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ramus
8th December 2016, 19:08
HOW CAN THIS HAPPEN ? NO VETTING OF SOURCES, AND QUICK TO ATTACK OTHERS OF
FAKE NEWS. THIS IS MSM AT IT'S BEST.

Washington Post Appends "Russian Propaganda Fake News" Story, Admits It May Be Fake
Tyler Durden's picture
by Tyler Durden
Dec 8, 2016 12:19 PM
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In the latest example why the "mainstream media" is facing a historic crisis of confidence among its readership, facing unprecedented blowback following Craig Timberg November 24 Washington Post story "Russian propaganda effort helped spread ‘fake news’ during election, experts say", on Wednesday a lengthy editor's note appeared on top of the original article in which the editor not only distances the WaPo from the "experts" quoted in the original article whose "work" served as the basis for the entire article (and which became the most read WaPo story the day it was published) but also admits the Post could not "vouch for the validity of PropOrNot's finding regarding any individual media outlet", in effect admitting the entire story may have been, drumroll "fake news" and conceding the Bezos-owned publication may have engaged in defamation by smearing numerous websites - Zero Hedge included - with patently false and unsubstantiated allegations.

It was the closest the Washington Post would come to formally retracting the story, which has now been thoroughly discredited not only by outside commentators, but by its own editor.


The apended note in question:

Editor’s Note: The Washington Post on Nov. 24 published a story on the work of four sets of researchers who have examined what they say are Russian propaganda efforts to undermine American democracy and interests. One of them was PropOrNot, a group that insists on public anonymity, which issued a report identifying more than 200 websites that, in its view, wittingly or unwittingly published or echoed Russian propaganda. A number of those sites have objected to being included on PropOrNot’s list, and some of the sites, as well as others not on the list, have publicly challenged the group’s methodology and conclusions. The Post, which did not name any of the sites, does not itself vouch for the validity of PropOrNot’s findings regarding any individual media outlet, nor did the article purport to do so. Since publication of The Post’s story, PropOrNot has removed some sites from its list.

As The Washingtonian notes, the implicit concession follows intense and rising criticism of the article over the past two weeks. It was “rife with obviously reckless and unproven allegations,” Intercept reporters Glenn Greenwald and Ben Norton wrote, noting that PropOrNot, one of the groups whose research was cited in Timberg’s piece, “anonymous cowards.” One of the sites PropOrNot cited as Russian-influenced was the Drudge Report.

The piece’s description of some sharers of bogus news as “useful idiots” could “theoretically include anyone on any social-media platform who shares news based on a click-bait headline,” Mathew Ingram wrote for Fortune.

But the biggest issue was PropOrNot itself. As Adrian Chen wrote for the New Yorker, its methods were themselves suspect, hinting at counter-Russian propaganda - ostensibly with Ukrainian origins - and verification of its work was nearly impossible. Chen wrote “the prospect of legitimate dissenting voices being labelled fake news or Russian propaganda by mysterious groups of ex-government employees, with the help of a national newspaper, is even scarier.”

Criticism culminated this week when the "Naked capitalism" blog threatened to sue the Washington Post, demanding a retraction.

Now, at least, the "national newspaper" has taken some responsibility, however the key question remains: by admitting it never vetted its primary source, whose biased and conflicted "work" smeared hundreds of websites, this one included, just how is the Washington Post any different from the "fake news" it has been deriding on a daily basis ever since its endorsed presidential candidate lost the elections?

PurpleLama
8th December 2016, 20:00
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-12-07/washington-post-apends-russian-propaganda-story-admits-it-may-be-fake

Helene West
8th December 2016, 23:52
With several alt news folks and sites talking about how mainstream is done for, they've lost credibility, they're finished, etc. I came across an article a few days ago on a financial site, Seeking Alpha, (not a very political site but heavy finance), which stated that the subscriptions to the NY Times went up 20% since the elections! I was surprised and have no way of telling if it is true or not but I just hope the Alt news sites are not getting carried away with rose colored glasses.

Bill Ryan
9th December 2016, 01:47
the subscriptions to the NY Times went up 20% since the elections!

The New York Times did by far the best online real-time election coverage as the voting was counted, and called Trump as the winner many hours before anyone else. It was astonishing to follow, and I was glued to the changing web page as, fairly early that long night, they predicted Trump as the victor with 80%, 85%, 90%, and then >95% certainty. It was no guesswork... just very smart math, based on a lot of good data.

