement we have received so far, and look forward to our next steps with Poynter.

 

Read more comments on Facebook.

 

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NewsTrust Baltimore just launched!

Today, we are pleased to announce the launch of NewsTrust Baltimore, our first local news site. 

We invite you to join this online experiment, along with other Baltimore residents, to find and share good journalism about their community.


Why NewsTrust Baltimore?
The Internet has radically changed the way we get our news, introducing new problems for cities like Baltimore: Traditional media have reduced their local news coverage, new media startups are struggling to fill in the gaps, and social networks are flooding us with too much unreliable information.

To address these problems, NewsTrust Baltimore aims to feature on a single site the best news coverage in the region, selected from a wide range of local online, print and broadcast outlets. Our online news hub, which is funded by the Open Society Foundations, welcomes all Baltimore citizens to rate and discuss local news stories, in collaboration with NewsTrust editors -- and share the best reporting with each other.

Meet our team
I am delighted to introduce our local team, which will be leading this experiment for the next few months:

Mary Mary Hartney - Local Editor
Mary has been a journalist for nearly a decade, beginning as a newspaper copy editor and most recently serving as director of audience engagement at The Baltimore Sun. She is responsible for updating our site and managing relationships with our media partners. Check out her profile.



Gin Gin Ferrara - Community Manager
Gin has been a media educator since the early 1990’s and is the founder of Wide Angle Youth Media. She is responsible for supporting our online community and managing relationships with our educational partners. Check out her profile.


Our national NewsTrust team has worked hard to develop this site and community relations in the past few months, and will also participate actively in this pilot. They include: managing editor Jon Mitchell; lead engineer Subramanya Sastry; technology director David Fox; and yours truly, executive director Fabrice Florin.  

Meet our partners
For this project, we have partnered with a number of local news organizations, including the Baltimore Sun, Baltimore magazine, The Mark Steiner Show (WEAA-FM), Urbanite Magazine and WYPR-FM, as well as online sites, including Baltimore Brew, Center Maryland, Citybizlist and Baltimore-area Patch sites. These media partners will invite their audiences to participate in this interactive quest, and many will host special activities with us, as well as include NewsTrust feeds and widgets on their sites.

We are also partnering with several local colleges and high schools, including Towson University, the University of Maryland, Morgan State University, the Baltimore Freedom Academy and The Baltimore Civitas School. These educational partners will train their students to rate and curate the news on their own group pages, earning certificates for their work.

Our most important partner of all is the Open Society Foundations, especially its audacious team in Baltimore. We are particularly grateful to Lori McGlinchey, Diana Morris and Debra Rubino for their vision, insights and inspiring support of this project. Besides providing funding for NewsTrust Baltimore, they have participated actively as collaborators, introducing us to their community, and making us feel welcome in Charm City.

Meet our community
This experiment is first and foremost about Baltimore and its community. Already, hundreds of folks have contributed to this project, including local citizens, community leaders, advisors and partners, all of who took the time to share their thoughts with us and participate on our site. You can view some of their portraits on a special slide show we created for this project, Faces of Baltimore, as well as on our members page.

We think this initiative offers a unique opportunity for Baltimore citizens to become better informed and more engaged about local issues -- especially college and high school students. Our service will show them how to tell apart good journalism from misinformation, so they can become more discerning news consumers.

NTBaltbanner88


Join the experiment
We hope you will sign up and participate in this fascinating investigation of Baltimore's  news ecosystem (if you already are a NewsTrust member, there is no need to sign up again, but you might like to subscribe to our Baltimore email newsletters). We think this community-based social network can improve the way we get our local news and help us all make more informed decisions as citizens.

Give it a try -- and review a story today. This week, we are reviewing stories on politics -- and Mary will tell you all about this in our local blog, where future updates on this project will be posted (this national blog will only include highlights). We will release our first findings in April and give awards to news outlets that are providing high-quality reporting, as determined by our reviewers and editors.

Hope to see you soon on NewsTrust Baltimore!

Fabrice Florin
Founder and Executive Director
NewsTrust Communications

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Truthsquad Results: How to Fact-Check the News

Badge_truthsquad_howto_screen1_185x148How can citizens learn to fact-check the news online? To find out, NewsTrust created a new service called Truthsquad and invited our community to fact-check controversial quotes from politicians and pundits, with professional guidance. (see earlier blog post)

Our first pilot ran for a week, from August 2nd to 8th, 2010, with the help of our partners at the Poynter Institute and our advisors at FactCheck.org -- and with the generous support of Omidyar Network and the MacArthur Foundation.

Our Truthsquad editors included: Kelly McBride, director of Poynter's Sense-Making Project; Steve Myers, managing editor for Poynter Online; Fabrice Florin, NewsTrust's executive director; and Jon Mitchell, our new managing editor. Throughout the pilot, Brooks Jackson, director of FactCheck.org provided helpful tips and advice.

Here are our findings from this experiment in community fact-checking.


Truthsquad-snapshotOverview
We created Truthsquad to help expose misinformation on the Internet -- and to give people new tools to fact-check the news, with professional oversight. Our hybrid 'pro-am' approach leverages the expertise of a few experienced journalists to show citizens how to tell fact from fiction in the news.

Each day during our pilot, our editors featured new quotes to research, and asked our community whether they were true or false. These short quotes were excerpted from recent news reports, opinions or political ads suggested by our editors and advisors.

Each quote page included links to factual evidence supporting or opposing that quote. We invited our community to review these links before giving a final answer. Editors actively searched for (and linked to) new evidence for their assigned quotes, monitored the community's answers and wrote a verdict based on the factual evidence we dug up together. We also held lively discussions of the quotes in our comments sections.

In all, we fact-checked twelve quotes as a community, with 528 answers from 307 participants. Each participant gave answers of "True," "False," or "Not Sure," with an average of 44 total answers per quote. Together, we posted 132 links to related evidence, which received 241 NewsTrust reviews. Participants were welcome to change their answers at any time, if they came across new factual evidence. As a result, participants changed their answers 57 times (which we view as a positive sign).

Truthsquad has generated more interest than any of the other pilots we hosted in 2010, and web traffic was also higher than usual. Over the week, we logged 12,801 pageviews for Truthsquad, and we estimate that at least 3,723 unique visitors checked it out, whether they participated or not.

In general, our community's responses were consistent with verdicts from our four Truthsquad editors. We were also pleased that comments from participants were civil, and that they seemed genuinely engaged in this communal quest for credible information.

Check it out for yourself. If you haven't already, try to fact-check some of the quotes on the Truthsquad overview page. Our final verdicts are posted on our earlier blog post (as well as on each quote page).

Based on this favorable response, we would like to offer Truthsquad on an ongoing basis, and we are now seeking donations and foundation support to provide it as a regular feature of our news curation service.


TruthsquadTeaserTHURSDAY

Report Contents:
Quotes
Featured Quotes
Stats
Survey Responses
Thanks
Next Steps


Related Stories about Truthsquad:
GigaOm's Article on NYTimes.com
Kelly McBride's Report on Poynter


Truthsquad_badge_logo_man_294x105


Quotes
Here are the twelve quotes we fact-checked for this Truthsquad:

The first six quotes above are featured below, with more findings. To see our verdicts for all twelve quotes, check our earlier blog post.


Featured Quotes
Here are more detailed findings on the six quotes which we featured during this pilot.


Orrin_hatch_healthcare_column

"87 million Americans will be forced out of their coverage"
by Obama's health care plan

By Orrin Hatch, U.S. Senator
Our verdict: FALSE
119 answers

Our investigation of this quote from Sen. Orrin Hatch led to some of the best collaborative fact-checking in this pilot. With 123 answers, this quote was the most active of the week, and 105 of these answers agreed with our verdict that Senator Hatch's statement was "False" (eight said "True," and ten were "Not Sure"). This strong consensus may be due to the great teamwork of Truthsquad editor Steve Myers and NewsTrust member Gerald Zuckier, who jointly dug up the actual text of the health care regulations and helped produce an impressive verdict.

From Steve Myers' verdict: (on behalf of Truthsquad editors)
"This quote wasn't easy to fact-check, for several reasons: Hatch doesn't provide a source for his figures or much of a clue as to what he's talking about. A Republican member of Congress issued similar talking points that provided an incorrect link to the federal regulations he's referring to. And while Hatch says this with certainty, the regulations only predict what could happen in the future. (...)

Score one for crowdsourcing, though: NewsTrust contributor Gerald Zuckier found the right set of regulations, read them and concluded that Hatch misstates what the regulations say. After reading the regulations, we agree."
See full verdict »


Dickmorrisfoxobama_column

Decline in illegal immigration to U.S. "due to the recession,"
not enforcement

By Dick Morris, Fox News consultant
Our verdict: MOSTLY FALSE
105 answers

For the two weeks before this pilot, we hosted an Immigration News Hunt with USA Today, so we were well prepared to research this quote about illegal immigrants. Morris' statement proved controversial; out of the 107 respondents, 54 found it false, while 36 answered true.

Contributing edior Derek Hawkins, after consulting the linked sources, concluded that "enforcement appears to have played at least as great a role" as economics, answering "False." Randolph Selig found the statement "True," contending that "the big draw is jobs." Still others, such as TC Reg, were "Not Sure." Reg thought that "it's impossible to say for sure as no scientifically valid studies have been conducted on the subject."

Eventually, the Truthsquad editors ruled that the statement was "Mostly False." The verdict was based on two major studies of immigration patterns on the U.S./Mexico border from credible sources. The linked sources that opposed the quote received an average NewsTrust rating of 3.4, slightly higher than the 3.1 average for sources that supported Morris.

From Jon Mitchell's verdict: (on behalf of Truthsquad editors)
"Downward economic trends... must have had an effect, but both studies point out that rates of legal immigration remained constant as illegal immigration dropped. Though illegal immigration comprises most of the traffic, and economics are clearly a factor, the constant rate of legal immigration suggests that some other factor makes it harder for people to enter the country illegally."
See full verdict »


Tv_o_reilly_sylvia_s_column

"In the capital city Phoenix, crime is totally out of control."
By Bill O'Reilly, Fox News
Our verdict: FALSE
86 answers

Our members posted evidence from a wide range of sources that disproved this quote. While some other participants posted links to support O'Reilly's assertion, the group found those far less trustworthy. The sources that opposed O'Reilly's statement received an average NewsTrust rating of 3.7, a strong indication of credibility, whereas the sources that supported O'Reilly only merited a 2.6 rating.

