I can’t seem to find anything in a sidebar or sticky thread that talks about the moderation / rules of the news community. I’m very interested in coming to this community to learn about news, but right now it seems whats being posted tends to be relatively low (lower?) quality.

Examples of common rules

  • Use the same titles as the article itself
  • No blog spam, link to the source
  • Political news, should go to the political community
  • No dupes of same topic

As an example, take a look at other news aggregators that focus on news.

My goal here isn’t tell people what to do but its start a conversation on the topic.

  • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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    1 year ago

    From a combatting misinformation perspective:

    If we’re drafting rules here, I’d like to suggest a rule that the original article URL should be the one used for the post, even if it’s to a paywalled source. It helps immensely in vetting sources without first having to click into an obfuscated archive link. I’m all for sidestepping paywalls, but I think it would be beneficial to have the archive link in the post body instead.

    Part of my media literacy protocol is establishing that the source is trustworthy, and it gets annoying / tedious clicking into an archive link only to find out the source is “Jimbob’s REEL TRUTH NEWZ”.

    I’m also on the fence about linking to YouTube (and similar) videos as news sources.

    • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I’m all for this as a soft rule, but so many articles have terrible headlines that it can’t be a fixed one.

      Also, a lot of the news sites I follow do A/B testing on every title. So every article has two titles.

  • The saucest tof@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I would like fo the country to be added to the title (or as tags if that exits on lemmy), like [USA], [FR] or [World]. We are an international community so it’d help filter out the news of country you are not interested in.

  • alanine96@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    What do people think of a “journalistic integrity” rule? I know that’s also subjective, but I’m trying to think of how to phrase a rule that is basically “don’t post intentionally incendiary crap”. I guess the rule could just be “don’t post intentionally incendiary crap”, with some examples of what that means and community opportunities to in some way indicate that an article is incendiary crap.

  • Drusas@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I would also say that a Twitter post is not news, but unfortunately a lot of politicians have not gotten that notice yet.

  • nyakojiru@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    I don’t know but, Remember to… beehave … you know is like a bee but that does things like the queen orders …

      • Another Person @beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        In the United States (at least) the whole point of a free press is to keep politicians in check. You can’t separate the news from politics.

        • Boz (he/him)@lemmy.one
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          1 year ago

          I disagree with that definition of news. Keeping politicians accountable is certainly one of the functions of the press, but there are a lot of possible news items that don’t refer to politicians. “Winter storms hit [location]” is news, but not related to politicians unless it talks about steps local politicians are taking to prevent storm damage (which is not necessary for a good article). Or “Physicists find [particle they were looking for].” That one could be in Science rather than here, but it is definitely news, and I personally think it’s hard to shoehorn politics into a discussion of particle physics without losing track of what actually happened. Very few politicians involve themselves in that kind of research (though, to be fair, it might be news if they did).

          Whether it’s possible to have a purely apolitical news forum is a different question, and I am sure it’s possible to put a political spin on almost anything if you want, but I just don’t think it’s true that news must be political to be news.