• @[email protected]
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    97 months ago

    Sure. NPR segments are roughly 4 minutes long.

    But how many people on tik tok giving you news are actually journalists and who is funding it? Tik tok is not paying them for their investigations so I assume what you are watching is not actual news but rather commentary on news that was done by journalists.

    • @GrymEdmOP
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      7 months ago

      Top Ten TikTok Journalism Accounts To Follow in 2022 Some of them:

      • Winner of the British Journalism Awards Innovation of the Year 2021, Sophia Smith Galer shares on her profile breaking news and fun facts on a wide variety of topics. Her work on TikTok has been highly successful since 2020: she has almost 400.000 followers on the platform.
      • Reporters from all over the world share their experience through breathtaking content on nature, science and people on the National Geographic TikTok account. This profile offers some of the most visually appealing videos on the platform.
      • One of the most popular news accounts on TikTok remains The Washington Post. The profile offers engaging and creative videos that attracted more than 1.2 Million followers – and will likely keep growing in 2022.
      • CNN journalist Max Foster is very active on the platform, where he posts first-hand insights on hot topics – and shows his reporter life behind the scenes. His profile shows one of the best sides of information on TikTok, where he creates a strong connection with his public.

      Biden is still campaigning on TikTok. CNN has a TikTok account. I can go on much longer if you aren’t convinced by those many examples of serious journalism on the platform.

      • @[email protected]
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        67 months ago

        Would you say you are more or less informed than the people who read those sources rather than watching what the algorithm says will be most easily monetized for short form video?

        I get it. There is too much news and its too expensive to consume all the news you actually need, but I think we can agree that getting the scraps from tik tok is not a long term solution.

        • @GrymEdmOP
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          7 months ago

          I’m not going to agree with your original assertion that TikTok is not a news platform, and I notice you’ve switched from “it isn’t” to “it isn’t ideal”. I know I might eat downvotes the same way I am in all of this thread, but I care more about the excellent examples I’ve provided that prove it is than opinion. I care more about the fact that people ARE using TikTok as a news source to find out about world events and news. I care that organizations like the ACLU are condemning the TikTok ban as closing off avenues of free speech even if it appears some of the folks voting here don’t agree.

          • @[email protected]
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            57 months ago

            Well I believe the ACLU is wrong if they are asserting the Chinese government is a beacon of free speech.

            They still banning all mentions of the Uyghur genocide and the decimation of the Tibetan Buddhist faith? If so, your own sources are censoring themselves for clicks.

            • @GrymEdmOP
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              7 months ago

              Dude, that’s an aggressively worded strawman that makes serious assumptions with no evidence. The ACLU is not arguing China is a beacon of free speech nor are they advocating for Uyghur genocide or Tibetan suppression, which the rest of your argument proceeds from. Quite the opposite in fact, which is something I can prove. They are saying free speech is being meaningfully facilitated by TikTok, even if it’s a Chinese company. Honestly, just person-to-person, that was pretty bad and if you care I really think you should change at least that last post. Maybe you don’t, that’s fine…I don’t always care about internet opinions either.

              If you want, you can read an article about debunking some reasons and suggesting others here, including how there’s no evidence to date that TikTok is artificially skewed pro-Palestine/progressive as opposed to other platforms (by China or otherwise), or how data privacy concerns are not either unique to TikTok by a long shot or solved by this bill. “The US government’s desire to ban TikTok instead of taking industry-wide action is a good indication that its campaign isn’t really about national security or data protection,” Marx points out, “but something much deeper: namely the preservation of American economic and geopolitical hegemony.”

              • @[email protected]
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                47 months ago

                I didn’t say they were advocating for those things. I said those things are the reason they are wrong.

                I don’t believe China should have the power to shape US News, and if negative reporting of China isn’t allowed on the primary source for many Americans, that is shaping American reality.

                • @GrymEdmOP
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                  7 months ago

                  Well I believe the ACLU is wrong if they are asserting the Chinese government is a beacon of free speech.

                  I can read what you’ve said. I’m not enraged by you, I’m not going to devolve into insults, but we clearly have different ethics when it comes to changing based on proof. I’ve proven that TikTok is a news source and it hasn’t affected your opinion or made you change your posts. You’ve gone from “it isn’t news” to “it’s not an ideal news platform” to “it’s unethical news” and I’m tiring of chasing moving goalposts. Journalists such as the one I linked have found no evidence that TikTok is skewing results period, much less because China says so. You believe what you will, as is your right.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    37 months ago

                    Have those journalists attempted to discuss human rights violations against the Uyghurs or Tibetans?

                    Those topics used to be a very big deal for leftists. They aren’t anymore. It should worry us all that our empathy is being redirected based on who owns what platforms we use. Which… You are here on Lemmy instead of reddit, so you already to an extent agree, just not in the case of one specific state controlled corporation.