Page 1 of 1

Should journalism survive on philanthropy?

Posted: Mon Feb 17, 2025 4:08 am
by Shishirgano9
Guests on this panel . Vivian Schiller, Craig Newmark and Alan Rusbridger.

The first to speak out was Craig Newmark, the killer of the US press classifieds, who became a philanthropist in projects that he considered to be the bearer of "trustworthy journalism".

His first words during this discussion? “ In truth, the press is the immune system of democracy .”

What he does for journalism is for him a question of ethics. You venezuela mobile database have to know what kind of journalism you want. And he defends independent and quality journalism. He brushes aside any interference in the projects he finances. The goal is to give journalism the means to regain a position worthy of trust in the eyes of all. He wants to be able to buy a newspaper without asking himself questions of this type.

Vivian Schiller, director of the Civil Foundation . It’s an independent nonprofit foundation that funds innovations in journalism, including through blockchain. “It’s founded on the principle that a free press is essential to a just and equitable society.”

Former Twitter news chief Vivian Schiller recalls her time as head of NPR, the national public radio station in the United States. Financial life there could be complicated. She found that having to find money made journalism vulnerable. This uncomfortable position is not one that journalists should experience as a mission, a vocation to accurately inform. “Benevolent” philanthropy can avoid this, she says, today.