Accuracy in Online Media: Insufficient Journalistic Routines in Fact-checking and Corrections

Authors

  • Mato Brautovic University of Dubrovnik
  • Sandra Buratović Maštrapa
  • Romana John

Keywords:

ACCURACY, ERRORS, SPEED, CORRECTIONS, ACCOUNTABILITY, JOURNALISM

Abstract

Accuracy is at the core of what journalists do and it amounts to journalistic commitment to report without
errors. This tenet of journalism is now in danger, because of the influence of digitalization, changes in
media landscapes, and the utilization of the assertation model of journalism. In this study, we used a
combination of content analysis and visual network analysis to investigate how subjective errors are
disseminated through an online environment, how time/speed influences the propagation of errors, and
what the error correction procedures/routines are. The results demonstrate that 69% of the analyzed
stories contained errors, and the main cause of such errors was the use of secondary sources, instead
of primary ones, these errors transcend national borders and, time/speed had only a minor role in the
emergence and correction of the errors, etc. Out of the 107 media websites analyzed, only seventeen
provide certain modalities of requesting error correction.

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Published

2020-11-23