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Pew Research Center
Journalism & Media
October 28, 2020

Daily Briefing of Media News share on Twitter

In Today's news:   Salt Lake City’s two newspapers end daily print editions, the Department of Homeland Security imposes new visa restrictions on foreign reporters in the U.S., and new research about who Americans fault for unfair news coverage.
Top Stories

Salt Lake City to lose its two daily print newspapers




New ‘hostile’ visa rules for journalists propose 240-day time limit on working in the USA




Americans blame unfair news coverage on media outlets, not the journalists who work for them



Press & Government

Feds seek at least 6 months in prison for leak to BuzzFeed




‘Stop doing that, or this interview will end’: How the smackdown took over cable news in 2020




Why do newspapers still make political endorsements?



About Misinformation

Fake news spread on WhatsApp to Indian Americans plays stealth role in U.S. election




Trump’s campaign website hacked by cryptocurrency scammers



Social Media

First day of Facebook moratorium on new U.S. political ads marked by glitches




How Americans see U.S. tech companies as government scrutiny increases



International

View: The ABC must be relevant to all – but that doesn’t mean telling people what they want to hear



 

The Daily Briefing of Media News is edited by Amy Mitchell and Katerina Eva Matsa and compiled by Pew Research Center staff, including: Michael Barthel, Jeffrey Gottfried, Maya Khuzam, Elisa Shearer, Galen Stocking, Mason Walker and Kirsten Worden.