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Should Freedom of Expression Be Guaranteed on the Internet?

Is freedom of expression a universal and inalienable right? What about free expression posted on the Internet? On April 6, 2015, the UConn Global House Learning Community invited me to participate in a timely panel discussion on how ideas of free speech and freedom of expression vary across the world and how the 21st century …

Quoted on Al Jazeera Listening Post

My international TV debut! Thirty second quote on the Al Jazeera English program “Listening Post” about managing online comments. Al Jazeera producers asked me to contribute to the program after reading my March 4, 2014 Poynter story about commenting and talk radio. Post by UCONN Journalism.

Talking about Online Comments with The Salt Lake Tribune

As a follow up to my Poynter piece about online audience participation and some lessons news websites can learn from talk radio, The Salt Lake Tribune invited me to participate in a Google chat about online comments. Streamed live on Mar 10, 2014. “Like newspapers across the country, The Salt Lake Tribune has grappled with …

John Dankosky

Answers to Taming Online Comments May Be Found in Talk Radio

With a 45-minute commute back and forth to UConn’s Storrs campus, I listen to a lot of NPR. One of my favorite radio shows is “On Point with Tom Ashbrook.” The show is smart, timely, features interesting guests, and includes perspectives from callers around the country. Discussions on the show are civilized and insightful, unlike …

More news organizations try cleaning up online comments with the help of social media

ESPN this week becomes the latest major news organization to rely upon social media to help civilize its online comments. Starting Wednesday, ESPN.com’s 25 million active users will have to log in through a Facebook account if they want to participate in online conversations on ESPN.com stories. Patrick Stiegman, editor-in-chief of ESPN.com, said by phone that three …

Oh, ok. Reddit made him do it

In an exclusive interview with CNN’s Drew Griffin, unmasked Reddit troll Michael Brutsch blamed Reddit’s culture for fostering his deplorable online behavior. Realizing he had a penchant for angering people anonymously online, Brutsch regularly used Reddit’s unfettered system of open access to create hundreds of subforums dedicated to topics like “Rapebait,” “Incest,” “Pics of Dead …

Journalists = Civility police?

Digital media organizations are being included in defamation lawsuits with growing frequency. Many of these lawsuits claim that reputations are being damaged by anonymous commenters, who use the easy and ubiquitous power of the Internet to publish and disseminate lies, insults and libelous characterizations. The outbreak of cyberlibel litigation stems from the explosive distribution of …