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social media

Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Digital News Report 2020. Episode 5: How People Access News about Climate Change

This episode focuses on the how people get news about climate change and how this differs across different countries, age brackets and attitudes towards the issue.
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Digital News Report 2020. Episode 6. How should journalists cover politics?

In this episode we look at what people think when it comes to the news media covering politics.
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Digital News Report 2020. Episode 4. Newsletters and podcasts: how to create news habits in your audience

In this episode we look at ongoing changes to news habits and how outlets can reach and engage audiences to develop sustainable news habits.
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Digital News Report 2020. Episode 3: Who will pay for the news?

This episode focuses on the public's willingness to pay for news, what motivates them and what could persuade them.
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Digital News Report 2020. Episode 2: The future of local news

Authors of the Digital News Report, the most comprehensive study of news consumption trends worldwide, discuss the key findings from this year's report. This episode focuses on our findings on the state and future of local news.
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Digital News Report 2020. Episode 1: What you need to know

Authors of the Digital News Report, the most comprehensive study of news consumption trends worldwide, discuss the key findings from this year's report
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Knowledge Exchange Showcase - Understanding Visitor Engagement of Free Heritage Sites Using Social Media

Kathryn Eccles (Oxford Internet Institute), gives a talk on her Knowledge Exchange research project on using social media data to understand visitor engagement at heritage sites.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Responses to the Government White Paper on Online Harms and the ‘right to be forgotten’

LSE media expert and government adviser Damian Tambini and Roxana Radu from Oxford Law Faculty respond to the UK government’s White Paper on Online Harms and assess the implications of the new rights of the digital age such as the ‘right to be forgotten’.
Uehiro Oxford Institute

Freedom of Political Communication, Propaganda and the Role of Epistemic Institutions in Cyberspace

Professor Seumas Miller defines fake news, hate speech and propaganda, discusses the relationship between social media and political propaganda.
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

India's Social Media Elections

Dr Vidya Narayanan of the Oxford Internet Institute on how India's 2019 general elections will be affected by the influence of social media
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

The Coldest Story Ever Told: Kanye and the Up Next Algorithm

Caithlin Mercer, Managing Editor, Yahoo!, uses the hip-hop star as an example of how social media's algorithms can enforce biased perspectives
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Political actors and the manipulation of social media audience groups through the use of junk news and other forms of automation

Vidya Narayanan (Director of Research, Computational Propaganda Project, Oxford Internet Institute) delivers a lecture for The Business and Practice of Journalism Seminar Series.
Strachey Lectures

Strachey Lecture: Privacy-preserving analytics in, or out of, the cloud

This talk is about the experience of providing privacy when running analytics on users’ personal data.
The End of Journalism

Creative Media Lecture 02

In the second lecture, Stig Abell discusses the future of modern and social journalism.
The End of Journalism

Creative Media Lecture 01

In the first lecture, Stig Abell discusses the pros and cons of old fashioned journalism as well as modern forms of journalism such as social media.
The Secrets of Mathematics
Captioned

The Law of the Few - Sanjeev Goyal

The study of networks offers a fruitful approach to understanding human behaviour. Sanjeev Goyal is one of its pioneers. In this lecture Sanjeev presents a puzzle:
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Why Facebook matters and what you need to know about digital

Esra Dogramaci, Senior Digital Editor, Deutsche Welle, gives a talk for the Business and Practice of Journalism Seminar Series. Introduction by Richard Sambrook.
Beyond boundaries: research worth sharing

Ten things you wish you didn’t know about elections (and what to do about them)

In this talk, Prof Phil Howard explains how we are targeted and manipulated by social media and bots trying to influence voter behaviour.
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Investigative journalism in the age of social news

Tom Warren, investigations correspondent, BuzzFeed UK gives a talk for the Business and Practice of Journalism Seminar Series. Introduction by Richard Sambrook.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

#NeverHillary vs #NeverTrump

The US Election on Social Media Panel Discussion

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