by Sydney Smith on Sep 11, 2019
UK newspaper cropped photo wrong, showed wrong victim
Last year, a UK man named Paul Collinson was killed after a driver on the wrong side of the road...
Last year, a UK man named Paul Collinson was killed after a driver on the wrong side of the road...
The Guardian admits it is "more liberal" about publishing profanity, but some readers are still concerned about the curse words...
New Zealand's largest news site Stuff doesn't have to publish anti-vaccine content, the New Zealand Media Council said. The media...
Podcasts may be taking over, but alleged plagiarism by makers of podcasts, and how to handle it, is new territory....
The Associated Press retracted a story after wrongly reporting former film producer Harvey Weinstein pleaded guilty to sexual abuse charges....
The UK press regulator the Independent Press Standards Organisation has published new guidance for reporting on Sikhs. Why? The guide...
Is it OK to use the word queer on air and in reporting? NPR's public editor office looked at that...
The BBC published a story in June about a woman who claimed she was ill because she didn't get vaccines...
The National Association of Hispanic Journalists offered new guidance for "how to accurately and inclusively cover mass shootings" in the...
It was irrelevant for the UK Sun to publish a picture of and a story speculating on a relationship between...