Wall Street Journal Reporter Evan Gershkovich Released From Russian Captivity
Gershkovich was released Thursday in an elaborate prisoner swap involving two dozen prisoners from at least six countries.
Gershkovich was released Thursday in an elaborate prisoner swap involving two dozen prisoners from at least six countries.
I wrote for the .com culture site in its heyday. I don't mourn its disappearance.
After police detained Benjamin Hendren, they urged construction workers to lie about him.
Hacktivist-journalist Barrett Brown sets out to settle scores in his new memoir.
Subsidies for journalism will divorce reporters from the need to even try to win readers and viewers.
The Manhattan Institute's Charles Fain Lehman misleadingly equates a survey's measure of "cannabis use disorder" with "compulsive" consumption that causes "health and social problems."
The podcasting pioneer discusses capturing the real J.K. Rowling, quitting The New York Times, and his new show Reflector.
Assange's plea deal sets a threatening precedent for free speech and journalism.
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The justices ruled that "objective evidence" of retaliation does not require "very specific comparator evidence."
Issuing a posthumous pardon for Bennett would reaffirm our nation’s commitment to free expression and intellectual freedom.
The justice's benign comments set off a lengthy news cycle and have been treated as a scandal by some in the media. Why?
That take on the former president's New York conviction echoes similarly puzzling claims by many people who should know better.
The reaction to Ramzan Daraev’s death is an extreme example of anti-immigrant panic and national security paranoia.
A journalism industry trade group is asking the federal government to thwart a tech tool that could make news publishing less profitable.
An ideologically diverse mix of individuals and organizations supports a Texas journalist who was arrested for asking questions.
Artificial intelligence writes a pretty good analysis of George Orwell's 1984.
Justin Pulliam's arrest and lawsuit once again demand we ask if "real" journalists are entitled to a different set of rights.
Morgan Spurlock's death and legacy are a reminder that skepticism is a necessary part of any balanced diet.
As the U.K. High Court allows a new appeal for Julian Assange, pressure mounts on Joe Biden to drop charges. He should.
There's no justification for cracking down on news organizations for reporting the news during war.
Without providing any evidence, the paper says "loosened restrictions on firearms" contributed to gun violence in Columbus.
Like it or not, AI is here to stay. In his newsletter, Timothy B. Lee helps explain what comes next.
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Julian Assange and Priscilla Villarreal were both arrested for publishing information that government officials wanted to conceal.
City gives journalist photos. Journalist publishes photos. City…sues journalist?
Half the country says suppressing “false information” is more important than press freedom.
Priscilla Villarreal is appealing a 5th Circuit decision that dismissed her First Amendment lawsuit against Laredo police and prosecutors.
The News2Share cofounder is revolutionizing news coverage.
"This bill would basically allow the government to institute a spy draft," warns head of the Freedom of the Press Foundation.
We've seen this saga so many times before.
"I am not in the newsroom," the embattled NPR chieftain said over and over again.
Alex Garland's latest post-apocalyptic thought experiment is a war movie without a take.
Last year, the offices of the Marion County Record were raided by police. A new lawsuit claims the search was illegal retaliation against the paper.
The former RNC chairwoman is in good company.
The former RNC chair's concession that Biden won "fair and square" did not save her from internal outrage at her support for Trump's stolen-election fantasy.
Most aspiring journalists need an apprenticeship, not a degree.
Diosdado Cabello, Nicolás Maduro's right-hand man, is threatening retribution against the satirical website.
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The newspaper portrays the constitutional challenge to the government's social media meddling as a conspiracy by Donald Trump's supporters.
After blaming the state's bathroom law, The New York Times says "it has never been clear" whether gender identity figured in the fight that preceded Nex Benedict's death.
"It is immoral that in a poor country like ours," the Argentine president said, "the government spends the people's money to buy the will of journalists."
An escalation in the war between people who publish secrets and those who seek to keep them.
Don’t let culture war politics overwhelm a commitment to the facts.
The WikiLeaks founder already has spent as much time in a London prison as DOJ lawyers say he is likely to serve if convicted in the U.S.
Everybody has the right to speak and then take the heat.