At first, it seemed that this statement might be too subjective to fact-check. "Out of control" is not an easily measurable quality. However, the data showed that crime in Phoenix has been dropping for several years, a trend which the editors felt was sufficient to debunk O'Reilly's claim.

From Jon Mitchell's verdict: (on behalf of Truthsquad editors)
This statement would have been difficult to fact-check, if the data had been more ambiguous. O'Reilly's statement that crime is "out of control" would ordinarily be open to subjective interpretation. However, the only sources that corroborated O'Reilly's statement seemed clearly biased, and trustworthy sources, including the Phoenix Police Department and the FBI, indicated that crime in Phoenix has been dropping steadily for years. ... Bill O'Reilly's assertion that crime in Phoenix is "out of control" would require at least a measurable increase in crime to be considered factual."
See full verdict »


Kathleensebelius_column

"Seniors guaranteed Medicare benefits will remain the same"
under the Affordable Care Act.

By Kathleen Sebelius, U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services
Our verdict: HALF TRUE
67 answers

Links to some related articles suggested that Sebelius' statement was technically true, and many of our participants agreed. Jim Lang wrote that "the term 'guaranteed Medicare benefits' allows it to be true." Indeed, no Obama administration spokesperson we came across discussed this point without appending the word "guaranteed," which editor Kelly McBride considered "slippery." Lynn Caporale clarified the meaning of this buzzword, pointing out that only "the extra subsidies to the Medicare Advantage plans" will be cut, which Barry Parr contends "are clearly not 'Medicare' under any reasonable definition." Thanks to the word "guaranteed," many people felt Sebelius was in fair territory. But other members rejected the administration's claims entirely. Morriss Moore wrote that "the health plan will limit health care, second opinions, and will have 'panels' to determine the amount of care one receives."

Due to the lack of clarity in Sebelius' wording, Truthsquad editors could not consider the statement to be true. Fabrice Florin wrote in his verdict on behalf of editors that "because this quote is partly misleading, we give it a rating of 'Half True'. We think the Obama administration could have been clearer and more forthcoming on this point."
See full verdict »


Fareed-zakaria_column

"The 'Bush tax cuts' ... remain the single largest cause
of America's structural deficit."

By Fareed Zakaria, Washington Post
Our verdict: TRUE
65 answers

This quote proved contentious, and some members vehemently disagreed with 48 who voted "True." Zakaria's claim is not a neat statement of fact. The tax cuts may be the largest component of the deficit, but that does not necessarily make them the cause.

As a result, answers to this Truthsquad seemed to be partly influenced by the political views of some participants. For Tyson Emmett, the operative word in Zakaria's statement was "cause." He argued, "Spending causes deficits. The underlining cause of every deficit is needing more than you have." On the other hand, Chris Strosser asked, "How can Republicans complain about deficit when the Bush tax cuts are the largest chunk?"

Rather than inflame a political debate, the editors focused on the data. A report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities showed that, if the loss in revenue due to the tax cuts is measured as a cost, it dwarfs all other structural programs in the budget, including the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Since the tax cuts are an elective part of the budget, the judges concluded that Zakaria's statement is "True."
See full verdict »


Bp_oil_effects_time_0727_column

The environmental impacts of the BP oil spill "have been
much less than everyone feared."

By Jacqueline Michel, Geochemist
Our verdict: MOSTLY TRUE
33 answers

This was one of the hardest quotes to fact-check, because it is not a statement of fact, but "an opinion about an opinion." Many participants pointed out the ambiguity of this quote, and over a third of the 33 respondents selected "Not Sure." In their answers, people highlighted three major reasons for withholding a verdict. Eric Yendall succinctly summarized one with a question: "Who exactly is 'everyone?'" Another problem with the statement is that, as Steve Myers pointed out, "it's too early to tell." Finally, in Joey Baker's words, "we have no idea what impacts everyone feared."

However, after reviewing the evidence, the editors declared a verdict of "Mostly True," accounting for the ambiguity of the statement, acknowleging that the outcome is not yet certain, but pointing to a range of scientific opinions that damage from the spill has been less than expected, compared to previous undersea oil disasters.

From Kelly McBride's verdict: (on behalf of Truthsquad editors)
"It appears true that many scientists and other experts say out loud that they are pleasantly surprised by the resiliency of the gulf, the beaches and the wetlands. There have been hundreds of oil-soaked birds, not thousands. Oil on the beaches has washed up in much smaller amounts than predicted. Very few injured or dead mammals have been recovered. The oil appears to be breaking down and evaporating more quickly that was thought possible. ... So the environmental impact of the spill is in fact not as bad - at this point in time - as experts thought it would be. However, almost every respectable expert qualifies that statement by cautioning a wait-and-see attitude."
See full verdict »


Stats
Here are some of the quantitative results of the weeklong Truthsquad pilot, from Aug. 2 to Aug. 8th, 2010.

Traffic:

Participation totals:

  • Total participants: 307
  • Total answers: 528
  • Total links posted: 132
  • Total links viewed: 572
  • Total links reviewed: 241
  • Total changed answers: 57
    (people who changed their minds based on new factual evidence)

Participation averages:

  • Average answers/quote: 44
  • Average answers/person: 1.81
  • Average views of links/person: 1.76
  • Average reviews/person: 0.79

Survey Responses
On Tuesday, Aug. 10th, we sent out a survey to all Truthsquad participants to seek their feedback. Early survey responses were generally favorable. In the first day after our survey went out, most survey respondents found the service useful or very useful -- and nearly half picked Truthsquad as their favorite service from NewsTrust this year.

Here are some sample quotes from these early responses:

  • "Good oversight, with backup info on both sides. Liked the mix of liberal and conservative statements."

  • "It gave a sense of mission - perhaps more so than regular NewsTrust reviewing."

  • "I like that we - the people - are reviewing the statements versus 'journalists'."

  • "Enjoyed having my cognitions tested. Checking stories takes a lot of time."

  • "As far as politics go, I don't see how anyone can get at the truth other than to do their own factual research."

  • "I was hoping that people would contribute and comment on matters they are either experts in or have direct knowledge of."

  • "Not interested in being a journalist, editor, or fact checker. I just want a service that helps me find good journalism. Rating an article after I've read it is quick and low-cost to me. But fact checking is too much like real work."

  • "The editors' section was quick, well-written and to the point. I also liked that participants were also checking ... the editors."

  • "There are some people with the time and enthusiasm to undertake the work, and they should be compensated for that effort. I am not one of them, and have no problem contributing a few $$/month to fund that activity."

  • "I'm totally won over by TruthSquad - I think it has a LOT of potential."

PoynterFactCheckBadgeSlim280x60Thanks to our partners and advisors
We're deeply grateful to our amazing partners at the Poynter Institute and advisor at FactCheck.org for their invaluable contributions to this project. 

In particular, we would like to thank Kelly McBride, Steve Myers and Julie Moos at Poynter Institute -- as well as Brooks Jackson at FactCheck.org. Heartfelt thanks to you all for making this project possible!

We asked our partners and advisors to share their general observations on why they participated in this pilot, what they learned from this experiment, what they found most and least useful about this approach -- and any other insights about this project.

Here are FactCheck.org director Brooks Jackson's personal comments about Truthsquad:

"FactCheck.org participated in this project because ordinary citizens need more help than they're getting from traditional news media to sort through the vast amount of disinformation to which they are exposed via the Internet and 24-hour cable talk networks. So far I would say the experiment is off to a solid start. The "verdicts" of the Truthsquad editors seem to me to be reasonable and based on good research. I'll be interested to learn how much of the research is the work of the "crowd" and how much comes from Truthsquad's paid staff.

One important observation. Even this brief initial experience has produced some pretty dramatic evidence of the limitations of crowd sourcing. The experience checking the Washington Times statement regarding a CitiGroup bonus shows that amateurs searching the Internet sometimes can't match the results obtained by an experienced staff reporter using old-fashioned shoe leather. In that case, one call to the reporter (or to Lew) might have produced the documentation needed to prove the accuracy of the claim."

Kelly McBride offered these thoughts as one of our editors on Truthsquad:

"It seems based on this pilot that citizens can learn fact-checking skills quite easily. The challenge is to motivate them to do this occasionally.

Some people love to do this stuff, but most are simply too busy. Adding more social gaming elements so folks accumulate points and prizes and compete against their friends - that might inspire some people."
Read Kelly's own report on Poynter: Truthsquad Shows We Can 'Crowdfight' Culture of Misinformation

Steve Myers also shared his reflections on being a Truthsquad editor:

"The Truthsquad showed the opportunities and challenges of crowdsourcing. It's possible to fact-check many of the statements that are made every day in the media. But will people go to the effort to dig it up? Some will; some won't.

Many of the users seemed to respond based on their preconceptions -- who said it, how the statement aligned with their political views and what news outlet published it. Some people were upfront about this; they said because Bill O'Reilly said this or the Washington Times reported that, that is why they ruled the way they did.

And yet some people did take an interest and dug in to find the material online. When I ran into a roadblock in researching something, someone else picked up where I left off and found the correct document, read it, and drew a conclusion that I ended up agreeing with.

In writing a couple of verdicts, I was acutely aware of the judgment calls I was making -- what was the underlying fact that had to be proven or disproven, for instance. The most important judgment call: how much weight should I assign to something that was perhaps grammatically or technically correct but misleading? These quotes proved the cliche that there's a grain of truth in every untruth."

Thanks to our funders
OmidyarNetworkLogo_150 This project was made possible in part by a generous grant from Omidyar Network, which funded a six-month investigation of new ways to help people separate fact from fiction online. We're very grateful for their support, as well as to the MacArthur Foundation and our other funding partners at Ashoka and the Ayrshire Foundation.

The Ford Foundation also contributed indirectly to this project, through its support of Poynter's Sense-Making Project, which led to the participation of Kelly McBride and Steve Meyers.


