SmartNews, Inc.さんが再投稿しました
Trust in the news media has continued to decline among Americans, with skepticism especially growing among younger audiences, according to study by SmartNews, reports Jon Gingerich https://odwpr.us/3R1pzRm
SmartNewsは、多くの皆様にご愛用頂いているニュースアプリです。 私たちは、フィルターバブルを越え、良質なニュースをユーザーの皆様にお届けする機械学習の企業です。 当社のアルゴリズムは、ユーザー行動や社会的な相互作用を評価し、数千万件の記事の中から、世界規模で最も興味深く重要な記事のみを配信します。そして、それは世界レベルでデータサイエンスとエンジニア達を魅了する課題であると捉えております。 SmartNewsは多数のベストアプリ・ベストアプリ・オブザイヤーを受賞し、3500万ダウンロードを達成、月間1000万人以上のユーザが使っております。現在、東京、サンフランシスコ、ニューヨークにオフィスを構えています。 私たちの国際的な文化の中で、スマートな仕事でスマートな人々と共に「世界中の良質な情報を必要な人に送り届ける」というミッションに飛び込んでみませんか。 米国と日本のオフィス間で、世界中の同僚達と一緒に仕事をしていきましょう。
SmartNews, Inc.の外部リンク
SmartNews, Inc.さんが再投稿しました
Trust in the news media has continued to decline among Americans, with skepticism especially growing among younger audiences, according to study by SmartNews, reports Jon Gingerich https://odwpr.us/3R1pzRm
We’ve released our latest survey: Trust in the Media: Exploring Consumer Sentiment and Behavior. Key findings: 🧐 A Generation of Skeptics: 65% of Gen Z and 59% of Millennials question news accuracy. Republicans (39%) are also more skeptical than Democrats (32%). 📚 Boomers Lead in Verifying News: 39% of Boomers seek additional sources to verify news, while only 13% of Gen Z do the same – preferring social media for verification. 🗳️ Politics Shapes Media Choices: 35% of respondents block news outlets with opposing views. At SmartNews, we’re bridging gaps by delivering credible, diverse and relevant news. What drives trust in news for you? See the full report here: https://lnkd.in/gWvdEit3
The more companies sanitize corporate communications, the less credible they become to the public. Our latest blog points to three flaws: 🔹The wrong messenger – C-suite executives are trusted more than PR flacks 🔹The wrong medium – 81% of people find company statements presented in news articles at least somewhat credible vs. 66% trust corporate blogs 🔹The wrong tone – 90% of people say they question corporate messaging at least some of the time, and 36% find company statements overly scripted or PR-driven When it comes to corporate communications, the more human the messenger, the more believable the message. Read the full blog here: https://lnkd.in/g_qWVdvW
Our latest survey shows that corporate communications double-speak is undermining faith in news. Have you seen any examples of over-the-top company gibberish? https://lnkd.in/edYrftmn O'Dwyer's Public Relations News
Journalism is at an AI crossroads. BBC News uses AI to personalize content, while The New York Times approves its reporters to use AI for certain tasks. This raises two key questions: • How soon will other newsrooms follow suit? • Should a universal standard – like the Associated Press Stylebook – exist for how journalists use AI? A well-defined “AI Use Guide” could set clear boundaries, help maintain trust and balance AI-assisted efficiency with human-driven reporting. This could ensure transparency while still leaving room for innovation. What do you think? Should the industry adopt a shared framework, or should newsrooms set their own rules?
Podcasts are going visual – are you keeping up? A new report by NPR, National Public Media and Sounds Profitable reveals news podcast listeners are leading the charge in video podcast consumption: 🎥 87% watch video podcasts – a staggering amount: 🎥 44% say YouTube is their top platform for podcasts (vs. 38% of non-news listeners) 🎥 65% of news podcast listeners said YouTube is how they find new podcasts Read more insights about the report from Digiday: https://lnkd.in/dURbUD88
Tech-savvy, but fact-challenged. A recent Teen Vogue interview with educators reveals that despite being "digitally native," teens struggle to distinguish fact from fiction online. A 2024 study by The News Literacy Project found alarming stats: • 94% of students want media literacy, but only 39% get it. • 80% face conspiracy theories often, and 81% believe at least one. • Nine states have news literacy standards, but only three require it. Kids and teens need more #medialiteracy tools and education, and more state curriculums need to require it. Read more here: https://lnkd.in/e5iiV5Mi
Misinformation thrives when platforms dodge responsibility. A new survey from the Communication Research Center at Boston University shows Americans trust independent fact-checkers over the “community notes” used by some social media platforms to flag misinformation. ✅ 2 in 3 adults support verified fact-checking. ❌ Less than half trust crowd-sourced notes. The fight against #misinformation needs facts and fact-checkers. https://lnkd.in/gqR6j5hG
Consumers of news want it straight and they hate corporate double-speak. A new SmartNews survey reveals:📊 🔹90% of Americans question the sincerity of company messaging 🔹56% see “no comment” as a strategy for companies to protect themselves 🔹36% find company statements overly scripted or PR-driven If companies want to build trust, they need to start sounding human. More insights here: https://lnkd.in/gNT45Wuh
Trust in news isn’t built on hot takes – it’s built on the expertise of journalists. CNN reporter Liam R. writes that small-but-focused outlets like Government Executive and Federal News Network-news-network are breaking major stories because they know their beats better than anyone. Their traffic surge proves it: real reporting is what audiences turn to when it matters most. https://lnkd.in/e5h4AgE4
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