worldnews
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/c/[email protected] strives for high-quality standards on the latest world events.
The basis of these standards comes from the MBFC, which uses an aggregate of methodologies, including the IFCN and World Freedom Indices, to rate the Bias and Factual Reporting of News.
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Disallowed submissions
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~~US internal news/US politics~~ (Allowed while the Fediverse grows)
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Editorialised titles
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Editorials, opinions, analysis
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Feature stories
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Non-English articles
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Images, videos or audio clips -- General Social media posts (Only Allowed during ongoing world events)
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All-caps words in titles
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Blogs
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Old news (≥ 1-Month-old) articles
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Memes/GIFs
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URL shorteners
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Paywalls (Copy-Pasting the Article content or bypassing the paywall is allowed)
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Celebrating death/Advocating violence
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Health disinformation/misinformation
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The general rules of the sh.itjust.works instance apply!
Thank you.
todo list:
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Automate a bot to check standards
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Introduce tl;dr bot
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Gain more moderators
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I'm actually wondering what is censorship. Because if you are going to include every nonsense blog and asshat that has some unfounded garbage to spew, the quality of your product will potentially be garbage. So you end up with the question on what sources to include, and you probably end up with authorative sources that are regarded higher.
The issue we already see with Google search is that seo spam and generated websites that all form a large circle jerk are setup to fool the algorithm. This will be the case for llms as well. The longer they are in use the better people will understand how to game the system. And then bad actors will get these things to say whatever they want.
I don't know a solution, but my guess is that it lies in what used to happen for the encyclopedia Britannica etc.. large pools of experts that curate the underlaying sources. Like in libraries etc.
Pity we've spent the past generation or so destroying critical thinking skills and factchecks
Nah, I think the solution is simpler: multiple competing algorithms. Gaming one system is pretty easy, gaming 5 isn't. So if a search company wants to always have the top results, they need to swap between a handful of good search algorithms to keep SEO hunters at bay.
Hiring experts is certainly a good idea, but due to the sheer size of the internet, it's not going to be feasible.
As for the original discussion about censorship in search, I take it to mean intentional hiding or demotion of relevant results due to the content of those results. SEO spam isn't relevant because it's not what the customer is likely wanting, so hiding/demoting it doesn't count as censorship imo.
Censorship is simply intentionally limiting the information that someone else has available to them, and it is bad. Let them curate their own information, that's fine, but they should have choice over what they see.
I disagree. The whole "buyer beware" does not work. Everyone is entitled to their own opinions but not to their own facts. Plenty of people out there are not able to curate their own content and rely on others to do it for them. Librarians, curators, there are jobs specifically for that purpose.
I think it is time.. no overdue, that proper curation takes over again. But the task is so enormous that it will be a challenge to figure out how this is done properly. And.. commercial entities will always have incentives that are not aligned with that of the broader populace.. so there is that.