Thanks to our participants and team
Our deepest thanks go to all our participants in this Truthsquad, as well as thousands of new visitors -- and hundreds of new members who signed up during our pilot. These new participants came from across party lines and seemed to integrate well with the NewsTrust community. Many thanks as well to our contributing editors Joey Baker, Kaizar Campwala, Kristin Gorski and Derek Hawkins, Jim Lang and many more for their inspiring participation in this project.

Last but not least, we are very grateful to our worldclass web development team, for their wonderful work in building Truthsquad: Subramanya Sastry, Caleb Waldorf, David Fox, created another great application of the NewsTrust platform in just a month, with the support of our staff editors Jon Mitchell and Kaizar Campwala. We're very lucky to have such a great team!


Next steps

This first pilot has given us a sense of what's possible -- and introduced our community to the discipline of factual verification, under the guidance of professionals from Poynter and Factcheck. Going forward, we will be posting new quotes to fact-check every Wednesday for the next few months (suggestions welcome: email us at truthsquad-at-newstrust-dot-net). But we can do better. Based on the positive response to this pilot, we would like to offer the Truthsquad service on an ongoing basis (we own the truthsquad.com domain).

To that end, we are looking for additional funds to provide Truthsquad on a daily basis this fall, through the mid-term elections. If you would like to support this project, please consider a donation to NewsTrust. Your contribution will help fight the rising tide of spin and misinformation on the Internet, as well as train citizens to evaluate the credibility of the news and information they find online.

We hope that Truthsquad can provide a useful fact-checking solution to the public, as well as help us all become more discerning about the news we consume.

Thanks for checking out Truthsquad!


-- by Fabrice Florin and Jon Mitchell, for the NewsTrust Team

 

Photo Credits: Fox News, News One, Associated Press, Good and Getty Images

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Immigration News Hunt Results

Immigration-jp-enforce_180Here are the results of our Immigration News Hunt, which NewsTrust hosted with our partners USA Today and their On Deadline blog, from July 19 to August 1, 2010. (see earlier blog post)

During the past two weeks, our community looked for good journalism on Arizona's controversial immigration law and its impact on local and national politics. NewsTrust hosts for this immigration topic were Kaizar Campwala, Kristin Gorski, and Jon Mitchell. Kaizar Campwala was managing editor and Fabrice Florin was executive editor.


Overview
Immigration has long been a heated political issue in America. It's tied to issues of security and economic prosperity, and raises many questions about national identity and citizenship.

Most recently, the immigration debate was rekindled with the passing of Arizona's new immigration bill, SB 1070, in April 2010. Among its provisions, the act "makes it a state misdemeanor crime for an alien to be in Arizona without carrying the required documents, bars state or local officials or agencies from restricting enforcement of federal immigration laws, and cracks down on those sheltering, hiring and transporting illegal aliens." (Wikipedia)

To sort through the political spin and develop a fact-based understanding of the Arizona bill and immigration issues, NewsTrust members teamed up with USA Today readers for two weeks. Together, we reviewed over 162 stories on immigration, posted 684 reviews, and fully rated 105 stories. We've highlighted some of the best of these stories below, with our take on how they inform and clarify the immigration debate.


Recommended Stories
Here are some of our top rated stories for this News Hunt:

NEWS


OPINION

For more recommended stories, check our full listing for this News Hunt.


News Comparisons
To highlight some of the important themes that emerged during the News Hunt, we compared stories on four different aspects of immigration: the legal and political debate surrounding Arizona's controversial new law, the economics of immigration, law enforcement and policy proposals for immigration reform.


Arizona Immigration Law: Legal and Political Debate
Arizona_protest_reuters_edited  On July 28th, a day before Arizona's controversial immigration law was due to go into effect, a federal judge issued an injunction that blocked key provisions of SB 1070. In a lawsuit between the U.S. Justice Department and the State of Arizona, Judge Susan Bolton ruled that the law would risk putting “a distinct, unusual and extraordinary” burden on legal resident aliens in Arizona. This decision provoked a frenzy of opinions about the role of the federal government in controlling illegal immigration.

Supporting the judge's ruling, the reliably left-of-center Nation gave readers their analysis of Arizona's SB 1070 law, arguing that all "[Judge] Bolton really did was to assert one of the most basic principles of Constitutional law: that the federal government gets to set immigration policy." Reviewer Thomas Rees gave the story a low rating, finding "its lack of real data negates its ability to inform the undecided or contrary thinker. It exists solely to stoke the fires of those who already believe in this particular point of view. Mr. Hearst would be proud."

Heather MacDonald writing in the National Review offered a dissenting perspective on what she deemed a fictitious ruling. "The real threat posed by S.B. 1070," MacDonald asserted, "was that it would disrupt the de facto amnesty that the executive branch has accorded to the vast majority of illegal aliens. It would start to implement congressional mandates and the public will that the immigration laws be enforced. For that reason, it had to be stopped." Not all NewsTrust reviewers were convinced by her arguments, as exemplified by William Gordon, who wrote "like many pundits she focused on the details of the law, if it were legal and misses the reason why it is not legal. She wholly misses the point of preemption in our federalist society in order to find demons in the Obama Administration."

While The Nation and National Review garnered mixed reactions, The Economist's Lexington column offered an opinion that was appreciated by most reviewers. The column cut through the rhetoric, writing that "at bottom the argument between Arizona and its critics is political. The stated aim of 1070 is to reduce the number of illegal immigrants, mainly by enforcing federal laws which local politicians accuse the federal government of neglecting. Although Mr Obama is in fact deporting more illegals (a total of about 400,000 a year) than George Bush did, that cuts little ice in Arizona because people know his eventual hope (or at least the one he dangles in front of Hispanic voters) is to give illegals a pathway to citizenship, not kick out as many as possible. Mr Obama’s policy was also Mr Bush’s, and is probably the only humane way forward. But in Arizona “amnesty” has been turned into a dirty word."


Economics of Immigration
Cash_immigration-azrepublic_edited  The immigration debate is inextricably tied to economic issues. High unemployment and strained government budgets have inflamed the conversation, with many Americans questioning the role illegal immigrants play in the U.S. economy. News media coverage of this issue varied greatly: some news outlets stoked the public's fears, while others worked to help citizens better understand the economics of immigration.

In a report that received mixed reviews on NewsTrust, The Arizona Republic, the state's largest newspaper, explores how illegal immigrants are often forced to operate in a 'shadow' economy. Though reviewer Gordon Oliver found the story "scattered" and "imprecise," other reviewers found the report commendable because it investigates a question that repeatedly surfaced during the News Hunt: "... whether illegal workers are a net boon to the economy because of the labor they contribute, or a drag because of the medical, education and other services they require?"

A number of news outlets focused on the role played by U.S. employers in providing jobs to illegal immigrants. The Wall Street Journal argued that employers are to some degree the victims, on one hand getting sanctioned for hiring illegals, and on the other facing Justice Department probes "for allegedly violating anti-discrimination laws by demanding too many identity documents from applicants who aren't U.S. citizens."

To address these competing pressures, two different sources, Truthdig and The Week, published opinion stories advocating for the expansion of guest worker programs in the U.S. As explained by Will Wilkinson in The Week, "By establishing a common labor market in which Americans and Mexicans (Canadians too!) may range freely, living and working where they please, we can channel the commercial energy of integration while maintaining distinctly separate citizenship." Longtime reviewer Patricia L'Herrou found the piece "thoughtfully based on reason, and a viable model in the EU."

History has shown that people will migrate to find better economic opportunity. In a story that reviewer Alice Lake felt gave "a glimpse of both sides of migrant worker reality," the New York Times took a step back to explore the phenomenon of migration from a global perspective. The piece highlighted the difficulty in trying to stem the tide of migration, explaining that "from the Arizona Statehouse to Calabria, critics warn that porous borders hurt native workers, threaten local cultures and increase crime. But even a downturn of rare magnitude did less than expected to slow the flows, revealing instead the persistent forces that keep migrants venturing abroad."


Law Enforcement
Flickr_immigration  Much of the news coverage we reviewed examined the real challenges of enforcing immigration laws. The Village Voice featured an intimate look at how “some young, assimilated illegal immigrants” married U.S. citizens, also Hispanic and often friends, in an attempt to become legal.

To gain perspective by looking at the past, an Arizona Republic article on the state's recent history with racial profiling warned that, in implementing SB 1070, police departments had to be careful to “never violate the public trust again.”

Looking at what could be a massive influx of newly arrested illegal immigrants, reporters at the Arizona Capitol Times constructed an insightful multimedia piece on how sheriffs and local government predicted how they would shoulder its cost; this piece showcased many different viewpoints in an unbiased way, and this successfully illustrated how complex the law's enforcement could be.

Not all articles were clarifying, however. An editorial in the San Francisco Chronicle about sanctuary cities didn't explain what they were and didn't clearly show how SB 1070 would affect them. And an interview on Fox News veered from a more factual, reasoned conservative source to focus on right-leaning political commentary, thereby losing points on credibility, balance and information quality.

Another law enforcement issue which surfaced during our search is the federal “Secure Communities” program, a national fingerprint-database program that's already in effect. The Associated Press wrote a well-sourced, factual and informative piece on this program, pointing out that it doesn't rely on racial profiling and results in used effectively to arrest and deport illegal immigrants with criminal records.


Immigration Reform
Border_safety_time_editMost of the stories we reviewed on this theme observed that SB 1070 has provided lawmakers with a strong impetus for passing national legislation to fix the country's broken immigration system. But when it came to discussion of the means and rationale for enacting sweeping immigration reform, agreement was far thinner.

The Texas Observer, an independent bi-weekly from Austin, argued that Texas, which has the longest international border of any U.S. state, should take a leadership role in reshaping the country’s immigration policies. It took a three-pronged approach: build a stronger social and economic relationship with Mexico; acknowledge that the U.S.-Mexico border can’t be “secured” and stop spending money to seal it; and redefine what makes an immigrant legal or illegal.

The Miami Herald, meanwhile, contended in an editorial that the case for immigration reform is as strong as it has ever been and that good ideas already exist -- what’s missing is leadership. The paper compared President Barack Obama’s calls for reform to those of his predecessor, saying the country has only grown more impatient since former President George W. Bush made the drive for immigration overhaul and failed. “In short,” the Herald said, “the delay has cost us money, created ill-will with our neighbors and produced bad laws -- without fixing the problem.” The problem, it concluded, is that lawmakers are too afraid of political backlash if they try to tackle the issue.

