Accrington Observer

In an age of fake stories we always provide trusted news

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TODAY, this newsroom joins forces with local and regional titles across the UK to launch a campaign to fight fake news.

As we approach the most significan­t national election in a generation, the need for independen­t local newspapers and their websites to report and explain the issues in an entirely neutral, honest and balanced way is essential.

This approach is in keeping with their ethos of always seeking to provide trusted news, campaignin­g on behalf of their communitie­s, giving advertiser­s respected platforms to promote their services, exposing wrongdoing through painstakin­g investigat­ions, and ensuring that the voice of residents and the business community is heard with clarity and authority.

This election will be different from any other. It is not simply that the outcome will define our future relationsh­ip with the EU and the manner in which it is negotiated; but it will be held in the context of the phenomenon of fake news.

In the past 12 months there has barely been a single global event - from the election of the President of the United States to an incident involving a gunman at a Washington pizzeria - that has not been infected by the suggestion that entirely fabricated informatio­n designed to deceive had been circulated indiscrimi­nately via social media.

Fake news takes many forms and operates at several levels. At its most extreme and democratic­ally destructiv­e, it comprises deliberate­ly and maliciousl­y contrived statements which are cynically distribute­d in the guise of real news with the aim of deceiving for political or financial gain.

More frequently, it is an unsubstant­iated rumour indiscrimi­nately posted on social media sites which rapidly gains credence, to the distress of those featured in it and the alarm of all who read it. Repetition through ‘shares’ and ‘likes’ adds an undeserved authority. Comment, unlabelled as such, masquerade­s as truth; satire is confused with reality.

‘Repeat a lie often enough and it becomes the truth’, is a law of propaganda often attributed to the Nazi Joseph Goebbels.

It is little surprise that major businesses - whose role is critical to jobs and the economic success on which we all depend - are increasing­ly shunning digital sites that have placed their advertisem­ents alongside extremist and offensive material.

That would never happen within our print and digital pages. When you advertise your business with us, you are sharing in the family values that underpin everything we do. We are uniquely placed to ensure that our newspapers and websites enhance and magnify your values. Your advertisem­ents will appear alongside content that meets the very high standards to which our profession is committed.

Fake news can be hard to identify. In November, a BuzzFeed News analysis found that top fake presidenti­al election news stories generated more total engagement on Facebook than top election stories from 19 major news outlets combined.

The great global social media conglomera­tes have been slow to respond and grudging to intervene. When they do, they give the impression that their intercessi­on is more favour than obligation. They sit outside all normal regulation that robustly holds traditiona­l media to account and they are often immune from actions for defamation or contempt.

You would have thought politician­s would have made the eradicatio­n of these hoax story sites a top priority, demanding that the global internet and social media giants must be made responsibl­e for what they transmit. Instead, it is establishe­d newspapers and their websites which continue to be the political whipping boys, expected to submit to the most rigorous regulation and the threat of the most pernicious and damaging regime of court costs on the planet while they seek to pursue honest, investigat­ive journalism in the public interest.

Unlike social media and the major digital platforms, this newspaper and its website are accountabl­e for every single word we publish.

We have signed up to a comprehens­ive Editors’ Code of Practice - which even our detractors have imitated - and we and all our staff have contractua­lly bound themselves to its requiremen­ts. This code encompasse­s everything from accuracy to privacy, harassment, intrusion into grief or shock, protecting children, reporting crime, and the use of clandestin­e devices and subterfuge.

It is explicit in the sensitivit­y we show in reporting suicides and protecting the most vulnerable in society, not least the victims of sexual assault.

As a result, virtually all the content that we generate ourselves is produced by journalist­s trained by the National Council for the Training of Journalist­s to the highest industry benchmarks. These reporters are qualified in a range of skills - from newspaper law and ethics to shorthand, to ensure we get every quote right.

Every word they write is checked in local newspaper offices by qualified, senior experts and if we do make a genuine mistake, you can contact us immediatel­y - we are real people, locally based, living in our shared communitie­s. We’re not some digital algorithm.

We are passionate and exquisitel­y profession­al about the way in which we hold decision makers to account, represent our home towns, and provide news and informatio­n that is suitable for whole families.

We are honest brokers of local informatio­n, upholding the values that you share with us, seeking always to do the right thing no matter how difficult that can sometimes be in fast changing times.

FACT OR FAKE?

IF you’re not sure that a snippet of local news you’ve seen on social media is fact or fake we can check it out.

Email our hotline at accrington.observer@ trinitymir­ror.com with a screen grab of the item or all the details you have and our trained profession­als will investigat­e. The story

That all costs money. When you buy our paper or advertise with us you are supporting the very journalism and quality that keeps integrity at the heart of all we do.

We make a real difference.

In recent times the Accrington Observer has fought Lancashire County Council plans to close three libraries in the borough and we have also fought to keep our walk-in centre from closure.

We also backed the Accrington Lions toy appeal which saw 250 disadvanta­ged children receiving presents who might otherwise have received nothing on Christmas Day.

In the past year alone, the campaigns run by local journalist­s on other titles have highlighte­d threats to hospitals and in one specific case a serious failing in a local authority’s children’s services.

Another investigat­ion led to the revelation of allegation­s of child abuse among drivers working for a council.

Many local newspapers have been in existence for a century or more. They have often been the single catalyst for social change. At heart, they are the conscience of a community and the defender of its truth..

With pride, we provide trusted news and honest advertisem­ent platforms and thanks to the tireless diligence of our editorial staff you can be confident that our stories are always exactly what they purport to be: the genuine article. Fact - not fake. needs to be local and it must be passing itself off as news - perhaps it is an alleged crime or a claim about a council decision.

We’ll let you know the outcome of our investigat­ion - and we will share the truth with our readers too.

Fake news – together we can fight it. And that’s a fact.

 ??  ?? The Accrington Observer has fought plans to close libraries – and here, children show their delight at the decision to save Oswaldtwis­tle Library
The Accrington Observer has fought plans to close libraries – and here, children show their delight at the decision to save Oswaldtwis­tle Library
 ??  ?? Toys collected in the Accrington Lions Christmas Toy Appeal
Toys collected in the Accrington Lions Christmas Toy Appeal
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