Their News is a news website that challenges your existing beliefs to break you out of your news bubble. You can better understand people with a different opinion if you are informed about their.news (badum tsss 🥁)
Hi all,
I have the feeling that in the last few years all political discussions have become more extreme. People from the left think that all the people from the right are evil and vice versa. Our filter bubbles don't help with this issue. That's why I built "Their news".
With "Their News" you discover news from the entire political spectrum without any filter bubbles.
My recommendation is that you try out different hot political topics and compare the most extreme political positions. It's super interesting to see how news from the left and news from the right report the same events differently. Also, make sure to check out a similar project: https://allsides.com
I thought about if I could somehow monetize the website, but I read somewhere (I think it was in the book "Range" by David Epstein) that it is probably impossible to do so. In the book, the author spoke about a study where researchers offered to give the participants a bit of cash if they read some articles that directly opposed their beliefs. The participants declined. This means that even though I think "Their News" was a super interesting project to work on, I probably could not get people to use it even if I paid them to 😂.
Behind the scenes:
It uses the media bias rankings from adfontesmedia as well as a news API by newscatcher (they were awesome and helped me a lot. Go check them out!). You are presented with a slider with a few dots. Each dot represents a news outlet (e.g. Reuters, Forbes etc). The news articles are shown below the slider always come from news outlets close to the slider. The entire project is 100% open-source (but contains a lot of spaghetti code 🍝) on my GitHub page (https://github.com/Hadjimina/per...).
I am more than happy to answer any questions you might have.
Cheers
Philipp
Wow, this is really great. I like being able to view the headlines from these media organizations without having to actually go to their page, just to get an overview of what the framing is for various topics. Nice work!
Univerbal
Truffle