The Economist picked up on the same theme, but painted a somewhat bleaker picture. "President Obama and Democratic leaders are killing any chance of Congress approving an immigration reform bill by alienating Republican legislators whose support is crucial," The Economist said. "And the Justice Department’s lawsuit over SB 1070 only made matters worse," it added, confusing the roughly 60 percent of the country that approves of the new law. Obama’s plan -- which contains calls for a pathway to legal status for unauthorized immigrants -- risks failure if Democrats continue to make it an issue for the midterm elections.

Other stories departed from the politics behind reform and offered different perspectives on what measures would be most beneficial to the United States and immigrants alike.

The Sun Sentinel said a guest worker program should be an essential aspect of reform, and attempted to dismiss claims that such a program would take jobs away from American citizens.

A Wall Street Journal op-ed took a more focused view, saying the United States should prioritize talent and special skills in the individuals it allows into the country. “The point is to attract more individuals with the potential to enhance American innovation and competitiveness, increasing the odds for economic prosperity and rising living standards for all down the road,” author Darrell West wrote. Immigration reform has failed so far because reform’s advocates have not convinced a skeptical public that newcomers contribute to the country’s prosperity, he said. “Instead of viewing immigration as a brain gain,” West said, “ordinary folks see the economic and social costs as broad, and the benefits as narrow.”

In a major departure from other sources, Newsweek said immigration could very well fade as a hot-button issue in the next decade, making reform unnecessary except for the short term. Declining fertility rates in Mexico could dramatically decrease the need for Mexicans to come to the United States to seek work because they can’t find it in their own country. “All this angst may be an overreaction,” it said.


Findings by Medium
Each day during the first week of this Immigration News Hunt, we compared stories from different media: news reports from major print publications and wire services on Monday, national broadcast media on Tuesday, online and blogs on Wednesday and local Arizona media on Thursday. Here are examples of noteworthy stories from each group: (see more in our earlier blog post)

National Print Media (Newspapers, Wires, Mags.)

National Broadcast Media (TV and Radio)

Online and Blogs

Local Arizona Media

For more stories by medium, check out our previous blog post on Immigration, or filter our full story listing on Immigration.


Bad Journalism
As part of our educational mission, we try to highlight examples of bad journalism in News Hunts like these. As we searched for great journalism on immigration, we also looked for news and opinions that seemed particularly superficial, biased or irresponsible on this topic.

On the top of our list was an opinion news clip of MSNBC host Ed Schultz's commentary against Fox News: as USA Today reviewer George Horen points out, Schultz "says nothing about the subject but is critical of other news reporting. He is just like a lot of the news people that sit in a chair and read some one else's writings." We also found plenty of bad journalism from the other side of the political spectrum, such as this Fox News clip using immigration to score political points in their case against the Obama Administration.

Here's a sampling of some of the worst offenders:

For more questionable stories on immigration, check our least trusted stories for this News Hunt.


Thanks to our partners
Usatoday We'd like to thank the wonderful team at USA Today for partnering with us for this News Hunt. In particular, we're very grateful to these individuals for their special contributions to this project: Doug Stanglin, editor of the On Deadline blog, as well as Anne Willette, Desair Brown and Chet Czarniak, to name but a few. Together, they went beyond the call of duty to promote this experiment widely on USAToday.com, from home page badges to special blog posts, emails and widgets. We really appreciate their great advice, initiative and inspiring commitment to this cause.

OmidyarNetworkLogo_150 This project was made possible in part by a generous grant from Omidyar Network, which funded a six-month investigation of new ways to help people separate fact from fiction online. We're very grateful for their support, as well as to our other backers at the MacArthur Foundation, Ashoka and the Ayrshire Foundation.


Thanks to our reviewers
We're also deeply grateful to all our reviewers for participating in this Immigration News Hunt. We welcomed hundreds of USA Today readers who signed up for this investigation. These new members added valuable new perspectives to the NewsTrust community, and seemed to share our belief that good journalism is critical to maintaining a vibrant democracy. Our deepest appreciation goes to our great community hosts Kristin Gorski and Derek Hawkins, and staff host Jon Mitchell for their thoughtful posts and reviews about immigration. We would also like to credit them here for their individual contributions to this report: Kristin wrote about Law Enforcement, Derek wrote about Immigration Reform. Managing editor Kaizar Campwala wrote about Law and Politics, and the Economics of Immigration -- and also wrote and edited this blog post, along with Fabrice Florin. Thank you all for your great insights!

This News Hunt and partnership with USA Today was a great opportunity to test our evolving "trust network" platform, which enables citizens and journalists to collaboratively curate the news. This project demonstrated the effectiveness of this 'pro-am' approach, as we all worked closely with each other to learn more about immigration. In the process, we became more informed and engaged citizens, and can now make better decisions about this important and complex issue. We look forward to expanding our news curation platform in coming months, and hope to work with you all again very soon!


-- by Kaizar Campwala, with Fabrice Florin, Kristin Gorski and Derek Hawkins



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Join the Truthsquad!
How can you tell fact from fiction on the Internet? Join the Truthsquad, a community fact-checking experiment led by NewsTrust, with the help of our partners at the Poynter Institute and our advisors at FactCheck.org.

The week of August 2nd, our community is fact-checking controversial quotes from politicians and pundits, and we hope you participate as well. Each day this week, our editors are posting daily quotes to research, and asking our members whether they think they are true or false. These short quotes are excerpted from recent news reports, opinions or political ads suggested by our advisors and partners.

Give Truthsquad a try. Here's one particular quote we fact-checked earlier this week, which will let you practice what you learned from our Immigration News Hunt:


Read more about Truthsquad on the NewsTrust blog. Enjoy!




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Introducing Truthsquad

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How can you tell fact from fiction on the Internet? Join the Truthsquad, a community fact-checking experiment led by NewsTrust, with the help of our partners at the Poynter Institute, our advisors at FactCheck.org -- and the generous support of Omidyar Network and MacArthur Foundation.

UPDATE: Check our full report about Truthsquad on the NewsTrust blog.

For our first pilot the week of August 2nd, 2010, we invited our members to help fact-check controversial quotes from politicians and pundits. Each day of that week, our editors featured daily quotes to research, and asked the community whether they were true or false. These short quotes were excerpted from recent news reports, opinions or political ads suggested by our community and partners.

Each quote page displayed links to factual evidence that supported or opposed the statement. We invited our community to review these links before giving an answer. We encouraged participants to change their answers at any time, as we all found more facts and posted new links. We also held lively discussions of the quotes in the comment sections.

Throughout this pilot, we updated this blog post to add more stories to fact-check and share our verdict. Our Truthsquad overview page now lists twelve controversial quotes for review. If you haven't already, you are welcome to fact-check them as well. Before you do, be sure to read our FAQ and the 'Learn More' section below (and try not to read the verdicts on this page).

We will post the overall pilot results and our findings on our blog on Wed. August 11th.

Each Wednesday this month, we will also post a new quote to fact-check. What should we research next? Suggest a quote for next week’s Truthsquad to "editors-at-newstrust-dot-net."

If you would like to support this project, please make a donation, so we can can continue to provide this service through the end of the year.


Learn More
For more detailed instructions on how to participate in Truthsquad, read our FAQ. To learn more about fact-checking and finding good journalism online, we invite you to read our guides, especially these:


SPOILER ALERT: Be sure to answer the quotes listed on our Truthsquad overview page before you read the verdicts below.


Truthsquad Verdicts
Each day during our pilot, the Truthsquad editors (Fabrice Florin, Kelly McBride, Jon Mitchell and Steve Myers) evaluated our collective answers. We gave our verdict when we had enough factual evidence to pronounce a quote true or false.

Here are our verdicts for the twelve quotes we fact-checked during this pilot.

Correction: We have amended our verdict for the Washington Times story stating that Jacob Lew, Obama's choice for budget chief, received a $900,000 bonus from Citigroup. We now conclude that this statement is TRUE, after verifying factual evidence from the State Department, which supports that claim. Our original verdict for this claim was "Half True." We regret any inconvenience which our preliminary verdict may have caused.


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What do you think?
How do you like Truthsquad? Add your comments below, or email your comments and suggestions to "feedback-at-newstrust.net," after you've tried fact-checking some of the quotes from our first pilot. What were your first impressions? What do you like most? least? what could be improved? which of these quotes do you find most interesting? were they easy or hard to answer?

Next steps
Now that this pilot is over, we will analyze the results and raise funds for more Truthsquads in the fall. During that time, we will continue to post a new quote every Wednesday, on the Truthsquad overview page.

What should we fact-check next? If you come across a good quote to research on Truthsquad, please email it to our editors at "editors-at-newstrust.net." We're looking for short, recent quotes from politicians or pundits, on public interest topics in the news. These should be 'statements of fact' (not opinions). Our members should be able to verify it on their own, by checking links to factual evidence supporting or opposing each statement. Quotes should be no longer than thirty-five words, and the full text of the quote should available online, from a trusted source.

Thanks to our Team, Partners and Community
Many thanks to our worldclass team, for their wonderful work in building Truthsquad: Subramanya Sastry, Caleb Waldorf, David Fox, Jon Mitchell and Kaizar Campwala created another great application of the NewsTrust platform in just a month.

Many thanks as well to our whole community, who helped us design this service through surveys, emails and phone conferences over the past two years. We're very grateful to all our members, advisors, partners and friends who took the time to propose new ideas, check our early designs, test our site and share their invaluable feedback.

Thanks to our Partners and Funders
We also really appreciate the great support of our partners at the Poynter Institute (Kelly McBride, Steve Myers and Julie Moos) and our advisors at FactCheck.org (Brooks Jackson), for collaborating with us on this experiment.

Last but not least, we're deeply grateful to our backers at Omidyar Network and the MacArthur Foundation for their wonderful support of this project. Thanks to them, Truthsquad offers a whole new way for citizens to inform and engage each other on public issues, and tell apart fact from fiction on the web.


Make a donation


Donate today so we can host more programs like Truthsquad in the fall.



