TRENDING DEMS
You probably don’t need a tool to tell you that Joe Biden is the Democratic candidate topping the most headlines these days. But a week or two from now? It could be anybody! Parse.ly, the analytics platform, released a tool to show “which Democratic candidates are getting the most attention, who is being written about the most, and who do readers want more content for.” It’s sortable by region, date, referral site, candidate and just about any other metric you can think of.
PROTECT YOURSELF
I’m constantly beating the drum about online security. My focus here is, for obvious reasons, on tools that you can use to protect yourself. But perhaps we should be having another conversation. For OneZero, Colin Horgan writes about how tech isn’t vulnerable, you are. “Every discussion of privacy has to begin there: We have no control,” he writes. “We are powerless and alone.” In other words, once we accept that we are at the mercy of a digital world in which most of the big issues are out of our hands, we can begin to take
steps to protect ourselves more aggressively.
UNSUBSCRIBE
Here’s your first test on that front. You probably get a fair amount of spam. Or maybe you’re a newsletter fiend like me, but you’re a little overwhelmed. It’d be great if an app could pull up all of those subscriptions in a big list and allow you to unsubscribe with one click. In fact, there’s a well-known one that does. It’s called Unroll.me and it has some massive privacy issues — namely, it scans your inbox for information it can sell. Another app, called Leave Me Alone, looks a lot better. Instead of selling user
data, it’s funded through a monthly subscription. Its website claims it doesn’t store anything about you at all. Decisions about apps like these, and a little bit of research, can make or break your online security.
WHAT’S THE WORD
If the dictionary is the Bible for writers, I just found the annotated version. OneLook is an online thesaurus that includes a “why didn’t I know that existed until now” feature called the reverse dictionary. Enter a definition and it’ll tell you the word it thinks you’re looking for. Enter a word and it’ll give you related words and concepts — “soccer” will give you “association football,” “FIFA” and “footy,” for example. Enter a category, like “marsupials,” and it gives you a list of mammals that carry their young in a pouch. It’s a dream tool for the writer with a wracked brain.
DATA BUDDY
If every picture is worth a thousand words, every database is probably worth a million. The problem is making sense of all those columns and numbers. There are plenty of tools for finding stories in data, but even the best of them fail to stack up against an experienced data journalist. If you’re in a newsroom, you can now buddy up with one, thanks to a project from Open News. Just tell Open News about your database and what you’re hoping to do with it and they’ll pair you up with a reporter who has worked on a similar story. It’s like pen pals but for future Public Service Pulitzer winners.
ADLESS
Imagine an internet without advertisements. What would we put on the right rail? Would our organization’s logo actually appear at the top of the page instead of below an ad for Allbirds or T-shirts with giant animal faces? And maybe we could actually cruise the web without being tracked everywhere we go? Mozilla and Creative Commons are putting forward $100 million to make that dream a reality. The aim is to identify creative new ways to keep websites financially afloat, like reimagined micropayments. I’d happily chip in $10 just to never see an ad for trendy men’s health vitamins again.
NWS IN BRF
Wait, don’t put your imagination away yet. Put your noodle to use thinking about this question: What if Wi-Fi was never invented? Wired has a fascinating story about how Wi-Fi almost didn’t happen.
Are you a student? Or maybe you just play one on TV? Notion — an all-in-one workplace with notetaking features, a to-do list and more — is now free for you.
Grammarly, the grammar and spell-checking plugin, now has a tone detection filter. Mine mostly shows this emoji: 🤓. WHAT DOES IT MEAN?
The Washington Post put together its first graphics-driven editorial and it’s about as great as you’d expect.
Ever wondered what it’s like to be one of those trolls who sows misinformation across social media for profit? No? Just me? Well, try it out anyway with a browser game called Troll Factory.
Until next week (kinda — I'll be out on vacation but the newsletter is already scheduled!),
Ren LaForme
P.S. I somehow ran the wrong ad last newsletter! Werk It, the annual gathering for women shaping the future of podcasting, will happen on Oct. 3-4 this year, not Nov. 13-14 (that was last year). Do me a favor and check out their page while I hide my face in shame?
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