國際傳媒:2026/04/17~2026/04/23

2026 年 04 月 24 日 | 媒大事

國際傳媒:2026/04/17~2026/04/23

✎ JournalismUK 英國新聞媒體《JournalismUK》|20260420

New report shows survivor voices missing in news stories of gender violence and misogyny

新研究報告指出,性別暴力與厭女事件新聞報導中,倖存者的聲音被忽視

Despite a decade marked by high-profile abuse scandals and a surge in digital misogyny – not least the release of the long-anticipated Epstein Files – the study finds that newsrooms are consistently failing to reflect the scale and complexity of the crisis.

✎ The Guardian 英國《衛報》|20260422

#ToddlerSkincare: the ‘dark and exploitative’ world of children’s beauty videos on TikTok

#幼兒護膚:TikTok上兒童美容影片「黑暗且剝削」的世界

Children as young as two are appearing in TikTok videos demonstrating their skincare routines, a Guardian investigation has found, raising concerns about the beauty industry’s reach and the lack of safeguards for child influencers.

✎ Rest of world 非營利科技媒體《Rest of world》|20260422

Deadly deepfakes: A survival guide for the age of algorithmic war

致命的深偽技術:演算法戰爭時代的生存指南

Rachel Adams warns AI-generated content sabotages civilian safety in conflict zones, and calls out global inequities and the role of Western tech powerhouses.

✎ The Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism 英國牛津路透新聞學研究所|20260421

The journalist pioneering a new approach to journalism training in Ghana

記者Emmanuel K. Dogbevi在加納開創了新的新聞訓練方法

At a moment when donor support for media development is shrinking across much of Africa, The Journalism Hangout offers a different proposition: journalism training sustained without grants, led by working journalists, and rooted in community.

✎ DIGIDAY 美國數位媒體《數位日報》|20260422

How The Financial Times is betting on personality-led vodcasts as its next subscription lever

《金融時報》押注名人主持的影音Podcast,作為下一波訂閱成長引擎

Rather than a neat, linear funnel from search to signup, people now spend months in a loose orbit around a publisher — via podcasts, YouTube channels, newsletters and social clips — before they ever consider paying.

✎ Pew Research Center 美國皮尤研究中心|20260420

What types of news do Americans seek out or happen to come across?

美國人主動追蹤與偶然接觸的新聞類型有哪些?

A growing share of Americans say they mostly get news because they happen to come across it, not because they’re actively seeking it out. About half of U.S. adults (49%) say this is the case today, up from 39% when we first asked this question in 2019.

整理:朱弘川、編譯:蔡宏杰