↩︎ Quartz
7 tweets Turnbull government MPs now probably regret from the era ...
PM Malcolm Turnbull should resign, Mathias Cormann says
Turnbull prime ministership ends in chaos as Cormann shifts
Why Mathias Cormann could be our next Prime Minister
Mathias Cormann: The ex-Belgian running Australia
Cormann switches sides, tells Turnbull it's time to quit; Morrison to run against Dutton
It takes a Belgian village to raise an antipodean finance minister
APS in de facto caretaker mode as speculation swirls over
secretaries
VERONA BURGESS: A Dutton government could shake the earth under the APS given his right-wing ideology; a Morrison or other middle-of-the-road challenger’s government less so.
Turnbull government collapses, gaggle of ministers resign
Opposition calls for 'extreme caution' over public sector appointments
LEADERSHIP INSTABILITY: As the government announces the next chief executive of NBN Co, the opposition cautions against making more appointments in the current volatile political climate.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks at The National Press Club YouTube
Latvia's money-laundering mud fight
Vanessa and The Cradle Will Rock: Older operas rescue current ills
VERONA BURGESS: A Dutton government could shake the earth under the APS given his right-wing ideology; a Morrison or other middle-of-the-road challenger’s government less so.
This morning's ABC Waverton survey reflected in this headline: Malcolm Turnbull allies jump ship, setting up contest between Scott Morrison and Peter Dutton via (Waterview Cafe)
CORMANN, FIFIELD, CASH ALL ABANDON TURNBULL
Turnbull government collapses, gaggle of ministers resign
TOM BURTON: Peter Dutton and Scott Morrison are likely to contest the prime
ministership after key ministers withdrew support for Malcolm Turnbull.
Opposition calls for 'extreme caution' over public sector appointments
LEADERSHIP INSTABILITY: As the government announces the next chief executive of NBN Co, the opposition cautions against making more appointments in the current volatile political climate.
MyHealth Record privacy legislation published
That's if there's still a
government to pass the amendments
Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks at The National Press Club YouTube
Another Offshore Account Guilty Plea Zion Birman
Latvia's money-laundering mud fight
Vanessa and The Cradle Will Rock: Older operas rescue current ills
Hedge funds, especially activist hedge funds, are established users of private-investigation services. Sometimes simply paying an investigator to go through publicly available information can yield valuable leverage in an investment. The hedge-fund investor Daniel Loeb, of Third Point, exposed misrepresentations on the résumé of Scott Thompson, the C.E.O. of Yahoo, who subsequently resigned. But some private-investigation firms or consultants will do much more for a well-paying client. “There are thousands of tiny shops out there, run by former C.I.A. operatives, MI6 guys, former Mossad people, or people on the fringes, who bring the tactics that they learned in the intelligence service to the investigative and corporate world,” the head of a boutique investigation firm told me. “Smaller players who will do whatever it takes.”
Calvin H. Johnson (Texas), Wherein Our Duty Lies, 159 Tax Notes 1969 (June 25, 2018):
In a speech delivered on May 21, 2018 to the Association fro Mid-Career Tax Law Professors, Johnson praises William Andrews as the best of his generation, calls upon tax academics to solve the most important problems of the tax field, calls on student law reviews to ask for expert reviews, and calls on defending the tax base, for instance, via the Shelf Project.
Here is How many spies are there again? (those new service sector jobs) - the Sheelah Kholkatkar piece (New Yorker), via Hugo Lindgren.
Hedge funds, especially activist hedge funds, are established users of private-investigation services. Sometimes simply paying an investigator to go through publicly available information can yield valuable leverage in an investment. The hedge-fund investor Daniel Loeb, of Third Point, exposed misrepresentations on the résumé of Scott Thompson, the C.E.O. of Yahoo, who subsequently resigned. But some private-investigation firms or consultants will do much more for a well-paying client. “There are thousands of tiny shops out there, run by former C.I.A. operatives, MI6 guys, former Mossad people, or people on the fringes, who bring the tactics that they learned in the intelligence service to the investigative and corporate world,” the head of a boutique investigation firm told me. “Smaller players who will do whatever it takes.”
Calvin H. Johnson (Texas), Wherein Our Duty Lies, 159 Tax Notes 1969 (June 25, 2018):
In a speech delivered on May 21, 2018 to the Association fro Mid-Career Tax Law Professors, Johnson praises William Andrews as the best of his generation, calls upon tax academics to solve the most important problems of the tax field, calls on student law reviews to ask for expert reviews, and calls on defending the tax base, for instance, via the Shelf Project.
Investigating fake academic journals
In
a time when fakery seems to expand to every corner of the internet (including
fake Amazon
product reviews and YouTube
views), it seems like academia is the last bastion of unadulterated truth,
right?
Wrong.
This
week, Motherboard
reported on a fake academic journal that puts work from real researchers at
Ivy League schools alongside junk science. The journal, titled “The World Academy
of Science, Engineering and Technology” (WASET), was
first exposed by German TV station Das Erste in late July. The WASET claims
to be peer-reviewed, but Das Erste got research accepted quickly and with
minimal notes.
