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Many news sites update articles without changing the dates, often changing important parts of stories after they've had the desired political effect. Some of them at least have the decency to include boilerplate on all their stories to the effect of "this story may change, so if you believe us it's your own fault" |
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There ought to be a version history on all new stories. When you link to a story, anyone who clicks the link should get the same version of the story that you read. The only thing that should change at that web address is the addition of a header notifying the reader that there is an updated version available (with link). Also, highlighting or strikeout text as well as notes in brackets can be added to flag errors as long as the original text is still clearly visible. New versions should include links to old versions at the end. |
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What [scad mientist] said. |
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Maybe that could be done as a third-party service: a web-crawler patrols the news sites,filters out things like advertisements and puts the html pages it finds into a Git repository (or similar). |
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Then it could either supply its own presentation (as [sc] indicated), or just allow public read-access to the repository so that people could use a Git-based diffing tool of their choice. |
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+ You would love to read the Police log from my town
woman calls 911 to report that someone stole her umbrella. Police arrive to find it floating in her pool. |
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I would ask where you live but you probably don't want the news to get out. |
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