First Amendment News

Coronavirus: Fake news runs amok

Fake news on the coronavirus is rampant on social media in spite of efforts of the industry to block its flow. The nonsense ranges from the advice to use a hair blower to punch hot air into your sinuses to drinking lots of water and gargling with warm water and salt or vinegar. These treatments were supposed the kill the virus. (New York Post, March 21, 2020, by Sara Dorn) Google, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube

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California open government roundup: With COVID-19 threat governor loosens open meeting law

The coronavirus pandemic prompted Gov. Gavin Newsom to suspend parts of the Brown Act, the state’s open meeting law. Local and state legislative agencies may now conduct public meeting by teleconference and make the meeting open to the public electronically. Agencies must still provide advance notice of meetings and designate at least one public location allowing the public to observe a meeting and offer comment. (JD Supra, March 13, 2020, press release) A citizens group

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Coronavirus: False information spread on social media threatens democratic governance

Preposterous claims about the coronavirus are flying across the internet as Twitter, Google and Facebook work to eliminate as much as they can, but their efforts are falling short against the onslaught. The false information has people panicking, seeking magical cures and entertaining conspiracy theories. It takes a few days to take down the false stories, too late to prevent widespread dissemination. (The New York Times, March 8, 2020, by Sheera Frenkel, Davey Alba and

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Cononavirus whistleblower faces retaliation

A whistleblower in the Health and Human Services administration is allegedly facing reassignment or loss of job after she complained that workers from her agency were sent in January and February without protective gear or training to meet with Americans evacuated from China. They could have contacted the conoravirus themselves or spread it on their return to home states. The workers were not tested for the virus. (SLATE, February 27, 2020, by Molly Olmstead) The

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So what else is new?: Administration criticizes news media over virus coverage

The acting Chief of Staff Nick Mulvaney said the news media is using the coronavirus crisis to “bring down the president.” He said that President Donald Trump had taken steps to curtail the virus and that news coverage was exaggerating its seriousness. (The New York Times, February 28, 2020, by Anni Karni) The Trump administration claim they took unprecedented steps to contain the virus while the director of the Center for Disease Control Nancy Messonnier

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