Panel One: “The Threat of “Fake News“ and Efforts to Curb It”
What is the future of free speech when there are increasing calls for government and the private sector to “filter out” or even censor misinformation? How much power should tech companies have to decide who’s heard? Is there some role for the government? Or does the burden of sifting fact from fiction fall mostly on news consumers—and, if so, what tools do both they and journalists need in this strange new age?
Panelists:
David Snyder, @1stamendmnt
Executive Director, First Amendment Coalition
Dan Gillmor, @dangillmor
Director, News Co/Lab
Professor of Practice, Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University
Kevin Bankston, @kevinbankston
Director, New America’s Open Technology Institute
Michelle Ciulla Lipkin, @ciullalipkin
Executive Director, National Association for Media Literacy Education
Moderator:
Carlos Maza, @gaywonk
Correspondent, Vox
Panel Two: “Is Education a Lasting and Long-term Solution? ” If news consumers (read: our citizenry) need better skills for sorting fact from fiction (and understanding the nuances of both), how exactly are they going to gain those skills? Who is helping them think critically about sources and recognize the signs of credible information? Are today’s schools set up to help the next generation build these skills? Could civics education play a stronger role?
Panelists:
Aleksander Dardeli, @IREXintl
Senior Vice President, IREX
An-Me Chung, @anmechung
Senior Fellow, Mozilla Foundation
Alan Page
Government teacher, Oklahoma City Public Schools
Involved with Generation Citizen, @gencitizen
Patricia Hunt
Government teacher, Arlington County Public Schools
Involved with the News Literacy Project, @newslitproject
Moderator:
Lisa Guernsey, @LisaGuernsey
Deputy Director, Education Policy Program, New America
Director, Learning Technologies Project, New America