Technology has morphed society into a fast-moving, progressive-thinking machine. A person can get access to almost everything with the right gadget and the proper execution. With the click of a mouse or the touch of a smart phone, people are able to consume news for free from around the world. This accessibility has caused a bit of restructuring for news organizations. They are now forced to adapt to modern technology.
The World Wide Web has become the ultimate source for information. Journalists on truth and originality when reporting their stories. Not all information found on the Internet is reliable. A news organization is responsible for its own reporting. Information published through print media is scrutinized at a greater scale than anything published on the web. There’s a greater expectation of telling the truth.
The Internet has also produced a mass population of citizen journalists that can publish stories online through various blogs and social media. No longer are people relying on journalists to provide them with information when they can do research of their own. But journalists are still relevant today, although not in the same way they used to be during the uprising of investigative journalism. To say that they’re a vital part of today’s society is questionable. People just need to trust that journalists will provide them with the most accurate version of the truth. As for adapting to technology, print media is working its way to a happy medium with online versions of their newspaper and more interactive features with videos, graphics, and sections for readers' feedback.
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