Do you Google search and click on whatever news sources come up or do you look into the news sources leanings, news reporting quality, and credibility? Maybe just if you can vibe with it or not in general?

Simplified

Do you save a list of specific news sites? Or do you just click on anything just to read that specific story on a search engine?

Me personally: I have a set list of sites I check. I know that they are credible and trust worthy to the public, being non profits and them having high standards to news reporting. (some of them include Npr, and Ap news) Most of their news stories are intended to benefit the public. Of course they aren’t always perfect, but a solid choice, especially if you’re starting out on picking a specific news source.

How about you all?

  • JaggedRobotPubes@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    AP is basically where the news gets its news, so I go there if I’m not looking for commentary or discussion.

    Some comedy news programs have developed a level of journalistic integrity that frequently surpasses actual news outlets. John Oliver, the Daily Show, and Jon Stewart’s The Weekly Show podcast are really solid, not to mention much less hostile to sanity.

    NPR has historically been king for getting me to feel like I actually understand an issue. I’ve been wary of them ever since whatever record-scratching both-sidesing it was they pulled during the 2016-2020 Trump American Soulrape Era that made me think nazi cock might have npr spit on it. I might look back into them again. They were good for a long time before that, it’s been awhile, and I haven’t heard about it continuing.

    • laranis@lemmy.zip
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      13 days ago

      nazi cock might have npr spit on it

      Ne’er shall I find poetry as eloquent in sentiment and imagination on this hallowed Internet. Good night.

  • peopleproblems@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    If I don’t see it on Lemmy, my parents usually let me know.

    No don’t worry they are progressives so it’s almost always NPR or local.

  • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    I posted this in a different thread a while back. Here are some primary news sources:

    • New York Times (NYT)
    • Reuters
    • Associated Press (AP)
    • BBC News
    • The Guardian
    • Al Jazeera
    • Bloomberg
    • The Washington Post
    • CNN
    • Deutsche Welle (DW)
  • NOT_RICK@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    Mostly Reuters as I feel news wires are inherently more likely to report just the facts as their main customers are other news outlets. This provides an incentive towards accuracy in a way that I find the current news landscape does not have. Beyond that I have a handful of podcasts and other more niche publications I love like Ars Technica.

  • Lemvi@lemmy.sdf.org
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    13 days ago

    I like to look at who owns a news source and which country it is operating in to get an idea how reliable it might be.

    It is also worth looking at the rethoric: do the headlines seem clickbaity? Do the articles cover more than one side to a story?

    I also look at the kinds of stories a news source covers, and whether it seems like they push some sort of agenda from the things they choose to report on.

    But yeah, I have come to find a bunch of sources I trust, and that I go to for news.

  • FartsWithAnAccent@fedia.io
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    13 days ago

    Never just one source, ever. For specific resources, newswires can be more or less good. I’ll often also use some sort of news aggregators like news.google.com as well as forums like Mbin and Lemmy to initially hear about things - if I want to go digging them I start checking out different resources.

  • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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    13 days ago

    as far as a collection of news, I get a lot of it from 1440, which compiles current, objective news stories reliably.

    I get ideas from the posts here, but I’m pretty careful about checking multiple sources before accepting any of the articles people post here as legitimate information.

  • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    IMO you’re doing it the right way.

    If there’s a single indicator to pay attention to, it’s the source of funding. Where does the media outlet get its money from?

    Next is professional ethics: does it employ real journalists? Journalism is like medicine, it’s a profession with a code of conduct. In this case, a commitment to factual accuracy, a good-faith search for the truth, fairness in choices about what to cover, transparency about sources, etc.

    And if you feel the journalists are doing a bad job, then go back to point 1 and ask: Who is paying them? Are you? The reason for today’s crisis in journalism is not that journalists are lazy or evil, it’s that the internet cratered their business model. More of us need to step up and pay. It’s that simple.

    I have a couple of paid subscriptions. If that’s the cost of living in a properly informed society, it’s a great deal.

  • kora@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    13 days ago

    I can tell a lot about a source’s bias by the question(s) they state and the answer they claim to have.

    Does the answer they give match the question?

    Does the question even have a relevant/importantly relevant answer, or is it unknowable to the point of lacking usefullness?

    Some people would be shocked to realize just how much crap gets caught by those two things, for me at least. Obviously Fox [or really insert your least favorite source] isnt publishing 100% truths, but sources that myself and those with similar ideals seem to more frequently trust, publish crap articles pretty frequently too.

  • justhach@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    You can reliably quickly tell if a news source is credible depending on how many appeals to emotion and superfluous adjectives/descriptors are found in their articles.

    A lot of it is about parsing multiple sources, and extrapolating the data from the spin.