We actually have a law in Denmark which holds news publications accountable for what they print, meaning that their editorial staff could go to prison if it can be proven that they knowingly misinformed.
In general I prefer to pay people to do my editorial audit for me. I go a step further though, I subscribe to a physical news paper that only comes out once a week, because by doing so, I also filter out all the things that weren’t important enough to make it into the single weekly print. I do sometimes turn to public service for a quick view of the daily news, and when something major happens. I used to read free internet news, but I was really dissatisfied with it, turns out you get what you pay for, and filtering out 90% of the bullshit has improved my outlook immensely.
When I chose my news paper I did some research on which Danish papers were considered the highest quality, and a few came up. Then I bought one of each for a few weeks and found the one I liked the best. That was Weekend Avisen. It contains a lot of stuff on culture, which I often skip, but it’s articles on news and the political scene are great. What it does that a lot of news media doesn’t, aside from filtering a lot of the day to day nonsense, is respect the fact that things are never black and white, and it handles this intelligently.
I’m extremely skeptic about things that are user audited. You can find a lot of good user driven content on the internet, but it’s often a little misleading even when it doesn’t intend to be. HN is a great example of this. The content here, on things like which programming languages are hot, is so far from the real world, at least the one I live in, it’s silly. We have so many topics about things like Rust or Go, but when I look at the Danish job-market there is literally just one listing for Rust, and that’s for a c/c++ job at Google where it’s listed as “nice but not necessary”. HN is still the best and most relevant place for tech-news, but I kind of wish there was a NYT for tech, where a real editorial staff would weed out all the medium bullshit. Because it’s really kind of a waste of our time when we all have to do it, and that’s probably why people turn to the comment sections before they read the articles, we want people to audit our content. I just go a step further, because I want trained and accountable professionals, not anonymous people to do it for me.
In general I prefer to pay people to do my editorial audit for me. I go a step further though, I subscribe to a physical news paper that only comes out once a week, because by doing so, I also filter out all the things that weren’t important enough to make it into the single weekly print. I do sometimes turn to public service for a quick view of the daily news, and when something major happens. I used to read free internet news, but I was really dissatisfied with it, turns out you get what you pay for, and filtering out 90% of the bullshit has improved my outlook immensely.
When I chose my news paper I did some research on which Danish papers were considered the highest quality, and a few came up. Then I bought one of each for a few weeks and found the one I liked the best. That was Weekend Avisen. It contains a lot of stuff on culture, which I often skip, but it’s articles on news and the political scene are great. What it does that a lot of news media doesn’t, aside from filtering a lot of the day to day nonsense, is respect the fact that things are never black and white, and it handles this intelligently.
I’m extremely skeptic about things that are user audited. You can find a lot of good user driven content on the internet, but it’s often a little misleading even when it doesn’t intend to be. HN is a great example of this. The content here, on things like which programming languages are hot, is so far from the real world, at least the one I live in, it’s silly. We have so many topics about things like Rust or Go, but when I look at the Danish job-market there is literally just one listing for Rust, and that’s for a c/c++ job at Google where it’s listed as “nice but not necessary”. HN is still the best and most relevant place for tech-news, but I kind of wish there was a NYT for tech, where a real editorial staff would weed out all the medium bullshit. Because it’s really kind of a waste of our time when we all have to do it, and that’s probably why people turn to the comment sections before they read the articles, we want people to audit our content. I just go a step further, because I want trained and accountable professionals, not anonymous people to do it for me.