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Social Media Overtakes Television As Young People's Main Source of News, Says Report (bbc.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from BBC: Of the 18-to-24-year-olds surveyed, 28% cited social media as their main news source, compared with 24% for TV. The Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism research also suggests 51% of people with online access use social media as a news source. The report, now in its fifth year, is based on a YouGov survey of about 50,000 people across 26 countries, including 2,000 Britons. Facebook and other social media outlets have moved beyond being "places of news discovery" to become the place people consume their news, it suggests. And news via social media is particularly popular among women and young people. The study found Facebook was the most common source -- used by 44% of all those surveyed -- to watch, share and comment on news. Next came YouTube on 19%, with Twitter on 10%. Apple News accounted for 4% in the US and 3% in the UK, while messaging app Snapchat was used by just 1% or less in most countries. According to the survey, consumers are happy to have their news selected by algorithms, with 36% saying they would like news chosen based on what they had read before and 22% happy for their news agenda to be based on what their friends had read. But 30% still wanted the human oversight of editors and other journalists in picking the news agenda and many had fears about algorithms creating news "bubbles" where people only see news from like-minded viewpoints. Most of those surveyed said they used a smartphone to access news, with the highest levels in Sweden (69%), Korea (66%) and Switzerland (61%), and they were more likely to use social media rather than going directly to a news website or app. The report also suggests users are noticing the original news brand behind social media content less than half of the time, something that is likely to worry traditional media outlets.

15 of 159 comments (clear)

  1. News? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can we honestly call the click bait articles on social media news?

    1. Re:News? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Can we honestly call the click bait articles on social media news?

      What this Anonymous Coward knows will shock you.

    2. Re:News? by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We never had good news before so what is the difference?
      Sure back in the 1950-1990 we had our "trusted" news on TV. However they tried to cover a Whole days of activity around the world in 1 hour. The first half covering Local and State News, the second half World and National News. So much of the coverage didn't spend more than a few minutes on the topic.
      The News Papers had much more depth to them. However during newspapers popularity there was a much lower literacy rate, so a good portion of the population couldn't fully read them, and just read what they could. So the headlines. Which is much shorter than a Twitter post.
      Political Bias, Corruption and special interests were just as part of the media in the past as it is now, it may be worse, however why would the media cover its own problems that will make you lose faith in it.
      For example look at the Electoral college results for presidential elections You see nearly solid political US results during during the time of TV News. Then with the internet and cable news you see the Maps becoming more diverse.
      While it may because of more polarization, but it is also because people are getting exposed to different ideas thus need to make their decisions from more data.
      The Media liked JFK, so his indiscretions were ignored. The Media didn't like Nixon so he was kicked out of office. TV News made it easy to push an agenda.

      Now Social media had made politics very messy. And some good and bad has come out of it. People are less trustful of the establishment candidate and want someone more outside. Hence the Trump and Sanders supporters, who feel that they had been told what to do for so long that they are trying to get a new voice free of this is how it is done. But this also creates the Problems with the Trumps and Sandars who are focused on particular issues and not the general complexities of running a government. Because of the wide coverage they can just talk about what drive the person passions and gloss over the details and complexities, as social media being more end user driven will focus on the reasons why they are voting for or against a person. While the more formal News did try to keep the information more broad and civil.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  2. That explains quite a lot by bickerdyke · · Score: 4, Interesting

    OK, so now we have more people getting their news from facebook than from TV, newspapers or any "traditional" source.

    And then look at something like snopes.com to have an idea how much of this so called news are hoaxes, misinformation or blatant lies*!

    And none of them gets an even remote feeling that something as unreliable as facebook is as usefull as a rubber knife when you treat it as news source. Yes, it's great for cat pictures. And I love the "25 incredible stupid things stupid people did" stuff. But that's it. It's a SOCIAL media. Is your social environment a regular part of the news? No? See?

    * and sometimes misunderstood satire

    --
    bickerdyke
    1. Re:That explains quite a lot by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It is worse that that it will feed your bias. Even the true news stories will be tend to be the ones that fit your world view. Frankly I miss the good old days of the news back when it was mostly right in the middle to slightly to the left. What we have on the Internet is terrible because people will pick the news sources they like. Frankly we do not need to see the news that we agree with. We need to see the news that we do not.
      BTW people take a look at VOANews.com
      It is the Voice of America news service and because it is a tiny government funded news service it really tries to provide a balance coverage without any spin. The reason is that it does not have to find sponsors and it is so tiny no one in the government bothers with it.
      Before you dismiss it just take a look at.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:That explains quite a lot by Jack_of_Shadow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      the problem is that 'traditional' 'news' sources no longer have journalists in them, they only have editorialists. They don't report the news, they spin the news to match their opinions, they use rhetoric to 'guide' your opinions and they don't actually want you to know the 'facts' they simply want to tell you what to think. Kinda like one man shoots up a night club, and instead of being allowed to demonize the religion he says he did it for, we demonize the weapons he had, and by extension demonize anyone in the country who has such weapons. We can't demonize one class, but we can demonize the other, because that is what the 'traditional' news sources say.

      --
      My not responding to your flame is in no way indicative of my submission to your statement, it just means I don't have t
    3. Re:That explains quite a lot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Right, but those are the advertisements, the personals section, and the opinion section. If you really try, you can find the news articles. Many of them quote lies (such as what Donald T. Rump said yesterday), but most of the articles aren't in themselves lies.

