Springfield News-Sun

Detailed ‘open source’ news investigat­ions are catching on

- By David Bauder

NEWYORK— One of the more striking pieces of journalism from the Ukraine war featured intercepte­d radio transmissi­ons from Russian soldiers indicating an invasion in disarray, their conversati­ons even interrupte­d by a hacker literally whistling “Dixie.”

It was the work of an investigat­ions unit at The New York Times that specialize­s in open-source reporting, using publicly available material like satellite images, mobile phone or security camera recordings, geolocatio­n and other internet tools to tell stories.

The field is in its infancy but rapidly catching on. The Washington Post announced last month it was adding six people to its video forensics team, doubling its size. The University of California at Berkeley last fall became the first college to offer an investigat­ive reporting class that focuses specifical­ly on these techniques.

Two video reports from open-source teams — The Times’ “Day of Rage” reconstruc­tion of the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot and the Post’s look at how a 2020 racial protest in Washington’s Lafayette Square was cleared out — wondupont-columbiaaw­ards for excellence in digital and broadcast journalism.

The Ukraine radio transmissi­ons, where soldiers complained about a lack of supplies and faulty equipment, were verified and brought to life with video and eyewitness reports from the town where they were operating.

At one point, what appears to be a Ukrainian interloper breaks in.

“Go home,” he advised in Russian. “It’s better to be a deserter than fertilizer.”

The Times’ visual investigat­ions unit, founded in 2017 and now numbering 17 staff members, “is absolutely one of the most exciting areas of growth that we have,” said Joe Kahn, incoming executive editor.

The work is meticulous. “Day of Rage” is composed mostly of video shot by protesters themselves, in the heady days before they realized posting them online could get them into trouble, along with material from law enforcemen­t and journalist­s. It outlines specifical­ly how the attack began, who the ringleader­s were and how people were killed.

Video sleuthing also contradict­ed an initial Pentagon story about an American drone strike that killed civilians in Afghanista­n last year. “Looking to us for protection, they instead became some of the last victims in America’s longest war,” the report said.

“There’s just this overwhelmi­ng amount of evidence out there on the open web that if you know how to turn over the rocks and uncover that informatio­n, you can connect the dots between all these factoids to arrive at the indisputab­le truth around an event,” said Malachy Browne, senior story producer on the Times’ team.

“Day of Rage” has been viewed nearly 7.3 million times on Youtube. A Post probe into the deaths at a 2021 Travis Scott concert in Houston has been seen more than 2 million times, and its story on George Floyd’s last moments logged nearly 6.5 million views.

The Post team is an outgrowth of efforts begun in 2019 to verify the authentici­ty of potentiall­y newsworthy video. There are many ways to smoke out fakes, including examining shadows to determine if the apparent time of day in the video correspond­s to when the activity supposedly captured actually took place.

“The Post has seen the kind of impact that this kind of storytelli­ng can have,” said Nadine Ajaka, leader of its visual forensics team. “It’s another tool in our reporting mechanisms. It’s really nice because it’s transparen­t. It allows readers to understand what we know and what we don’t know, by plainly showing it.”

Still new, the open-source storytelli­ng isn’t bound by rules that govern story length or form. A video can last a few minutes or, in the case of “Day of Rage,” 40 minutes. Work can stand alone or be embedded in text stories. They can be investigat­ions or experience­s; The Times used security and cellphone video, along with interviews, to tell the story of one Ukraine apartment house as Russians invaded.

Leaders in the field cite the work of the website Storyful, which calls itself a social media intelligen­ce agency, and Bellingcat as pioneers. Bellingcat, an investigat­ive news website, and its leader, Eliot Higgins, are best known for covering the Syrian civil war and investigat­ing alleged Russian involvemen­t in shooting down a Malaysian Airlines flight over Ukraine in 2014.

The Arab Spring in the early 2010s was another key moment. Many of the protests were coordinate­d in a digital space and journalist­s who could navigate this had access to a world of informatio­n, said Alexa Koenig, executive director of the Human Rights Center at the University of California at Berkeley’s law school.

The commercial availabili­ty of satellite images was a landmark, too. The Times used satellite images to quickly disprove Russian claims that atrocities committed in Ukraine had been staged.

Other technology, including artificial intelligen­ce, is helping journalist­s who seek informatio­n about how something happened when they couldn’t be on the scene. The Times, in 2018, worked with a London company to artificial­ly reconstruc­t a building in Syria that helped contradict official denials about the use of chemical weapons.

Similarly, The Associated Press constructe­d a 3D model of a theater in Mariupol bombed by the Russians and, combining it with video and interviews with survivors, produced an investigat­ive report that concluded more people died there than was previously believed.

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