FreeBaGeL
Footballguy
Because people are apt to question the NYTimes, you discount what IK looks at on social media?I’m not going to pretend to speak for IK here, but based on his comments in this thread, he isn’t “following randoms on Twitter.” He is following a specific subset of Twitter users who are drawn to facts, logic and critical analysis. People who have demonstrated what he concerns a rational approach to uncertain topics or events.Thanks for sharing. I think the NYT could have been better here. We agree in the micro - it's the macro where we diverge. Over the long run, you'll unquestionably be more accurately informed by reading the NYT, WaPost, etc. daily than following randoms on Twitter. There is far more misinformation and no editorial standards for the vast majority of armchair analysts on Twitter. None of them ever get any of the scrutiny the NYT is getting today.I literally just saw this.The NYT used a picture of a leveled building from somewhere else. Hope this helps
Here's an explainer for those who are interested. @tommyGunZ in particular will find this interesting. NGL, I saw this NYT story myself on Twitter, on my phone, and on my desktop, and I never once thought to question whether that building was part of the hospital that was hit. I guess I sort of fell for this even if I was mad at the NYT for some other piece of misinformation.
I don't question your honesty IK, I'm sure there were lots of contrarians last night on twitter doubting Israel's responsibility. What I doubt is their accuracy over the long run vs. larger organizations with stricter standards and more seasoned editorial decision makers.
It wouldn’t surprise me in the least to see that type of subset of people “outperform” random media members, particularly when it comes to unusual events like this one.
(Side note: good to see you in here TGunz. I still credit you with saving me a ton of money during the mid/late 2000s real estate bubble)
Of course the question is how would they hold up if they were under the same kind of scrutiny as NYT etc, with people and entire websites dedicated to tracking their every move and finding and calling out even the smallest errors, even if those errors are immediately redacted or the limitations in the first place completely put up front.
How many times have they posted incorrect information and then deleted their tweet and IK was never the wiser because there isn't a website dedicated to screenshotting everything they ever post and then cross referencing it later to see if it was deleted or changed 5 minutes later or when more information became available?
In this case we aren't even given the sources. We just have to take it on faith that there are this collection of people out there that report only completely accurate info all the time, in realtime, even though no one is checking them on it and we don't even know who they are. And our source on this is a guy who, while generally a good rational dude, is clearly approaching this topic with an extremely heavy bias (see: insane post about how if Elon hadn't bought twitter the whole world would still think Israel bombed the hospital).
The 'realtime' is another issue, where the larger media outlets just can't win. If they post "Hospital bombed by Israel, Palestinian authorities claim" they get lambasted for reporting on the allegations coming out of the region in realtime, even though they very clearly qualify it as allegations being passed on 2nd hand that they haven't been able to verify yet. Likewise if they wait, they get equally lambasted as they did in the Prigozhin news where they waited an hour to TRY and confirm some of the reports coming from Russian sources, and people here on this forum went absolutely nuts over them not reporting on it sooner even though it was all over twitter already. So they really can't win in that respect. Meanwhile if the Twitter guys pass on "according to Russian news sources" they get heralded for being fast.
That's the gist of all this, yes/no?
I find that fascinating
One doesn't seem to be tied to the other but I appreciate you sharing why you feel the way you do.
My point was there are hundreds of people who dedicate their entire livelihood to watching sources like the NYT and finding every little inaccuracy or edit they can and letting everyone know about it.
There are zero people tracking everything these random twitter users post and seeing if they edit/delete anything to hold them accountable for it.
So are these sources actually more accurate, or do we just not know when they're inaccurate because no one is tracking them and grading them on it? I have no idea the answer, but I would strongly guess the latter. I would imagine these people have deleted things or even still have things out there that lack accuracy plenty of times, and their followers just don't know because there aren't entire websites dedicating to screenshotting everything they ever post at the exact minute they post it so they can reference later in case it ends up being incorrect or misleading.