      Three times I've been involved in events covered by a newspaper.

      Out of any 10 random "facts" asserted by a newspaper article, in my experience 5 or 6 of those facts will be accurate, 2 or 3 will be wrong in some substantial way, and 1 or 2 will be flat-out fabricated.

      And this would be for simple, non-controversial things like a car accident.

      So whenever I read an article about something controversial in any way, I pretty much disbelieve all of it.

      I figure about 25% of the facts from stories written on Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton are true and the rest are utter bullshit. The problem is, there's no way to tell which ones came out of the reporter's/editor's rectal database.

  3. Really? by ledow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Social media? Gosh, the only thing more unreliable than the news channels.

    Did you know, Facebook are soon going to make you pay unless you click this link before the 1st of June/July/August/September?

    Did you know: this local crime happened (actually four years ago) and this little girl needs money for a life-saving operation (actually dead already), etc. etc. etc.?

    Social media is the new gossip. The junk on there is really atrocious, and when news is discussed most of what pops up on social media is rumour and/or just outright lies.

    If anything, my primary source of "news" is a web search. Not even a news search because that's just mainstream news lumped into one item. Even things like Wikinews at least have some element of journalism and truth to them more often that the TV channels or papers.

    But social media? Really? Maybe that's how you hear *OF* a story, because you're always connected as a young kid, but for that to be your source of details of the news? That's just scary.

    1. Re:Really? by Rik+Sweeney · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Even things like Wikinews at least have some element of journalism and truth to them more often that the TV channels or papers.

      This is the problem I have with the Press. They have too much power and influence.

      Currently, the UK is debating whether or not to remain in the EU. The UK's most popular* newspaper is telling its readers to vote out. The Press should not be allowed to influence its readers into making decisions based upon its** opinion.

      * Popular != Good
      ** The opinion of the editor

    2. Re:Really? by Coisiche · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's the owner's opinion, although I expect he would have hired an editor that aligned to his opinion.

      A journalist at another newspaper (not owned by Murdoch) had this in a recent column:

      I once asked Rupert Murdoch why he was so opposed to the European Union. “That’s easy,” he replied. “When I go into Downing Street they do what I say; when I go to Brussels they take no notice.”

      It's the opener to this article.

  4. explains a lot. by bloodhawk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That would explain why most kids now adays are so ill informed. My younger sister is 30 and lives on social media, it never ceases to amaze me the shit she believes or doesn't know about, especially around science where the just plain WRONG information is more abundant than facts on social media.

  5. Can't be much worse than womans mags by Viol8 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The psuedo scientific drivel my wife reads in these moronic magazines just beggars belief sometimes. Whether its health, diet or beauty advice, most of it seems to be either made up on the spot with no scientific basis, either by the know-nothing neurotic maghag "journalists" , or by whatever crank they've waved some money at and who can string together enough semi coherent sentences to create an article out of. I genuinely believe some of these magazines should come with a health warning on the cover because of the rubbish they peddle to impressionable girls.

  6. The Media by sjbe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We never had good news before so what is the difference?

    Sure we have. We've also had crappy news before. It's trivial to point out examples of news done well over the last 100 years. It's even easier to point of examples of it being done badly.

    Sure back in the 1950-1990 we had our "trusted" news on TV. However they tried to cover a Whole days of activity around the world in 1 hour. The first half covering Local and State News, the second half World and National News. So much of the coverage didn't spend more than a few minutes on the topic.

    That's was the state of affairs basically until around the the late 1980s to early 1990s for television news. The first big change was CNN and the 24 hour news cycle. The second was the internet (specifically the web) in the 1990s.

    The News Papers had much more depth to them. However during newspapers popularity there was a much lower literacy rate, so a good portion of the population couldn't fully read them, and just read what they could. So the headlines. Which is much shorter than a Twitter post.

    Literacy rates have been rather high for well over a century in the US, particularly for white americans. Literacy in the 1950s was well above 90%. The percentage of the population that couldn't read a newspaper in the US hasn't been over 10% since before 1910.

    While it may because of more polarization, but it is also because people are getting exposed to different ideas thus need to make their decisions from more data.

    The evidence seems to show people doing exactly the opposite. People are now able to seek out niche news sources that support their already existing world view and disregarding contrary view points regardless of their validity.

    The Media liked JFK, so his indiscretions were ignored. The Media didn't like Nixon so he was kicked out of office.

    Must be nice to have such a simplistic world view. Nixon getting kicked out of office had a LOT more to it than whether "The Media" liked him or not. Saying something like that is the sort of idiotic sound bite we get from the Rush Limbaughs of the world. Sounds good to people who want it to be true even though it's complete nonsense in reality.

  7. How Many? by sycodon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How many news stories by the supposedly professional news gatherers are festooned with copies of tweets by some random joe? Many stories are 80-90% Twitter comments.

    Useless.

    Social Media hasn't taken over the News Media, the News Medaia is freely giving itself over to Social Media.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  8. The media in 1972 was more than just TV by sjbe · · Score: 4, Informative

    The truth about Nixon is that he was living in an age with basically a single-source media - Television. The TV news people weren't letting the story go, so he had to go.

    The Watergate story was broken by the Washington Post NEWSPAPER. If you think TV was the only news source in 1972-73 then you are completely clueless. Newspapers, magazine, TV, and radio were all substantial parts of the media in the early 1970s.