Lachlan Cartwright editor at large at the Daily Beast, on the recent lawsuits plaguing Fox News, and how they reveal glimpses of a future news empire. Daphne Keller director of the Program on Platform Regulation at Stanford University's Cyber Policy Center, on how two new Supreme Court cases may reshape social media as we know it. Plus, how one reporter's prolific coverage of Trump earned her friends and enemies alike. On this week's On the Media, a look at the legal gray areas of how news gets shared online. This week, two cases headed to the Supreme Court that could change the internet as we know it.Music: The Artifact and Living by Michael AndrewsCellar Door by Michael AndrewsBoy Moves the Sun by Michael AndrewsExit Music (For A Film) by Brad Mehldau TrioEye Surgery by Thomas NewmanHammer of Los by John Zorn Michael Bang Petersen political science professor at Aarhus University, on the difference (or lack thereof) between on and offline behaviors, and how social media might not be affecting us in the ways we think. Josh Owens ], a former InfoWars employee, on what can be done to help people who have become consumed by conspiracy theories. Elizabeth Williamson features writer for The New York Times, on the Sandy Hook defamation trials against Alex Jones and what the trials taught us about the spread of misinformation. Plus, does social media really turn nice people into trolls? 1. On this week's On the Media, a former Alex Jones staffer struggles with the damage his participation wrought. A jury recently ordered Alex Jones to pay nearly one billion dollars to the families of the victims of the Sandy Hook shooting.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |