NetNewsCheck
While some news websites have turned to Facebook Comments and required commenters to use real names, The Plain Dealer website Cleveland.com is embracing its anonymous commenters. “I think you miss out on the full extent of the [online] medium if you block out what readers have to say,” Cleveland.com Editor In Chief Denise Polverine told NetNewsCheck. “Some news organizations feel their voice is the final voice on a subject, and that’s not the case at Cleveland.com.” That’s not to say the comments are untouched. Moderators remove offensive ones, and on sensitive stories comments may be disabled entirely. A community manager writes a note about commenters when they attain “featured user” status and quotes something they’ve posted recently. || Related: News websites see the benefits of using Facebook Comments; why people need anonymous identities on the Web. || Earlier: Plain Dealer unmasks judge as anonymous commenter; judge sues and settles with Advance Internet.
Uncategorized
Cleveland.com embraces its anonymous commenters
More News
‘No comment’: When it’s time to make that the story
What an independent journalist and a student newspaper can teach journalists about sources who block them
January 3, 2025
Here’s what Poynter looked like 50 years ago
Orange walls. TVs with bunny ears. Light tables. And so much carpet …
January 2, 2025
When should journalists use the word ‘terrorism?’
The FBI is calling the attack in New Orleans that killed at least 10 an 'act of terrorism.' Here are some considerations for journalists.
January 1, 2025
A journalist reckons with the press’ treatment of baseball Hall of Famer Roberto Clemente
‘Call Me Roberto!,’ a nonfiction picture book, tells the story of the athlete’s struggle to get the media to respect him
December 31, 2024
Opinion | Editor’s choice: 15 of the best Poynter articles from 2024
A retrospective of a cult classic journalism movie. An editor who was fired for talking to us. A tipster’s massive find. What a year it was.
December 30, 2024