About The Journal FactCheck unit
The
Journal FactCheck unit is located within the
newsroom of one of Ireland's most-read online news sources, The
Journal. It was established in early 2016 to sift truth
from claims in the Irish political arena in the run-up to the
General Election of that year. It has since expanded its
operations to factcheck misinformation and disinformation across
all spheres that inform and influence Irish citizens'
decision-making..
In early 2020, we launched our Covid-19 Debunking Project to stem
the growing tide of coronavirus-related misinformation and to
distribute quality information to the public on this topic. We
continue to contribute our factchecks to the global CoronaVirusFacts Alliance effort.
Since 2017, we have been the only verified Irish signatory of the
International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) and abide by the organisation's Code of Principles.
We are the fact-checker partner for the Ireland EDMO hub
(European Digital Media Observatory); you can find more about
our collaborative work across media literacy, research and other
tools against disinformation here.
The Journal and The Journal FactCheck unit are
fully-compliant members of the Press Council of Ireland.
How we are funded
Our work is funded via The Journal newsroom budget,
largely from advertising revenue on the site but also
increasingly from contributions to the readers'
fund by citizens like you who wish to see our
factchecking and other quality journalistic work remain
accessible to all.
We received funding as a partner in the Ireland hub of the
European Digital Media Observatory (EDMO). This is a
collaboration between academic researchers and fact-checkers
which promotes scientific knowledge of online disinformation,
advances the development of EU fact-checking services and
supports media literacy programmes, and our portion of the
funding helps us to contribute fact-checking expertise to this
effort. EDMO receives funding from a European Union programme
but is an independent observatory with its own governing board
and an independent advisory board. You can read more about EDMO
here, and the Ireland EDMO hub here.
We are also a member of the Facebook Third-Party Fact Checking
programme, under which we receive some payment for
submitting certain factcheck articles to be applied to
misinformation on its platform.
The Journal and The Journal FactCheck are part
of Journal Media Ltd, which is a registered company in Ireland,
number 483623 at the CRO (Companies
Registration Office). The Journal was founded in 2010
by online entrepreneurs Eamonn and Brian Fallon, who first came
to public prominence by creating the online property listings
portal Daft.ie in 1997.
The work of The Journal and The Journal
FactCheck is in no way influenced by advertisers,
shareholders or any other external party which may contribute
funds now or in the future.
How we factcheck
It is very important to us that our readers can follow our
factchecks from nose to tail, for two key reasons.
Firstly, so that we can earn your trust in the consistency of our
work by being transparent about every step, from how we choose a
particular claim to factcheck to how we come to a verdict. We
link to raw, public data where it exists and name and define
clearly any expert advice and input from sources external to our
factcheck team.
Secondly, we hope that by outlining our process clearly, we may
equip readers with the tools to better distinguish good quality
information from less trustworthy content for themselves,
sending our factchecking principles out into the real world of
public literacy.
Our readers' guide here
is a great starting point for understanding what content can be
factchecked, how we evaluate claims, how we weigh evidence and
how we rate our verdicts.
Who we are
The Journal FactCheck was launched in 2016 by
then-Journal editor Susan Daly, who is now Managing
Editor of Journal Media and oversees strategic
partnerships and standards at FactCheck. The editorial lead and
operations on The Journal FactCheck specifically is
Stephen McDermott, Assistant News Editor.
Full biographies and roles of our FactCheck editors and reporters
are available here.
How you can contact us with a correction
Each fact check article carries the name and direct link to the
author's email where you can get in touch. There is also a 'send
a correction' button on every piece.
If we deem a clarification, correction or update is needed to a
factcheck, we publish that on the original article and to our
corrections page here.
As a signatory of the International Fact-Checking Network, we
adhere to their standards of excellence. If you feel there has
been a violation by The Journal FactCheck of the IFCN
Code of Principles, you may report that
here.
Getting involved
One of our key sources in identifying content to fact check is
YOU. We rely on the public to tell us what claims they find
confusing, unclear or suspicious and to submit them to us for
consideration.
You can reach us by:
Non-partisanship policy
The Journal was founded in late 2010 with a stated
mission to provide unbiased, independent, contextualised news
that informs users without agenda. Our motto, 'read, share and
shape the news', has long been a public declaration that we are
answerable to users of our service.
This is supported by features such as 'submit tip' and 'make a
correction' buttons on our apps which allow users to contact the
newsroom and journalists directly, as well as frequent
opportunities for our audience to engage with editors and
reporters, for example in email Q&As on specific issues, or in
Lunchtime Live events with our newsroom on Facebook.
Our hiring policy excludes members of political parties or
lobbying groups from working in our newsroom or FactCheck unit.
We understand that journalists may have personal opinions on a
wide range of topics but we ask them to not get involved in
advocacy or state policy positions on issues which we might
factcheck in such a way as might lead a reasonable member of the
public to see the work of The Journal FactCheck as
biased.
We require our factcheckers to verify facts independently and
weigh the evidence in a proportionate manner and present their
findings in language that is free of opinion or hyperbole. We
have a policy of hyperlinking to primary sources such as studies
in academic or scientific journals and publicly-available data,
where we have verified these as independent and wholly
trustworthy, for the purpose of transparency.
Our journalists are excluded from accepting any fees, commissions
or other inducements of any kind whatsoever from any third party
which could create a conflict of interest or otherwise
jeopardise or leave open to question the impartiality of their
work.
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