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Vagueness: How to know what is true in the age of information overload?
Vagueness: How to know what is true in the age of information overload?

Author: [America] Bill kovac and others.

Content introduction:

This book is a news consumption guide written by senior journalists for ordinary citizens.

In the Internet age, in the face of the uproar of talk show commentators and self-media, and the endless links and additions of websites, has "true news" died? The old authority has been overthrown, new authority is being created, and the way we obtain information has changed. But finding true and reliable information is still the most important goal of news media. At the same time, this is also the goal of news consumers.

In the era of information fragmentation, how to identify which information is a rumor and which information and opinions are credible? This book aims to answer the above questions and explore what changes are taking place in information culture. It provides a path navigation for all citizens-using six-step questioning method to identify rumors and get the truth.

About the author:

In his 50-year career, Bill? Kovac was the president of the Washington branch in The New York Times, the editor-in-chief of the Atlanta Charter, and the project director of the Niemann Foundation Association of Harvard University. He is the founding chairman of the Enthusiastic Journalists Committee and a senior consultant of excellent news projects.

Tom who has been a reporter for more than 30 years? Rosenstiel is the chief congressional reporter for Newsweek, LA Times and MSNBC. Williams watched the news together as a media commentator. He is the author of We Interrupted the News Program. Rosenstiel is the vice chairman of the Enthusiastic Journalists' Committee and the head of the excellent news project.

Kovac and Rosenstiel also co-authored two other books: Ten Basic Principles of Journalism and The Speed of Distortion, which won the Goldsmith Prize of Harvard University in 2002.