We hope that Truthsquad can provide a useful fact-checking solution to the public, as well as help participants like us become more discerning about what the news they get on the web. This first pilot should give us all an introduction to the discipline of factual verification, under the guidance of professionals from Poynter and Factcheck. If this pilot is successful, we are prepared to offer the Truthsquad service on an ongoing basis in the fall (we own the truthsquad.com domain).

Thanks for your interest in Truthsquad!

-- by Fabrice Florin, Jon Mitchell and the NewsTrust Team

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Immigration: Join our News Hunt

Arizona_illegals_heat_gettty_180x127Arizona's new immigration law has been met with mixed reactions. Supporters feel it's a necessary solution to the difficult problem of illegal immigration, while detractors argue the state law oversteps federal law -- and may encourage racial profiling. 

How have news media investigated and explained this contentious issue? To find out, join our Immigration News Hunt


Immigration News Hunt
From July 19 to August 1, 2010, NewsTrust is partnering with USA Today and its On Deadline blog to find good (and bad) journalism about immigration -- with a focus on Arizona’s controversial law and its effects on local and national politics.

During this two-week Immigration News Hunt, we will collectively post and review stories on that issue from a wide range of print, broadcast and online news providers. On Wednesday, August 4, we'll feature on this blog some of the best (and worst) coverage we found together on this important topic.




Join the News Hunt
Join the Immigration News Hunt -- and get more informed!

Can you help find good journalism on this topic? You can participate in just minutes. First login (see below), then review some of our recommended stories on our Immigration topic page. In the process, you will learn more about immigration issues, and you will become more aware about the quality of the news you consume.

If you are not yet a NewsTrust member, please sign up on our special welcome page for this project. You can also login through Facebook, if you prefer. This will let you review stories on NewsTrust and get the full benefit of our free service.


News Hunt Schedule
Here's a day-by-day schedule for the next two weeks:

Week 1 (July 19-25): By Medium/Type

  • Mon. 7/19 - National Print Media (Newspapers, Wires, Mags.)
  • Tue. 7/20 - National Broadcast Media (TV and Radio)
  • Wed. 7/21 - National Blogs and Online
  • Thu. 7/22 - Local News (all media)
  • Fri. 7/23 - Opinions (all media)
  • Sat. 7/24 - Community Picks
  • Sun. 7/25 - Weekend Reads & Features

Week 2 (July 29 - Aug.1): By Theme

  • Mon. 7/26 - Economics of Immigration
  • Tue. 7/27 - Law Enforcement
  • Wed. 7/28 - Immigration Reform
  • Thur. 7/29 - Arizona Law
  • Fri. 7/30 - Bad Journalism
  • Sat. 7/31 - Community Picks
  • Sun. 8/1 - Best & Worst Stories


Featured Stories
Throughout the News Hunt, we will UPDATE this blog post to feature stories recommended by our hosts and reviewers for each of these themes. Please review some of the stories below:

Monday, July 19: National Print Media (Newspapers, Wires, Mags.)

Tuesday, July 20: National Broadcast Media (TV and Radio)
Wednesday, July 21: Online and Blogs
Thursday, July 22: Local Arizona Media
Friday, July 23: Opinions
Saturday, July 24: Community Picks
Sunday, July 25: Weekend Reads

Monday, July 26: Economics of Immigration
    Opinions Tuesday, July 27: Law Enforcement
Wednesday, July 28: Judge Rules on SB 1070
    Opinions on Comprehensive Immigration Reform Thursday, July 29: Was the Arizona immigration ruling fair?
Friday, July 30: Bad Journalism on Immigration

More stories can be found on our Immigration topic page -- and in this full listing of all stories reviewed so far. We'll keep updating this blog post with new recommended stories every day through the end of the News Hunt on August 1st.

If you come across good stories we're missing about immigration, please post them on our site (be sure to tag them "Immigration" under Topics in the Edit form, so they will be listed in our News Hunt page).

Happy Hunting!

-- by Kaizar Campwala, Fabrice Florin, Jon Mitchell and the NewsTrust Team

Photo: Getty Images

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Try our new review tools

NewReviewPopupCompactCloseupWe just launched a new version of the NewsTrust review tools, to make it easier and faster for you to check and review stories on our site.

Our new review form (see screenshot) features big buttons with two choices per question. For example, we ask if a story is 'fair' or 'unfair' (instead of asking you to rate the fairness of that story on a scale of 1 to 5). Our current rating form continues to work the same of for existing reviewers, and you can easily switch between versions (use the drop-down menu at the top right of any review form).

We also streamlined our toolbar to provide a better user experience for new visitors and experienced members alike. You can now quickly view story info, star stories you like, and share them on Facebook, Twitter or email, straight from the toolbar. Our improved popup window offers the same features for sites that don't support the toolbar.



What's New
Here are some of the new features in this release:

New Review Form

  • simple review form for new members
  • big buttons with positive/negative answers for simple form (instead of 1-5 ratings) 
  • compact format shows short review form by default, with only three questions
  • help balloons show quick review tips when you mouse over question marks 
  • expanded review section lets you add notes, comments, quotes and links
  • larger text box with a lot more room for writing notes or comments
  • current rating form still available for experienced reviewers
  • drop-down menu lets you switch quickly between review forms 
  • saved settings show the same review form you used last time (expanded or not)
  • no more "guest reviews" to reduce confusion and spam - only members can review now

New Toolbar & Popup
  • new toolbar has been streamlined to a single line, to reduce visual clutter
  • star icon lets you bookmark stories you like, and add them to your picks widget 
  • story info tab lets you get more information about the story you are viewing
  • edit info button lets trusted members (with a level of 3 or more) edit story information
  • share buttons let you quickly share stories on Facebook, Twitter, Email and more
  • login link makes it easy to login or logout from the toolbar (or popup window) 
  • popup window offers the same features for sites that don't support our toolbar



NewReviewFormToolbarShortCompactCloseUp



New Review Form
Our new review form is shown by default to new members, to help them get started as reviewers. But many experienced reviewers may also find it helpful. 

This simplified review form features big buttons with two choices per question: for example, we ask if a story is fair or unfair (instead of asking you to rate the fairness of that story on a scale of 1 to 5). We also offer help balloons with quick review tips when you roll over question mark buttons.

The new review form is also more compact. To quickly add a note, quote or link -- or share your review with your friends -- just click on Expand your review (see expanded view). This lets you add notes, comments, quotes and links -- using a larger text box with a lot more room for writing your reviews.

ReviewDropDownMenuCloseupYou are welcome to keep using our original rating form, if you prefer (we now call it "rating form" to distinguish it from the new review form). To switch between review forms, simply click on the drop-down menu at the top right of any form (shown to the right). This lets you preview all of our review tools. When you see a review form that you like, simply click on the yellow 'Save' button to update your settings. You can change your review settings as often as you like.

Lastly, we have discontinued "guest reviews" by non-members, to reduce confusion and spam. Going forward, you must be a registered member to review stories on NewsTrust, and you need to login before you can use the review form.



Toolbar  


New Toolbar & Popup Windows
We also streamlined our toolbar to provide a better user experience for new visitors and experienced members alike.

You can now quickly view story info, star stories you like, or share them via Facebook, Twitter, or email, straight from the toolbar. Our improved popup window offers the same features for sites that don't support the toolbar.

To learn more about these new features, check our Toolbar Visual Guide.

Try it out for yourself! Click here to review a sample story using our new review form.

Note that if you don't like this new form, you can you can easily switch back to our current rating form, which still works the same as before (use the drop-down menu at the top right of any review form). 

Go check out all these new features on our site and let us know what you think. Be sure to click on any yellow 'Review' button next to any story title to see our new review form, with all its bells and whistles.


Thanks to our Team
Many thanks to our wonderful web development team: David Fox, Subramanya Sastry and Caleb Waldorf created a much improved user experience in just a few weeks. This core team was supported by our editorial staff members Kaizar Campwala and Jon Mitchell, who worked beyond the call of duty to make this new review tool possible. Thank you all for a job well done!

Our new review tools were designed with the help of our community, through a variety of surveys, emails and conversations this year. We're very grateful to all our members, advisors, partners and friends who took the time to check our early designs, test our site and share their invaluable feedback.

Please share your comments, suggestions at the bottom of this page - or email us. What do you like most? what do you like least? did you experience any bugs? how can we improve these new review tools?

Thanks again to all our supporters for making this community effort possible. We hope that these new tools and enhanced user experience will make it easier for all of us to find and share good journalism together -- and make more informed decisions as citizens.

Enjoy!

Fabrice Florin
Executive Director, NewsTrust

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The Future of Energy: News Hunt Results

Fusion_LawrenceLiverMoreLabPhoto_180  From June 7 to 20, 2010, NewsTrust hosted an Energy News Hunt to find good (and bad) journalism about the future of energy -- with a focus on low carbon technologies and innovative solutions that can scale quickly to power the whole planet. (see earlier blog post)

Our partners for this News Hunt were The Long Now Foundation and its Long News initiative. Our hosts were Kirk Citron, Mike LaBonte, Jon Mitchell and Beth Wellington. Kaizar Campwala was managing editor and Fabrice Florin was executive editor.  


Overview
Each day during this two-week News Hunt, we reviewed stories on a new energy source: solar, wind, nuclear, geothermal, biofuels and fusion. We also researched related topics, such as the BP oil spill and energy efficiency. Our findings for each of these topics are summarized below. During that period, we reviewed over 260 stories about the future of energy, 129 of which received a NewsTrust rating, with a total of 774 individual reviews during that period. Posted stories were published by over 120 separate news sources.

Together, these stories helped us better understand some of the many challenges and opportunities related to the future of energy. As scientists, businesses and governments around the world look for scalable alternatives to fossil fuels in the next few decades, it appears that many clean energy sources can play a role to offset peak oil -- and yet they all have their own limitations. Based on what we found as a community, the future of energy is likely to be made of a patchwork of many different technologies, as our society struggles to generate terrawatts (not just gigawatts) to power our global needs.

