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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsA "pink slime" news outlet is an outlet that makes a planted story look like local news.
Last edited Tue May 31, 2022, 11:57 AM - Edit history (1)
We've talked about them on DU before, specifically the outfit known as Metric Media.
Kevin M. Kruse Retweeted
Link to tweet
Link to tweet
Farmer-Rick
(12,667 posts)organizations falsely calling themselves news. There should be a criteria established and enforced that requires media using the label "News" to actually not publish lies. It's like labeling pork beef when they make up these sites and claim they are a "News" organization.
It started with FOX and then we got Russian propaganda sites and now everyone is dumping lies and labeling it news. We need more regulations and less capitalism in the market place of Media.
mahatmakanejeeves
(69,854 posts)I am not in favor of a Federal Bureau of Truth.
Thanks, but no thanks.
Link to tweet
ancianita
(43,307 posts)to demand retraction or sue for defamation?
Even re the Big Lie tweet, the Big Lie has enough court rulings (60+) behind it to put it close to the defamation line, which can justify rulings of loss, harm or damage. Which is maybe why all the 136 Jan 6 who've been sentenced now have to pay a minimum fine of $500; some owe thousands.
Lies are the basis of a lot of actionable fraud.
Farmer-Rick
(12,667 posts)Merely having requirements before you label a media product "news", violates nothing. You can still spew your lies and fake news just can't call it "news". You could call it breaking events, the newest happenings, the earliest report, the truthiest events, the Hollier than though report or whatever you want.
It is not a violation of the first amendment to require you to label pork as pork and NOT chicken, or to sell a house and NOT a barn when you sell a home, or claim you are selling stocks or bonds when you are actually just selling worthless paper. You are mistaking information labels on products with freedom of speech. In fact false labeling is frequently called FRAUD and there are criminal charges for such lies. So requiring accurate labeling of media products violates no one's rights.
You can lie and scream fake stories through out the internet but you have no right in the US Constitution to label it "news".
kcr
(15,522 posts)You'd rather risk dying of botulism? If not, how is it different? Why even post the OP if you're against doing anything about this. Enjoy your freedom fries!
mahatmakanejeeves
(69,854 posts)By Priyanjana Bengani
AUGUST 4, 2020
EDITORS NOTE: This is the second of our four pieces on this network. In December 2019, we first established the scope of the pink slime network distributing algorithmic stories and conservative talking points. In October 2021, we found that the network had received funding from multiple dark money groups as well as collaborated with advocacy groups on topics to cover prior to the 2020 Election.
The run-up to the 2020 November elections in the US has produced new networks of shadowy, politically backed local news websites designed to promote partisan talking points and collect user data. In December 2019, the Tow Center for Digital Journalism reported on an intricately linked network of 450 sites purporting to be local or business news publications. New research from the Tow Center shows the size of that network has increased almost threefold over the course of 2020, to over 1,200 sites.
Identifying these new sites is a result of further analysis of the closely linked entities with conservative ties illustrated in Figure 1 (below). The Tow Center focused predominantly on Metric Media, Franklin Archer, Local Government Information Services (LGIS), and Locality Labs. Both Metric Media and Franklin Archer claim to be the largest local news provider in the US, though many of their sites have low visibility in both search and social media. Over 90 percent of their stories are algorithmically generated using publicly available data sets or by repurposing stories from legitimate sources. In the remaining stories that have an authentic byline, there is often a conservative bent. As reported by the Lansing State Journal and The Guardian, this includes articles about voter fraud using data from the Heritage Foundation, negative pieces about elected Democratic representatives, and stories supporting conservative candidates. This low-cost automated story generation has come to be known as pink slime journalism. In addition to the hundreds of titles that ape the look and feel of local news, our research has detected new sites in this network that address single subjects, appeal to religious orientation, and focus on business news.

Figure 1: The organizational structure of the network
The recent increase in activity is in line with the election cycle. It is becoming an increasingly common campaign strategy for pacs and single-interest lobbyists to fund websites that borrow credibility from news design to help advance particular agendas. The proliferation of politically funded local news sites across the political spectrum raises questions about how these entities represent themselves to the public, and how they are categorized by search engines and social platforms.
{snip}
Evolution and Sprawl of the Network in 2020
The bulk of sites that went live in 2020 are under the Metric Media banner. In 2019, when we were first looking at Metric Media, its https://lansingsun.com/about_us" target="_blank">stated goal was to launch hundreds [of sites] nationwide to inform citizens about news in their local communities. Today, the language on the same page indicates it has reached the goal of creating hundreds of sites. A website lists its publications by state, along with a one-line explanation of what the company is: a digital firm managing the online presence of the portfolio of local news sites known as Metric Media. Based on passive DNS data (RiskIQ and DNSDB Scout), by the end of January 2020, Metric Media had publications devoted to all but one of the forty states that werent already covered in 2019; the domains for these were registered in the second half of 2019. The one exception was Illinois, which we cover in more detail further down.
{snip}
crickets
(26,168 posts)EndlessWire
(8,103 posts)Oh, Gawd, another new term I have to learn. It's like the dictionary is being transformed.
JHB
(38,213 posts)...being used as filler in McDonalds burgers.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_slime
The connection with the usage in the OP is that of filler, with unclear origin and unsavory processing, being mixed in with a common product typically consumed without much questioning.
Sounds just yummy...
calimary
(90,021 posts)Thats an actual phrase Ive seen in ingredients lists on cheese-containing products. I just added the Republican part.
TheRealNorth
(9,647 posts)Do these fake news outlets get included in News Feeds of things like Yahoo News or MSN? I tend not to click any source not familiar to me (or Faux or the Washington Examiner for that matter).
Of course, with these sorts of hit jobs against Democrats, the "hit" is often in the article title, and no further reading is required to get the point across. So the trick is to work the algorithms to get those articles in front of people's faces.