Choose an online news article published by Time, The New York Times, or The Huffington Post and track its cited sources. Visit each source online and evaluate its credibility based on the guidelines set in Criteria to Evaluate the Credibility of WWW Resources. Draft a blog post that briefly states a potential impact of unrestricted web publishing through mass media as it relates to this article.
Finding credible sources takes a
critical eye, time, and research. I
choose to read the article, “U.N. Sees Need for $1 Billion to Fight
Ebola.” I found this article on The New York Times website: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/17/world/africa/ebola-fight-needs-more-money-un-says.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&version=HpSum&module=first-column-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news
The New York Times is a very credible
source and has been in business since 1851.
Having a news source that has been that long running is hard to come
by. We can look at The Onion which is known for
its satire pieces and if consumers don’t know that, they could be misinformed and spread false information. They should do some
easy research to find that out and realize they shouldn’t use that site as a
reliable source. As stated in our Module
3 readings, “no source is trustworthy until proven so” (SNHU, 2014).
The author of this article is Nick
Cumming-Bruce. By doing some research on
him; I realized he is credible because he has had many works published in The New York Times, the Guardian, the Asian Wall Street Journal, and the International Herald Tribune, all very well known and respected
sources. The article we read for class
titled “Criteria to Evaluate the Credibility of WWW Resources,” states that we
should look to see which organization the author is with and if they have a
link to an association or contact information (1998). In this article the link to The New York Times is present and there
are many ways to get in touch with the author.
By googling his name I found a website https://www.opendemocracy.net/author/nick-cumming-bruce
which lists the articles he has published and provides a link to contact
him. Throughout the article there are no
clues that this author is biased as he is quoting Bruce Aylward, an Assistant
Director General of the World Health Organization, Valerie Amos, The United
Nations’ Emergency Relief Coordinator, and Dr. David Nabarro, the United
Nations’ Senior System Coordinator for Ebola.
We should look to see if the author is biased, promoting a product, or
taking a personal stand (1998) none of which Nick Cumming-Bruce did. Two links that are used as sources
in this article brought me to another article published by The New York Times. The first article reads “Ebola Could Strike 20,000, World Health
Agency Says.” The other article says
“U.S. to Commit Up to 3,000 Troops to Fight Ebola in Africa.” All links should be current according to our
criteria (1998) and each article from this story has been published within the
last month.
Overall, based on the criteria we
have learned in Module 3, these sources seem reliable. It is very believable
that the U.N. would need $1 Billion to fight Ebola, as stated in the article;
it is about more than just the disease but about how the countries affected are
unable to provide food, water and other necessities for everyday life
(Cumming-Bruce, 2014). Like any article
posted online there is always potential for unrestricted web publishing through
mass media. At the bottom of this
article there is a correction stating that there was an editing error and that
he misattributed a comment about the W.H.O.’s priorities. Although to the consumer it is a minor error,
the person who made the comment doesn’t receive the initial praise, or the
other way around, the person who didn’t make the comment may receive criticism
because many people who read the original article aren’t going to look back at
it and notice a correction. At that point the damage is done, readers could publish to blogs and social
media posts, without having all of the facts.
References
(1988, August).
Criteria to evaluate the credibility of www resources. Retrieved from
http://mason.gmu.edu/ website: http://mason.gmu.edu/~montecin/web-eval-sites.htm
(Cumming-Bruce, N.,
2014) U.N. sees need for $1 billion to fight ebola. Retrieved from www.nytimes.com: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/17/world/africa/ebola-fight-needs-more-money-un-says.html?_r=0
SNHU (2014) Module 3 –
Overview: Finding and Sharing Information COM 510-X1509
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