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AIBU?

To think that the Daily Mail should be prevented from using mumsnet thread for its articles

128 replies

Atenco · 17/05/2016 00:05

I am a bit concerned about the number of mumsnet threads appearing in the Daily Mail. IMHO this could end up being dangerous for some posters

OP posts:
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limitedperiodonly · 17/05/2016 22:13

Do they PterodactylToenails?

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PterodactylToenails · 17/05/2016 21:06

Loose Women do it too so does The Wright Stuff.

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HouseOfBiscuits · 17/05/2016 21:03

Given how many times the DM is linked to, or quoted on MN, wouldn't it be a little hypocritical to say that they should not take from here?

I don't see any problem with a simple link within an original article, with a sentence or two quoted. I do think it's too much when nearly the whole "article" is screenshots from MN.

I haven't seen any posts or threads here containing most/all of a DM article, with little other comment.

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Rosalie55 · 17/05/2016 20:54

Well I can't speak on behalf of the BBC Barbara, but it's certainly the rationale of other high profile national organisations

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BarbaraofSeville · 17/05/2016 20:42

Oh is this why the BBC news website is littered with videos and hardly any news articles any more?

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Rosalie55 · 17/05/2016 20:29

I also think that if you have a certain preference for the type of news you read, then you have to show the industry that that's your preference.

If 10,000 people buy the Telegraph each day, but 1 million people click on Buzfeed each day, how do you think the industry will react in the way it presents news?

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limitedperiodonly · 17/05/2016 20:19

I've worked at a national news organisation where the rule is "no more than 3 paragraphs of text without an image". When you're under pressure to write 5 articles a day to bring in ad revenue because no one buys newspapers anymore, the easiest thing to do is to embed a tweet. Doesn't mean the rest of the article isn't throughly well researched, accurate and includes all the necessary facts.

YY Rosalie55. I tire of people who say they don't read print news but then don't understand how online works.

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mollyonthemove · 17/05/2016 20:11

I was interviewed for a magazine last year and it ended up (sensationalised of course! ) on the mail online site. Bit of a shock but nothing I could do about it.

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Rosalie55 · 17/05/2016 20:09

How does that add to the story? It's nothing to do with being made up, make it up or spend 10 seconds lifting it from Twitter, it's equally useless and adds equally little to the article

It depends where you read. The Times won't embed tweets, but Buzzfeed will. It's all about targeting readers. Buzzfeed and co do research which assumes their readers are 18-30 for example. Research suggests that these younger readers will be reading through phones / mobile devices, and large blocks of text without images doesn't work in the same way that it does on a printed newspaper.

I've worked at a national news organisation where the rule is "no more than 3 paragraphs of text without an image". When you're under pressure to write 5 articles a day to bring in ad revenue because no one buys newspapers anymore, the easiest thing to do is to embed a tweet. Doesn't mean the rest of the article isn't throughly well researched, accurate and includes all the necessary facts.

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BarbaraofSeville · 17/05/2016 20:09

My mum gets the Daily Mail Sad. I think its depressing given their obvious hatred against women how most of their readers appear to be female 50/60+.

I get the Times on a Saturday because I like the weekend food and travel supplement and the Caitlin Moran column.

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DameDiazepamTheDramaQueen · 17/05/2016 19:12

I only know 2 people and my mum who buys the weekend one to do the crossword.

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WeAreTheOthers · 17/05/2016 19:12

But then they'd have to do proper journalism.

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Sparklingbrook · 17/05/2016 18:55

I don't think I know anyone who buys an actual paper newspaper any more.

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booklooker · 17/05/2016 18:51

To think that the Daily Mail should be prevented from using mumsnet thread for its articles

Given how many times the DM is linked to, or quoted on MN, wouldn't it be a little hypocritical to say that they should not take from here?

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limitedperiodonly · 17/05/2016 18:45

That was a while ago. Surely they've done other things to incur your wrath since then.

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ForalltheSaints · 17/05/2016 18:43

I am more concerned at the number of people who buy the Daily Mail, the paper that supported the Blackshirts.

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limitedperiodonly · 17/05/2016 18:02

I'm not sure if we're talking about different things. These appear frequently at the end of articles- the last paragraph or two- and are not sources, or eyewitness accounts. They are random tweets from unknowns.

I think I get you now Buckinbronco. I don't often see it - where do you see it? - but I'd agree that it's pointless. My explanation is that some people on news desks think that's balance or interesting. They're wrong but you can't shake them.

It's a recruitment and training issue. It's annoying when you work with them, but I can't really see the harm for readers.

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HoneyDragon · 17/05/2016 15:49

Write Blush

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HouseOfBiscuits · 17/05/2016 14:32

HoneyDragon Grin

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HoneyDragon · 17/05/2016 13:46

Why don't MNHQ right to their comments page.....

Dear Daily Mail

Ahem

Peace and Love
Mumsnet


Works on us when it's a taat Wink although that's because peace and love actually means ner ner I have a big ban hammer at my disposal

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Atenco · 17/05/2016 13:29

Surely screenshotting posts and printing in them in the DM or publishing them on their website breaches this term? Or does that mean that MNHQ are approving the features? Surely not?

Actually, so far the stories seem to be relatively innocuous and if that is because MNHQ is approving them, I would find that reassuring.

However my concern is about people in DV situations or, as someone mentioned above, adoptive parents. Some people are quite isolated and posting here can be a first step to finding a way out of that isolation. If however a newspaper were to decide that their thread would sell more newspapers, I hate to think of the consequences.

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TrillKitten · 17/05/2016 13:17

limitedperiodonly oops, my bad. They merge into one in my mind. Awful publications, all of them. Pretty sure I didn't "accuse journalists of not getting their facts straight" though, just of failing to have ethics, so your assertion that I "try to get [my facts] right too" becomes amusingly ironic Wink I stand my my pub/sitting room analogy though!

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Buckinbronco · 17/05/2016 12:57

No limited. I'm not sure if we're talking about different things. These appear frequently at the end of articles- the last paragraph or two- and are not sources, or eyewitness accounts. They are random tweets from unknowns. So I have not been to Paris, do not know anything about the Paris bombings bar what the bbc are reporting and tweet "so sad about paris!" Then the next day I'm in an article- buckinbronco tweeted "so sad about Paris"

How does that add to the story? It's nothing to do with being made up, make it up or spend 10 seconds lifting it from Twitter, it's equally useless and adds equally little
To the article

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limitedperiodonly · 17/05/2016 12:52

Are you suggesting that all those tweets were made up? I suppose some of them might have been, but all of them? And things like the phone footage of people escaping from the back of the concert venue? That would be like suggesting the whole thing was made up, which would be silly.

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limitedperiodonly · 17/05/2016 12:44

I was sent out to do one on the first day of my journalism course.

snailhunter The people of Harlow were usually very patient whenever we were sent out of the classroom to practise finding off-diary stories Grin

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