Throughout the News Hunt, we found some great journalism about energy, but were also struck by the scarcity of comprehensive, in-depth, well sourced and contextual news coverage of this topic. Many of the straight news reports we reviewed tended to be superficial and focused more on the "problem box" (e.g.: BP oil spill), rather than the "solution box" (e.g.: clean and scalable energy sources). Popular science publications usually provided better coverage of possible solutions than general news outlets, but often relied on a single source (e.g.: the scientists whose work was being featured in the story). We also found many opinions and advocacy pieces that were more thoroughly researched than news reports, but they typically favored their own viewpoints. Thanks to our focus on "long news", we were able to go back several years to find better information. This was the first News Hunt where we didn't restrict ourselves to recent news stories, and it was a liberating experience: though some of the stories we found were a bit dated, the overall quality of their coverage usually made up for this time lag.

Here's what Long News editor Kirk Citron thought about this Energy News Hunt:

"The Long News project looks for news stories that might matter in the long term; obviously, the search for energy will be one of the great challenges of this century. We wanted to run this News Hunt now in the hope that the current BP oil spill crisis might help prompt a broader conversation about possible alternative sources. There was good news on many fronts - we found a lot of high quality journalism; we had participation from a large number of NewsTrust and Long Now Foundation members, bringing in news sources from around the world; and finally, there was a surprising amount of good news in the news stories themselves, as you'll read below."


Recommended Stories
Here are some of our top rated stories for this News Hunt:


NEWS


OPINIONS


For a full listing of stories evaluated in this Energy News Hunt, check all stories we reviewed, as well as our least trusted stories -- these stories were all reviewed between June 7 and 20, 2010, regardless of their publication dates. More recent stories can be found on our Energy topic page.


Solar Energy
Solar-panel_180As we found out in this News Hunt, solar radiation is by far the most abundant energy source on earth (The Oil Drum), exceeding global energy demand many times over. But at its current capacity, solar power generation can only produce a tiny fraction of the world's total electricity supply (Wikipedia). However, according to The MIT Technology Review, the market continues to grow rapidly, especially in the U.S., and the industry has begun to employ a range of technologies, from next-generation photovoltaic cells to solar thermal generation using heat, to capture and harness more solar power.

And yet these advances appear limited by their high costs and the large amount of physical space they require, making solar unlikely to become a leading source of new energy in the near future. As our partner and reviewer Alexander Rose points out: "This should be put in perspective. Solar currently represents less than 1% of the total energy mix."

Recommended Stories

See all stories we reviewed on this topic. More recent stories can be found on our Solar Energy topic page.


Wind Power
Wind_power_180  As we learned from over forty articles we reviewed on this topic, wind power is less costly than solar, and doesn't require the large upfront investments needed for nuclear and geothermal. And scientists, governments, and private companies appear to be tackling many of the issues that previously stunted the growth of wind energy, as demonstrated in Texas, where "a unique state energy policy combined with federal subsidies have helped make this state an important test case for scalable wind power deployment," as noted by Fabrice Florin.

We also read about several schemes to store wind energy, including the use of compressed airpumped hydro, and even a piece in the New York Times about battery storage (which co-host Mike LaBonte noticed contained "three viewpoints, but only from the subject company and one customer"). A number of sources also covered an ambitious offshore wind proposal spanning the eastern United States, that could harness stronger, more consistent winds, while "eliminating aesthetic and noise concerns that have delayed [past] projects." As with other alternative energy sources, government support has been critical to the growth of wind, but there's increased interest in wind from the private sector, boding well for the future of this technology.

Recommended Stories

See all stories we reviewed on this topic. More recent stories can be found on our Wind Power topic page.


Nuclear Power
Nuclear_180We found much controversy in the stories we reviewed about nuclear power. Is nuclear energy the clean, safe alternative to fossil fuel's finite supplies and carbon emissions? Or is it unsafe and too expensive to build? Critics say the timeline for conversion to nuclear power is too long, that investments divert resources from other technologies that work. They point to dangers involved in uranium mining, plant operations, nuclear waste disposal and the possible use of nuclear material for weapons. Proponents say that nuclear power has become a viable alternative to fossil fuels. They tout its lower cost per kilowatt, its baseload, always-on character, as opposed to intermittent solar and wind -- and point to "fourth generation" reactors which use nuclear waste as fuel.

The Council of Foreign Relations lays out the arguments both pro and con in its "Nuclear Energy Guide", which Sirajul Islam calls "a good resource." A number of stories report on the benefits of a "nuclear renaissance," such as this article from MarketWatch -- while NASA climate scientist James Hansen supports the use of fourth generation reactors. Other stories point to some serious side-effects, such as "Nuclear power & public health" which Dwight Rousu calls "a thorough and informative article... from an expert not in the pay of the nuclear industry."

Recommended Stories

See all stories we reviewed on this topic. More recent stories can be found on our Nuclear topic page.


Geothermal Energy
Geothermal_180  Geothermal energy is generated by converting heat from deep within the earth into electricity. We learned in this News Hunt that unlike wind power, geothermal power plants produce a consistent energy load all year round, and have a smaller footprint compared to solar. However, geothermal energy is highly location dependent. "The reason Iceland gets 26% of its power from geo," said Alexander Rose, "is that it is highly geothermally active."

Another hurdle for geothermal power is the significant capital needed to explore and then build geothermal plants. Accessing the heat source requires drilling deep in the ground, a process that "is very nearly as old as the discovery of oil as a fuel source, and is expensive, time-consuming, dangerous and environmentally hazardous." Scientific American's Christopher Mims explained that while geothermal may be cost effective in the long run, the high up-front investment mean "companies are more likely to spend money on things with lower front-end costs, like natural gas-powered plants." Drilling for geothermal power plants also increases the risk of earthquakes, according to Nature.

Recommended Stories

See all stories we reviewed on this topic. More recent stories can be found on our Geothermal topic page.


Biofuels
Biofuels_algae_180  As we found out in this News Hunt, not all biofuels are created equal. The Guardian points out that producing biofuels from corn and soybeans can drive up the price of food, and the Associated Press explored whether wood-base biofuels could harm woodlands. 

On the horizon are "fourth generation fuels that use techniques like hydroprocessing, advanced biochemistry, and "solar-to-fuel" methods, which were reported on in Scientific American and GreenTech Media. Reviewer Mindy Phypher sounds a note of caution about these new technologies in her Scientific American review, explaining that she has "learned to take glowing reviews of potential breakthroughs with a grain of salt. So many, for one reason or another, never make it to the market or successfully solve the problem they were intended to solve."

Recommended Stories

See all stories we reviewed on this topic. More recent stories can be found on our Biofuels topic page.


Fusion Energy
Fusion_machine_180  Unlike nuclear fission, fusion power forces atoms to join and thus release some of their energy, using only water and other commonly available elements as fuel, as we found out in this News Hunt. A leader in this field is the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore Labs. On June 16, 2010, The Long Now Foundation hosted a talk by NIF director Ed Moses, who described their groundbreaking work (this News Hunt was originally intended as a companion program to this talk). If Moses is right, fusion energy, likely to be driven by the NIF's laser array, could provide clean, abundant electricity to power the planet. 

Some scientists and politicians have expressed skepticism about this technology (Scientific American), and question whether society can bear the cost of development (Bnet). But Long Now founder Stewart Brand points out that "fusion power, like nuclear fission power, would cost less per kilowatt hour than wind (and far less than solar), yet would be less capital intensive than fission. For the constant baseload power no carbon is involved, no waste stream, no possibility of meltdown or weaponization, and there is no such thing as peak hydrogen."

Recommended Stories

See all stories we reviewed on this topic. More recent stories can be found on our Fusion Energy topic page.


Energy Efficiency
Energy-efficient buildings, industrial processes and transportation could reduce the world's projected energy needs in 2050 by one third, according to the International Energy Agency. In the U.S., while the size of the economy tripled between 1970 and 2010, 75% of the energy which fueled that expansion came from efficiency advances, according to the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy. The real challenge seems to be a lack of political will to change energy policy in the United States, as suggested in opinions such as "The Psychology of Climate Change.

In "Europe Energized", Steven Hill looks at how government policy can encourage the adoption of energy alternatives -- and reviewer Chris Finnie found "this piece was not only informative, but inspiring."  Shari Shapiro comments on the proposed Kerry-Lieberman bill in the Green Building Blog, noting that it "took the best, easiest and cheapest means of reducing greenhouse gas emissions - through energy efficiency - and gave them the very short end of the stick." Perhaps the most informative opinion on this topic was by Grist's David Roberts, who covered Robert Lugar's less ambitious bill  in "A bipartisan path forward on energy and climate." 

Recommended Stories


Gulf Oil Spill
Our News Hunt coincided with the BP oil spill, which dominated the news and raised urgent questions about this environmental disaster. Coverage of this event ranged from the immediate threats to Gulf Coast residents to the consequences for BP and its shareholders to "longer news" stories about the spill's ecological impact (which reviewer Dale Penn calls "excellent journalism")  and the dim future of fossil fuels as an energy source from The Oil Drum (reviewer Patricia L'Herrou calls it "a fascinating description.")

For this News Hunt, we looked at dozens of stories related to the BP oil spill, hoping to find good information about alternative energy sources that might wean us from fossil fuels. We were often disappointed by the lack of substantive coverage about viable solutions to the upcoming energy crisis.

Recommended Stories

See all stories we reviewed on this topic. More recent stories can be found on our Oil and Gas topic page.


Bad Journalism on Energy
As always, we try to highlight examples of bad journalism here at NewsTrust, and we found plenty of them in this News Hunt. The usual suspects did not disappoint, with Glenn Beck's associates Pat & Stu offering a review of President Obama's June 15th primetime address, leading reviewer Richard Williams to write: "If we look at this as an opinion piece delivered by comics, it wasn't half bad. If we look at it as 'journalism,' we're barking up the wrong tree."). We were also concerned by Keith Olbermann's interview with Mother Jones reporter Kate Sheppard at MSNBC.

This Energy News Hunt also uncovered a particular kind of bad journalism, in which lazy writing allows the wow-factor of a new technological development to overwhelm critical reporting and thorough investigation, as noted above.

Least Trusted Stories

See all our least trusted stories about energy. More recent stories can be found of our Energy topic page.


Thanks to our partners
LongNow_GroupShot_KirkFabZander_1393_crop_180  We'd like to thank our partners at The Long Now Foundation and its Long News initiative, for participating in this News Hunt. In particular, we're very grateful to these individuals for their special contributions to this project: Stewart Brand, Kirk Citron, Danielle Engelman, Kevin Kelly and Alexander Rose. 

