Trusting and valuing news in a pandemic: Attitudes to online news media content during COVID-19 and policy implications

Author:

Flew Terry1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Sydney

Abstract

While the global Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic led to significant growth in news consumption, this did not translate into either greater trust or an improved financial situation for news providers. At a time when disinformation has become a key concern with regards to public health messaging, this mistrust of mainstream news media has potentially disastrous consequences for public communication in a time of urgent public health concerns. The article explores five issues for the study of news and trust, including the impact of digital platforms, the accountability revolution, the crisis of news media business models, the power-shift within media to platforms in the time of COVID-19, and the turn to subscription-based media. The latter raises critical issues around the value of news, and the future relationship between subscriptions, advertising revenue and public funding in the future of news publication and distribution.

Funder

The Australian Research Council

Publisher

Intellect

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Media Technology,Communication

Reference60 articles.

1. Social media and fake news in the 2016 election;Journal of Economic Perspectives,2017

2. A free irresponsible press: Wikileaks and the battle over the soul of the networked fourth estate;Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review,2011

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