Impressive journalism -- whatever the editors' personal opinions (or instructions!) -- and this may have earned them a bunch of kudos points thereafter.

mgray
9th December 2016, 04:17
With several alt news folks and sites talking about how mainstream is done for, they've lost credibility, they're finished, etc. I came across an article a few days ago on a financial site, Seeking Alpha, (not a very political site but heavy finance), which stated that the subscriptions to the NY Times went up 20% since the elections! I was surprised and have no way of telling if it is true or not but I just hope the Alt news sites are not getting carried away with rose colored glasses.

Seeking Alpha, which as a financial newspaper editor I can attest to its rigorous journalistic principles, was one of the sites along with zero hedge as being labeled fake news sites.

Neither are in my opinion, but do call what Wall St. sees as the real truth, minus the spin.

And that 20% bump in the NY Time sub rate, which was reported by the paper, was from liberals wishing to see more of their brand of "fake news."

onawah
9th December 2016, 04:23
For those who don't follow Alex Jones' Infowars ( I don't that much myself, but have been recently), he reports that Infowars is the top rated source of news now, rating far higher even than the New York Times
How things do change!

Baby Steps
14th December 2016, 12:57
34697

The above is useful, although I do not agree with it- it gives too much credibility to the supposedly credible large organisations - the ones propagating mass psychosis on issues like Syria and 9-11

I found this- Media Lens.

http://www.medialens.org/

Also try this:


http://beautifultrouble.org/theory/the-propaganda-model/



“Any dictator would admire the uniformity and obedience of the U.S. media.”
Noam Chomsky


In Sum
The propaganda model seeks to explain the behavior of news media operating within a capitalist economy. The model suggests that media outlets will consistently produce news content that aligns with the interests of political and economic elites.
Origins:
Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky
The propaganda model seeks to explain media behavior by examining the institutional pressures that constrain and influence news content within a profit-driven system. In contrast to liberal theories that argue that journalism is adversarial to established power, the propaganda model predicts that corporate-owned news media will consistently produce news content that serves the interests of established power.
First introduced in 1988 in Edward S. Herman’s and Noam Chomsky’s Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media, the propaganda model argues that “the raw material of news” passes through five filters that ultimately shape the news audiences receive. These filters determine what events are deemed newsworthy, how they are covered, where they are placed within the media and how much coverage they receive.
The five filters are as follows:
Concentrated ownership, owner wealth and profit-orientation of the dominant mass-media firms. Corporate media firms share common interests with other sectors of the economy, and therefore have a real stake in maintaining an economic and political climate that is conducive to their profitability. They are unlikely to be critical of economic or political policies that directly benefit them.
Advertising as primary source of income. To remain profitable, most media rely on advertising dollars for the bulk of their revenue. It is therefore against the interests of the news media to produce content that might antagonize advertisers.
Reliance on information provided by “expert” and official sources. Elites have the resources to routinely “facilitate” the news-gathering process by providing photo-ops, news conferences, press releases, think-tank reports and canned news pieces that take advantage of the news media’s need for continuous and cheap news content. Business leaders, politicians and government officials are also typically viewed as credible and unbiased sources of information, jettisoning the need for fact-checking or other costly background research. This filter was clearly demonstrated during the run-up to the 2003 Iraq War, when the U.S. news media took official pronouncements at face value, refusing to investigate their veracity or accuracy.
Flak as a means of disciplining the media. Flak refers to negative commentary to a news story that can work to police and discipline journalists or news organizations that stray too far outside the consensus. Flak includes complaints, lawsuits, petitions or government sanctions.
An external enemy or threat. Manifesting as “anti-communism” during the Cold War period when Manufacturing Consent was originally published, this filter still operates, particularly in the post-9/11 political climate. This filter mobilizes the population against a common enemy (terrorism, energy insecurity, Iran…) while demonizing opponents of state policy as insufficiently patriotic or in league with the enemy.
The propaganda model suggests that corporate media ultimately serve to “manufacture consent” for a narrow range of self-serving élitist policy options. It allows us to understand the institutional pressures that ultimately color how activists’ causes and actions are covered. By understanding the limits of “objectivity” and the contradictions within corporate-sponsored journalism, we can develop media tactics that take advantage of these contradictions while also bypassing the filters of the corporate press, and directly appealing to the public through alternative forms of media. As Herman himself suggests, “we would like to think that the propaganda model can help activists understand where they might best deploy their efforts to influence mainstream media coverage of issues.”