Gaming
predatory journals is nothing new. In May 2015, science journalist John
Bohannon created a fake institute and published
a meaningless study under a pseudonym that claimed chocolate accelerated
weight loss (He also
ran a sting operation on open-access journals for Science magazine).
Several media outlets picked it up.
And
the problem goes beyond the U.S., too.
The
Indian Express has
been
investigating some of the fake and predatory academic journals where would-be
scholars simply have to pay before their work is included. In one
of the more recent installments, The Express found that one company owned
more than 100 journals covering everything from science to management.
"I
have received hundreds — if not thousands — of this kind of invitation to
publish research articles in fake science journals and conferences, including
the one mentioned in the (Motherboard) piece," said Emmanuel Vincent,
founder and project lead at Climate Feedback, in a message. "I think we
are going to see more of this in the future, so we need to make it easier for
everybody to be able to spot these fake science journals."
Vincent
pointed to things like Scimago Journal
& Country Ranking, which lets users search for journals widely cited by
scientists, as a way for people to determine a source's authenticity.
(AP
Photo/Nelson Antoine)
This is how we do it
- In Brazil, Truco from Agência Pública has set up a coalition of 34 journalists to fact-check gubernatorial candidates in seven states, as well as the presidential election.
- The founders of the now-defunct Breaking News app have launched a new service that delivers verified information to companies during a crisis.
- Do you know the difference between a “misquote” and a “misattributed quote?” MediaWise has the explainer.
This is bad
- Genoa's bridge disaster led to at least 39 deaths. It also spawned a sadly predictable series of false or misattributed photos.
- A fake Twitter account for Peter Strzok, who led the FBI’s investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server, is racking up thousands of likes and retweets.
- The governing party in Scotland launched a “fact-checking” service that it’s using to amplify its message.
(Screenshot)
This is fun
- Someone is selling Bellingcat T-shirts without the organization’s permission on eBay.
- This exhibition in Columbia, Missouri traces the historical roots of misinformation all the way back to Ancient Greece.
- Donald Trump called fact-checkers “bad people.” The New York Times’ Linda Qiu has a fact check.
Research you can use
- The majority of Americans think that tech platforms aren’t doing enough to combat misinformation — and they also think those companies should remove posts that are made up or unverified, according to a new survey from the Knight Foundation and Gallup.
- As part of its effort to reach out to skeptical fact-checking audiences, PolitiFact commissioned an analysis of its fact checks. The topline finding: Researchers couldn’t find any substantial linguistic difference in the way the project covers Republicans or Democrats.
- Misinformation isn’t just a public relations fiasco: It could threaten social media companies’ bottom line, according to research from the University of Southern California.
(Shutterstock)
A closer look
- The New York Times published an in-depth investigation into the business of manipulated views on YouTube. One man in Ottawa has sold 15 million views for close to $200,000 this year.
- The Times also profiled Glenn Kessler and said he’s “doing the poet’s work” by running The Washington Post Fact Checker.
- Speaking of fake social media engagement, the Digital Forensic Research Lab exposed a network of Brazilian Twitter, Instagram and Facebook accounts that are trading likes, followers and pages for cash.
If you read one more thing
BuzzFeed
News reported on two people who spend their free time tracking and
reporting scammers who create fake Facebook accounts for American military
members. Over the past two years they've reported about 2,000 accounts and
submitted three quarterly reports to the company — which they're concerned
doesn't know the magnitude of the problem.
13 quick fact-checking links
- After it refused to follow other tech companies and ban him, Twitter suspended notorious conspiracy theorist Alex Jones for a week. The company cited a violation of its rules against abusive behavior and violence incitement.
- Speaking of Twitter, CEO Jack Dorsey told The Washington Post that he's reconsidering core parts of the platform to stop the spread of harassment and fake news — including adding factual context to false tweets.
- A false story about the Greek parliament installing a pool on its terrace went viral.
- What makes people believe fake news? Turns out that most Americans — of all digital skill levels — let their impulses take over when sharing content online.
- Turkey is investigating social accounts spreading rumors that the government says are aimed at manipulating the economy.
- BuzzFeed Newz is the wannabe BuzzFeed News.
- Would *you* watch an entire movie about fact-checkers? (If your answer is “Yes”, a reminder that Lifespan of a Fact is hitting Broadway next month.)
- Mother Jones interviewed Daniel, First Draft, Mike Caulfield and other experts on how to fight back against online misinformation.
- That moment when fake news accounts like your photos on Instagram.
- A Texas town’s police department shared a hoax originally posted by Christopher Blair and then amplified by a Macedonian fake news site.
- An InfoWars editor thinks what Alex Jones does is just “silly conspiracy rants” and “stupid radio rants,” per his own DMs.
- The New York Times’ Sheera Frenkel wrote about how one fake Facebook group was able to organize protests in real life.
- Verificado 2018 is a finalist for a 2018 Online Journalism Award in the collaboration and partnerships category.