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Published on 27 de May 2026

The contents on our radar, which we recomend that enter yours.

Everyday life demands that we pay attention to an ever-increasing volume of constantly updated information. Although, often, the “new” is not truly new, this appearance of novelty fuels a sense of urgency — and the fear of missing out (FOMO). We want to help slow down this pace, with a curated selection of content on the quality of information that has caught our eye and that we recommend you take a look at. To read at your leisure.

 

Reuters Institute

The changing shape and new economics of news podcasting: From listening to watching, from podcasts to shows

“Our research shows that podcast use is largely complementary to other types of news and they are valued for building knowledge and adding depth”.

https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/changing-shape-and-new-economics-news-podcasting-listening-watching-podcasts-show

Columbia Journalism Review

With malice

“Kash Patel’s FBI is going after reporters and news organizations for routine newsgathering practices”.

https://www.cjr.org/analysis/with-malice-kash-patel-fbi-routine-newsgathering-target-practice-atlantic.php

Nieman Lab

As goes CBS Radio News, so goes the idea that news media should serve the public interest

“As a media historian, I think the story of CBS Radio News’ rise and fall cannot be told without telling another parallel story: the story of how the U.S. stopped demanding that media serve the public interest”.

https://www.niemanlab.org/2026/05/as-goes-cbs-radio-news-so-goes-the-idea-that-news-media-should-serve-the-public-interest/

Scientometrics

Determining quality dimensions for peer review reports using a Delphi approach

“Poor-quality reports present an information quality (IQ) problem, often due to incompleteness, inconsistency, bias, or lack of clarity, which reduces their usefulness”.

https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11192-026-05603-3.pdf

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