GSAN: First Amendment attacks | Bill Gates rumor | Prison newspapers

 

Learn news literacy this week
First Amendment attacks | Bill Gates rumor | Prison newspapers

 
Note: Get Smart About News is taking a spring break. We’ll be back in your inbox on Tuesday, April 4.
 

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An illustration of the U.S. Constitution with a gavel on top along with a torn white piece of paper with “Freedom Of The Press” typed on it.
Freedom of the press is protected under the First Amendment, and a landmark 1964 U.S. Supreme Court ruling extended such protections. (Illustration credit: Shutterstock.com)
 

Florida lawmakers have recently pushed legislation to make it easier to sue media outlets for alleged defamation — a threat to press freedoms that could have national implications. Journalists are legally protected in publishing critical comments about public officials due to the First Amendment and precedent set by a 1964 landmark U.S. Supreme Court case, New York Times Co. v. Sullivan. If the Sullivan case is challenged and overturned, public figures could “use libel law to shut down their critics in the press,” legal historian Samantha Barbas said in an interview.

Two years after a gunman killed six women of Asian descent at Atlanta area spas, the executive director of the Asian American Journalists Association noted that equitable news coverage of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders “continues to be elusive.” Disclosing staff diversity data is an important step for newsrooms in improving AAPI coverage, Naomi Tacuyan Underwood writes. “Good journalism, by newsrooms that are representative of their communities, is essential to the multicultural democracy we’re committed to building in the United States.”

 
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Baseless claim that Jan. 6 rioter ‘flipped’ against the FBI circulates on Twitter

A tweet reads, “….Breaking News…Jim Jordon… just announced that RAY EPPS just flipped and will testify against FBI involvement on Jan/06…..watch as they now start to testify against each other-OMG.” The News Literacy Project has added a label that says, “BASELESS CLAIM.”

NO: As of March 20, Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Jordan, who has claimed that whistleblowers contacted him about politicization within the Department of Justice, has not made any announcements that Ray Epps is “flipping” and will testify against the FBI. YES: Epps, a supporter of former President Donald Trump, has been the subject of a wide range of conspiratorial claims based on his role in the violence, including that he was a federal informant who helped start the riot.

NewsLit takeaway: A social media post that strongly aligns with one’s political beliefs or desires — in this case, a message perpetuating the conspiratorial and untrue claim that the attack on the Capitol was organized by the government — can easily gain traction online as confirmation bias leads people to like and share the post. But a quick evaluation of these tweets often reveals red flags indicating these messages may not be worth engaging with.

Even a brief search for “Ray Epps” and “Jim Jordan” would quickly debunk this claim and explain the history of conspiratorial theories surrounding Epps.

 

False reports claim Bill Gates faces ‘premeditated murder’ charges over vaccines

Three tweets falsely assert that an international arrest warrant was issued in the Philippines for Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on charges of “premeditated murder” related to his support of COVID-19 vaccines. The News Literacy Project has added a label that says, “CONSPIRATORIAL FANTASY.”

NO: An arrest warrant for Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates was not issued in the Philippines for “premeditated murder” in relation to the COVID-19 vaccine rollout. YES: This rumor stems from a conspiratorial website with a penchant for pushing false claims. NO: The Heinous Crimes Court that allegedly issued this warrant does not exist. YES: Baseless conspiratorial fantasies about public figures being arrested for serious crimes are common on conspiracy theory websites.

NewsLit takeaway: Sensational and false claims often gain traction on social media because they appeal to what their audience wants or feels to be true. Social media users can protect themselves from these kinds of conspiratorial fantasy claims by seeking out more information about their source and checking to see if any reliable, standards-based sources are reporting the same thing. A search for NewsPunch, the conspiratorial website where this claim originated, finds several fact-check articles debunking this particular claim, along with dozens of additional articles addressing other false claims it has published.

 
Kickers
After nearly 15 years “down the rabbit hole,” one former conspiracy theorist is now fighting misinformation. What changed his mind? It started with Infowars host Alex Jones’ false narrative about the Sandy Hook school shooting.
“How to talk about conspiracy theories without getting fired” was the title of a recent talk by one social studies teacher who successfully integrated media literacy in his classroom. He’s part of a growing movement of researchers and educators who support internet literacy to combat misinformation — a life skill for the 21st century.
Be alert, TikTok users: The platform’s parent company, ByteDance, is being investigated by the FBI and Justice Department for possibly spying on journalists.
At least 27 rural counties in Texas have no local newspaper. Here’s the story of how one newspaper in the panhandle recently ended its run after 130 years.
Newspapers are growing in a place you may not expect: prison. There are now two dozen prison-based newspapers — with at least four of those papers launched within the last year, according to the Prison Journalism Project.
A new bill in Washington state would provide legal safeguards against “deepfakes” in political ads — or manipulated media that can look or sound like a real person.
The unstable and challenging media landscape in Venezuela hasn’t stopped independent news outlets there from flourishing online. As one professor said: “The hope is in digital.”
 
ICYMI: In case you missed it, the most clicked story link in the last issue of Get Smart About News was this PolitiFact piece that outlined false claims about the Jan. 6 insurrection from Fox News commentator Tucker Carlson.
 
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Your weekly issue of Get Smart About News is created by Susan Minichiello (@susanmini), Dan Evon (@danieljevon), Peter Adams (@PeterD_Adams), Hannah Covington (@HannahCov) and Pamela Brunskill (@PamelaBrunskill). It is edited by Mary Kane (@marykkane) and Lourdes Venard (@lourdesvenard).

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