You can read Kirk's own News Hunt report on the Long News blog. And as Long Now's executive director, Alexander shared these observations about our partnership:

"Looking back over what came out of the Energy News Hunt I found that I learned not only more about energy, but a lot more about the way it is covered by the press. I am reminded how rare it is to see a story that contextualizes new energy technology in the overall picture. Crowd-sourcing is a tricky and nuanced business, NewsTrust did a great job framing and directing the efforts of its contributors to yield high quality stories."

This project was made possible in part by a generous grant from Omidyar Network, which is funding a six-month investigation of new ways to help people separate fact from fiction online. We're very grateful for their support, as well as to our other backers at the MacArthur Foundation, Ashoka and the Ayrshire Foundation.


Thanks to our reviewers
Our deepest appreciation goes to our great hosts Kirk Citron, Mike LaBonte, Jon Mitchell and Beth Wellington, for their thoughtful posts and reviews about the future of energy. We also greatly appreciate their findings in this blog post: Jon wrote about Solar, Fusion, the Gulf Oil Spill and Bad Journalism. Beth wrote about Nuclear, Biofuels and Energy Efficiency. Kaizar wrote about Wind and Geothermal -- and also wrote and edited this blog post, along with Fabrice. Thank you all for your good contributions!

Lastly, we're grateful to all our NewsTrust reviewers for participating in this Energy News Hunt. And a big welcome to over a hundred new members who signed up for this project. We're delighted that you could join us for this fascinating investigation.

This News Hunt and partnership with The Long Now Foundation was a great opportunity to test our evolving "trust network" platform, which enables citizens and journalists to collaboratively filter the news. This demonstrated the effectiveness of this approach, as we all worked closely with each other and used all of our tools to learn more about our energy options -- and became more informed and engaged citizens in the process. We look forward to expanding this platform in coming months, and working with you all again very soon!


What do you think?
We would love to hear your thoughts about this News Hunt -- and/or NewsTrust in general. To share your feedback, please leave a comment below, or email us.


-- by Kaizar Campwala and Fabrice Florin, with Jon Mitchell and Beth Wellington

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Global Economy: News Hunt Results

Global_economy_coins_180 The week of April 19, 2010, NewsTrust hosted a News Hunt on the Global Economy (see earlier post). Together, we surveyed journalism from every continent, to better understand how people around the world were affected by the financial crisis. We found some fascinating stories about a global economy that is deeply interconnected. In this post, we'll highlight some of the stories that stood out, and identify some key themes covered in the stories we reviewed.

Our partners for this News Hunt were Global Voices, Link TV and Youth Noise. Joining them were over 120 high school students from San Francisco's International High School and Philadelphia's Science Leadership Academy. Our community hosts were Kristin Gorski, Jon Mitchell and Beth Wellington, who also wrote the detailed findings and news comparisons below. Kaizar Campwala was managing editor.


Overview
Together we posted 248 news reports and opinions about the global economy, 86 of which received a NewsTrust rating. Posted stories were published by an impressive 123 different news sources from around the world.

These stories revealed a complex, multi-layered picture of the global economy, with wide variations in different regions of the world. The IMF released a cautiously optimistic report pointing to "a tepid recovery in many advanced economies, and a much stronger one in most emerging and developing economies."

In the US, for example, weak consumer demand and high unemployment continued to plague the nation's economy -- while allegations of fraud by Goldman Sachs dominated the news. Many stories grappled with what, if anything, the US government should do to regulate banks and prevent a repeat of the 2008 financial meltdown.

Europeans dealt with two crises last week that serve as stark examples of how interdependent their economies have become. Greece's debt troubles continued to reverberate across the continent, despite a loan guarantee from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Union (EU). As Greeks prepared for new austerity measures, EU member states faced an uphill battle to convince their citizens of the importance in propping up the Greek economy. At the same time in Europe, the eruption of an Icelandic volcano shut down air traffic across much of the continent, disrupting commerce and costing their economies millions of dollars a day.

Many African farmers and businessmen also suffered when the volcano prevented exports to European markets. But as NewsTrust reviewers found, the big challenges for African economies remained structural, including a need to reduce corruption and improve governance.

Asian economies faced very different pressures than the more mature economies of Europe and North America. Countries such as India and China continued to grow at a rapid pace, leading to inflation and economic bubbles such as the Chinese housing market.

Our detailed findings below begin with some of the most trusted stories reviewed during the News Hunt, along with examples of bad journalism on this topic. We've also included insightful summaries of our findings by medium (e.g. print, TV, blogs). Finally, we've included a couple news comparisons showing how different publications covered stories about unemployment and the Greek financial crisis.


Most Trusted Stories
Here are some of our top rated stories for this News Hunt:

News


Opinion


Least Trusted Stories
As part of our News Hunt, we also looked for bad journalism, from superficial reporting to misinformation. Here are a few of the worst offenders we found:


For a full listing of stories reviewed in this News Hunt, check all our rated stories, as well as our most trusted stories and least trusted stories, published between April 12 and April 25, 2010.


Findings by Medium
Each day of the News Hunt, we compared stories from different media: news reports from major print publications and wire services on Monday, opinions from the same on Tuesday, TV and radio sources on Wednesday, online sites and blogs Thursday, and citizen journalism on Friday. We devoted Saturday to featuring examples of bad journalism across all media types. Here's what we found in each of these categories:

News From Print Media  
Two stories dominated mainstream news coverage during our news hunt. A cloud of ash from an Icelandic volcano disrupted air travel over much of Europe for days, causing an economic ripple effect felt around the world. American and European sources mostly covered the inconveniences for Western travelers, but we found some reports of unexpected consequences in far-flung places, revealing just how interconnected the global economy has become. 

The Kenyan newspaper The Daily Nation reported that European flight cancellations cost the Kenyan economy more than $3.9 million a day. The horticulture industry was hardest hit. Stephen Mbithi, CEO of the Fresh Produce Exporters Association of Kenya stated, "We have handled drought, El Niño and the post-election violence, but we have not seen anything like this." Mbithi told the Associated Press that 5,000 workers were temporarily laid off due to these losses. 

The other major story this week was the Greek debt crisis. On Monday, we featured this story from The Guardian, which outlines the possible financing options and summarizes their economic, political, and social ramifications. 

The Economist published a summary of new findings about social mobility in America as compared to other countries, which gave us a look at broader trends in the global economy. Reviewer Walter Cox said the story "puts a difficult topic in clear perspective."

Opinions From Print Media
Reviews of opinion pieces in the print media often differed widely. In "What links the banking crisis and the volcano?" in the Guardian (UK), George Monbiot looked at disruptions in air travel caused by the eruption in Iceland and advocated that we "start decommissioning this industry while there is time and find ways of living happily with less of it." Andre Heinemann liked the piece, however "gloomy." Walter Cox argued "Our real task is to make existing systems more durable and less sensitive to natural and man-made phenomena." 

Nehemia Shtrasler, in the Haaretz (Israel) piece "Unemployment: Israel's other existential threat" wrote that instead of creating a long-term plan for improving education, professional training and infrastructure, the government took the easy route of simply increasing outlays to the unemployed. James Canning thought the author "correctly identifie[d] the government's preoccupation with staying in power...". Eremipagamo Amabebe complained, "Clearly, just because one isn't working does not necessarily mean one is living off the state. I was left curious to know what percentage of unemployed Israelis really are living from the work of others, and how many of these are using the government support as a permanent means of sustenance (rather than just a temporary stop-gap to help them through tough times)."

TV and Radio
We found a wide range of TV and radio pieces on the global economy, from both mainstream and independent sources. These stories make it clear that our world is increasingly interconnected. Clearly, any ripple in the global economy affects all shorelines, although with varying severity.

Link TV's Debt: Greece vs California compared news broadcasts from around the world to cover two different casualties of the financial crisis in Europe and the U.S. Al Jazeera offered a compelling video narrative of a young man's journey to become a police officer in Gaza, one of the only paying jobs available. The Real News' Senior Editor Paul Jay presented a video interview with Jane D'Arista, a research associate with the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Their topic: Can the U.S. dollar remain the world's currency?

Public Radio International's Marco Werman delved into the reasons why Russia is the 120th on a World Bank list of countries with attractive business options. National Public Radio took us to South Africa in a quest to understand the negative economic effects of Iceland's volcanic ash cloud and its hamper on travel. Though this story was highly rated for its ground-level reporting and context, International High School student MeiLi LeRoy accurately noted, "There aren't many sources, mainly from one guy."

A joint effort by Ira Glass's This American Life and non-profit journalism organization ProPublica resulted in the highly rated "Inside Job: Eat My Shorts" It chronicles how a hedge fund named Magnetar bet against the very securities it helped create, contributing to the recent global financial crisis.

Online News Sites and Blogs
We found interesting coverage of the global economy by online sites and group blogs from a variety of countries. Edward Hugh, in the group blog A Fistful of Euros observed in "Do I See Movement In The Greek Trenches", "This isn't about economics anymore, this is now about who does what, and when, and how everyone else reacts." Jon Mitchell found "The arguments in this article are high-level, but their presentation is excellent, and the sources back them up." 

Aparna Ray of Global Voices weighed in with "India: Citizens debate government policy and the Maoist response". Bhumika Ghimire observed that "India has a huge wealth and education gap. The cities are zooming ahead while the rural areas are far behind. Maoists are taking advantage of this gap." Alexander Roe added that "This report shows a variety of sources. We see reactions from bloggers, citizens and the government, which re-inforces its credibility". 

Also popular was an opinion piece in the Huffington Post by the chief economist at the International Monetary Fund: "World Faces Serious New Economic Challenges."

Citizen Journalism
Citizen journalists and individual bloggers worldwide brought many local perspectives on the global economy. Prolific economics blogger Edward Hugh shared his views on the Greece financial crisis here and hereSeeking Alpha bloggers weighed in on the Greek debt crisis as well, along with an article on how Asian markets could be recovering. Economist Stefan Karlsson examined 2-year European inflation rates as indicators of the continent's monetary health.

Two Global Voices bloggers provided more perspectives on this issue. Tarek Amr explained how rising meat prices in Egypt are driving a trend in local vegetarianism, both out of necessity and out of protest. And Sonam Ongmo drew our attention to South Asian leaders traveling to Bhutan for the SAARC summit.

