fbpx

You are viewing our site as a Broker, Switch Your View:

Agent | Broker     Reset Filters to Default     Back to List
You have viewed all your free articles this month


Due to the ongoing situation with Covid-19, we are offering 3 months free on the agent monthly membership with coupon code: COVID-19A

UNLIMITED ACCESS

With an RE Technology membership you'll be able to view as many articles as you like, from any device that has a valid web browser.

Purchase Account

NOT INTERESTED?

RE Technology lets you freely read 5 pieces of content a Month. If you don't want to purchase an account then you'll be able to read new content again once next month rolls around. In the meantime feel free to continue looking around at what type of content we do publish, you'll be able sign up at any time if you later decide you want to be a member.

Browse the site

ARE YOU ALREADY A MEMBER?

Sign into your account

Think Before You Tweet!

September 07 2010

femaletextingatdinnerWe can learn from Mike Wise’s mistake

As we engage in Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin and blogging, we have all become journalists. Most of us have never been trained in the “rules” of journalism. We haven’t been trained on the code of ethics for journalism. When we get in to Twitter, it sometimes feel like we’re all by ourselves and nobody really ties our posts back to our “real” lives.

NOT TRUE - just ask Mike Wise, sports reporter from the Washington Post. He created a false post about an athlete in his Twitter Account as an “experiment". He deliberately posted a false story just to see what major news sources would pick it up. His plan was to post the false story, then quickly create another post that would dispel the myth and make the first post a joke. The only problem was Twitter was over capacity and thus the second post never made it to print.


 

TO READ THE REST OF THE STORY LOGIN OR REGISTER.