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mohanmcgeek | 3 years ago
That's exactly what reporters _should not_ do. Why would i want them to mix their opinions in when reporting an actual statment from the company.
People are perfectly capable of forming their own opinions.
mohanmcgeek | 3 years ago
That's exactly what reporters _should not_ do. Why would i want them to mix their opinions in when reporting an actual statment from the company.
People are perfectly capable of forming their own opinions.
ballenf|3 years ago
Don't print a company claim without doing some digging to back up or refute it.
Or if you do make it clear that you (the reporter) made no effort to back up the claim.
slg|3 years ago
There needs to be a greater degree of skepticism in the way the media covers powerful people, companies, and organizations. Amazon saying something doesn't mean that statement is true. It is the reporter's job to determine if it is true before passing that statement along to the reader. When the reporter is unable to confirm it as truth, the reporter should denote that lack of confirmation before repeating the statement. When the reporter can confirm something is false, such as the implication that fuel price increases are permanent, the reporter should note that as a lie.