These ground-level reports and independent insights helped us better understand the global economy's many facets.

Bad Journalism
We love rooting out bad journalism here on NewsTrust, and during this news hunt, our usual suspects didn't disappoint. See this mystifying story from The New York Post, which apparently took two reporters to write 94 words, including one confusing quotation. Fabrice Florin called the story "shallow," and "a textbook example of bad journalism."

The most common journalistic flaws we found this week were bad sourcing and lack of enterprise. This Associated Press story reported that China has agreed to devote $20 billion to development projects in Venezuela, but the article merely summarizes Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez's televised announcement of the deal, without even seeking comment from an official Chinese source.

Similarly, Earth Times published a story about trade between China and Argentina from German wire service DPA that "uses the chinese government as an infallible source," according to Isaac Traister, one of our reviewers from the International High School in San Francisco.

The Hindu also published a story that uncritically reported statements from the general secretary of a political party without seeking comment from the opposition or any independent sources.


News Comparisons
Throughout the 248 stories we found on the Global Economy, there were several themes that news organizations returned to again and again. Across media types, we saw multiple stories about sovereign government debt, unemployment, poverty, recession and/or inflation -- and of course, breaking news about the volcano in Iceland and allegations of fraud by Goldman Sachs. 

Here are brief news comparisons on two of these themes.

Greek Debt Crisis
As Greece teetered on the edge of default and the European Union debated a loan guarantee, we reviewed dozens of stories about this crisis, from a wide variety of news sources.

A detailed article from The Guardian provided an early assessment of the European Union's options in case Greece needed a bailout. NewsTrust reviewer Patricia L'Herrou commented that this article showed "...an EU capable of coming together to save Greece economically and simultaneously strengthen its own union, at a time when the individual countries have been through a difficult financial crisis of their own. I wish there was more here on the potential risk for these countries and on the world financial markets if Greece uses the plan."

NewsTrust reviewer Hanna Moazed posted Smart Money's explanation of how the Greek crisis created both short-term gain for Germany while causing domestic discontent at the prospect of lending more money. Economic blogger Edward Hugh provided one of the News Hunt's most original perspectives on Greece's precarious financial condition, and its impact on Germany and other EU member nations.

Link TV's innovative "Debt: Greece vs. California" Global Pulse segment compared the Greek and Californian debts, as covered by a variety of TV news reports from around the world. Towards the end of our News Hunt, NewsTrust member Nett Davis found a factual BBC News report on what Greece's rescue package was beginning to look like. 

These stories revealed the interdependency between world economies, as Greece's financial troubles quickly spread to other European nations. 

Jobs and Unemployment
Coverage of jobs throughout the world helped us measure the human toll of the recession. We found mixed news on overall employment trends. While some reports in the U.S., the U.K., and Canada sounded optimistic, others were more circumspect.

In Haiti, relocation to new relief camps has taken refugees far from the jobs that could drive economic recovery. In India, workers migrating to the city for jobs face widespread and organized discrimination. And in Nepal this year, over two hundred thousand people have left the country to find employment abroad. Even if the global economy has begun to recover, it seems that workers around the world will take whatever jobs they can get.

According to this Reuters article, anxiety about job prospects, healthcare, and retirement has led to a phenomenon of "walking wounded" workers, who willingly trade career ambitions for job security. The article is based on a report by human resources consultancy firm Towers Watson Co., which highlights a disconnect between this "nesting" tendency and the trends currently driving the global workforce toward flexible, short-term, and part-time work.

Al Jazeera reported on an example of these trends in Gaza, where 60% unemployment has led many young men to apply for a small number of newly created police jobs. The report claims that the incentive for young men to join the police force is "often economic." One man says he "would prefer a normal job, something not in the military or police," but police duty is one of the few stable, paying jobs available in the territory.

Finally, while the Eyjafjallajökull volcano dominated the headlines this week with stories of travel disruptions for Westerners, one less-reported aspect of the story reveals just how fragile employment can be in this global economy. The AP reported that 5,000 horticulture workers in Kenya were temporarily laid off as a result of flight cancellations in Europe.


Thanks to our partners
IHS  We'd like to thank our partners at Global Voices, Link TV and Youth Noise, as well as San Francisco's International High School and Philadelphia's Science Leadership Academy, for participating in this News Hunt. In particular, we're very grateful to these individuals for their special contributions to this project: Eremi Amabebe, Linda Annan, Solana Larsen, Firuzeh Shokooh Valle at Global Voices; Heidi Blobaum, Erin Coker, Anna-Lena Isaksson, Evelyn Messinger and Kim Spencer at Link TV; Lauren Hauser and Trina Chiasson at YouthNoise; Andrew Brown, Jane Camblin, Joel Cohen, Marie Ferreira, Dan Harder, Dan Rosenberg, Jeremie Rostan, David Stockwell and Richard Ulffers at the International High School; and Diane Laufenberg at the Science Leadership Academy

Together, our partners went out of their way to promote this News Hunt and getting their community to participate in this experiment. Last but not least, many thanks to the 120 high school students who joined forces with us last week (see photos from International High School). 

This project was made possible in part by a generous grant from Omidyar Network, which is funding a six-month investigation of new ways to help people separate fact from fiction online. We're very grateful for their support, as well as to our other backers at the MacArthur Foundation, Ashoka and the Ayrshire Foundation.


Thanks to our reviewers
Our deepest appreciation goes to our wonderful hosts Kristin GorskiJon Mitchell and Beth Wellington, for their great work in posting and reviewing so many stories about the global economy. We also greatly appreciate their detailed findings and news comparisons: Jon wrote about News in Print Media, Bad Journalism, and Jobs and Unemployment. Beth summarized the findings from Opinions in Print Media and Online News Sites and Blog. Kristin write about TV and Radio, Citizen Journalism, and the Greek Debt Crisis. Thank you all for your good insights!

Lastly, we're grateful to all our NewsTrust reviewers for participating in this Global Economy News Hunt. We're delighted that you could join us for this important experiment.

It was a true pleasure to work with our members and partners on this project. Through this collaboration, we learned a great deal from each other about the state of the global economy -- and became more knowledgeable about the impact of the financial crisis around the world. And we really enjoyed helping our high school students in San Francisco and Philadelphia become more informed and engaged citizens in the process. We look forward to our next collaboration!


What do you think?
We would love to hear your thoughts about this News Hunt -- and/or NewsTrust in general. To share your feedback, please leave a comment below, or email us.


-- by Kaizar Campwala, Fabrice Florin, Kristin Gorski, Jon Mitchell and Beth Wellington

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Talking back to the news with NewsTrust

By Dan Kennedy -- Assistant Professor, School of Journalism, Northeastern University.

[Ed.: Dan is a valued NewsTrust member and advisor. We're grateful to him and NewsTrust editor Mike LaBonte for hosting this exercise with Dan's students. This post was originally published on Dan's blog, Media Nation.]



Who doesn’t like to talk back to the news? That, in its essence, is the idea behind NewsTrust, a site I’ve been involved with almost from its inception in 2005. The basic idea is to rate news stories on journalistic criteria such as sourcing, fairness and depth. You can rate news organizations, and other reviewers get to rate you as well.

Last week Mike LaBonte, a volunteer editor for NewsTrust who lives in Greater Boston, visited my Reinventing the News class to lead a hands-on demonstration. Dividing the class into four groups, we reviewed a story in the Washington Post on a day in the life of an Iowa tea-party protester.

It was a difficult story to rate, and my students were of two minds. On the one hand, the story was woefully incomplete, and the reporter allowed the protester to make all kinds of ridiculous assertions about President Obama and health-care reform. On the other hand, the story had value if viewed not in isolation but, rather, as part of the Post’s ongoing coverage. As a result, student reviews ranged from a high of 3.5 (out of 5) all the way down to a 1.7.

We followed that up with a class assignment: each student was asked to find, post and rate at least three stories, and to write about the experience, as well as the positives and negatives of NewsTrust, on her or his blog. Here is our class wiki, which links to everything.

Unlike previous semesters, we did not participate in a news hunt on any particular topic. Thus you’ll find stories ranging from the death of Polish President Lech Kaczynski and the pending retirement of Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens to lighter fare such as why yoga appeals mainly to women.

Students have differing views about the value of NewsTrust as well. One positive aspect, it would seem, is that perusing NewsTrust restores some of the serendipity that existed back when everyone read a print newspaper every day.

Yet Mark DiSalvo observes that Google News and the people he follows on Twitter already put news stories in front of him that he might not otherwise know about, and with less technological hassle. “Google News has better customization tools, and the people I follow on Twitter are already people whose taste I trust,” he writes.

Hannah Martin writes that NewsTrust makes her think about the news in a more critical and discerning way. “What I liked about the reviewing experience was it forced me to really analyze my news on its journalistic value, which, as bad as it sounds, is often something that slips my mind,” she says. “I browse the headlines of nyt.com, read what looks important, and accept it as fact, rarely stopping to count sources or assess context. The process of reviewing though, forced me to think through all the elements of each piece, and consider what, as a journalist, should ultimately be there.”

My own view is that NewsTrust is potentially valuable as a crowdsourced front page — an alternative to letting the New York Times or the Washington Post tell us what the most important news of the day is. The problem is that the software is time-consuming and not particularly intuitive, even though it has been improved over the past year.

And though NewsTrust claimed more than 15,000 registered users by the end of 2009, most of the stories you’ll find seem to have been posted and rated by just a small handful of regulars. This is not surprising. Studies have shown that two much-bigger crowdsourced sites, Wikipedia and Digg, are the handiwork of small numbers of unusually active users.

I hope NewsTrust will continue to grow, because the idea is sound. The challenge is that crowdsourcing only works when there is a crowd.

-- Dan Kennedy

[Originally published on Dan's blog, Media Nation, on April 13, 2010 at 4:10 pm ET.]

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About NewsTrust.net

  • NewsTrust.net helps people find good journalism online. Our web review tools let you rate the news based on journalistic quality, not just popularity. Based on member ratings, we feature a daily selection of top rated news and opinions on our free site. We're non-profit, non-partisan, and committed to helping citizens make informed decisions about democracy. More »

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