SF Weekly
The lawyer representing the 50 or so former and current FindLaw writers says the employees were encouraged to skip lunch breaks and keep churning out copy. Most writers worked on average 60 hours a week, he says, but weren’t paid for the overtime. || Over at AOL… Patricia Chui, the Moviefone editor-in-chief who offered fired freelancers the chance to work for free, has been fired. || Earlier: “I wanted to clarify a couple of things about the email I sent earlier today,” writes Chui.
Uncategorized
Bloggers at Reuters’ FindLaw sue for overtime, meal breaks
More News
Q&A: Jane Lytvynenko on disinformation and how journalists can navigate an increasingly cloudy social media landscape
The pioneering reporter in the disinformation space will host a webinar about investigating Telegram on April 4.
March 28, 2024
What’s next for Plandemic? A musical.
‘It was a good reminder that there is a very strong amount of financial support for even the wackiest far-right, anti-vax ideas’
March 28, 2024
Opinion | Now NBC News must deal with the Ronna McDaniel fallout
Questions linger about whether this could impact how viewers see NBC News’ political coverage
March 28, 2024
Opinion | How fact-checkers can use AI wisely
AI is already saving hundreds of hours of work by automating repetitive tasks. More collaboration among fact-checkers is the next step.
March 28, 2024
Opinion | Yes, you can fact-check on TikTok
Fact-checkers in Turkey have found a space amidst dance videos and humor
March 28, 2024