Not exact matches
According to a report this week in tech
news outlet The Information, when asked
by some of his 11,000 employees Kalanick has brushed off
questions about diversity in hiring and whether Uber could share demographic data about its workforce.
Newsweek notes that these conspiracy theories, which this
question tries to bolster, are being raised primarily
by very unreliable sources such as the Syrian government accused of using chemical weapons, far right Fox
News commentator Tucker Carlson (whose track record for accuracy is poor) and white supremacist leader Richard Spenser via the neo-Nazi
outlet The Daily Stormer.
This is all well and good, but it doesn't address the
question of how to read, look at, approach, or trust a
news outlet that is largely financed or owned
by a major player in a issue.
As discussed earlier and in the report, given that mainstream
news coverage of the fundamentals of climate science remains a hotly debated topic — and the suggestion that we need to invest more resources in improving the portrayal of climate science at these
outlets — the media analysis evaluates this
question, applying the methodology employed previously
by Boykoff.