All posts by media-man

Rethinking Nature As Economic Climate Capital — And A Really Valuable Investment

We hear a lot about sea level rise and the effects it is having on coastal communities. The media sometimes morbidly plays and replays footage of homes collapsing from their high cliff footings into the pounding surf. As someone who is lucky enough to live at the beach, I’ve tried ... [continued]

The post Rethinking Nature As Economic Climate Capital — And A Really Valuable Investment appeared first on CleanTechnica.

How a Groundbreaking Indigenous Treaty on Whales’ Rights Could Change National Laws

A declaration recognizing whales as legal rights-holders is influencing legislation in New Zealand and sparking an international push to translate Indigenous customs into binding protections.

In one of his final acts before his death in 2024, Māori King Tūheitia Pōtatau Te Wherowhero helped galvanize Pacific Indigenous leaders to sign a landmark declaration recognizing whales’ rights.

The Border Wall Closes in on Big Bend

Go behind the scenes with executive editor Vernon Loeb and reporter Martha Pskowski as they discuss plans for a border wall through Texas’ biggest state park and one of the jewels of the national park system.

Building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border has been a signature issue for President Donald Trump since he first ran for office in 2016. Now, plans for a wall through the Big Bend region of West Texas are raising alarms with residents and officials alike.

A simple water shift could turn Arctic farmland into a carbon sink

Deep in the Arctic north, drained peatlands—once massive carbon vaults built over thousands of years—are quietly leaking greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. But new field research from northern Norway suggests there’s a powerful way to slow that loss: raise the water level. In a two-year study, scientists found that restoring higher groundwater levels in cultivated Arctic peatlands dramatically cut carbon dioxide emissions, and in some cases even tipped the balance so the land absorbed more CO₂ than it released.

Peak Fuel Cell Bus Deliveries in the EU Occurred in 2025

Transport & Environment’s latest European city bus market report glossed in an article in CleanTechnica caught my attention for a reason that may not be obvious at first glance. Battery-electric buses now dominate new city bus registrations across the EU, and vastly ahead of schedule. That is the headline, and ... [continued]

The post Peak Fuel Cell Bus Deliveries in the EU Occurred in 2025 appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Health and Climate Consequences of EPA’s Endangerment Finding Repeal ‘Cannot Be Overstated’

In short: the agency will no longer be able to regulate carbon pollution or greenhouse gases—though a couple of scenarios might prevent President Trump from getting his way.

From our collaborating partner Living on Earth, public radio’s environmental news magazine, an interview by Jenni Doering with Pat Parenteau, an emeritus professor at the Vermont Law and Graduate School. 

Under water, in denial: is Europe drowning out the climate crisis?

Even as weather extremes worsen, the voices calling for the rolling back of environmental rules have grown louder and more influential

In the timeless week between Christmas and the new year, two Spanish men in their early 50s – friends since childhood, popular around town – went to a restaurant and did not come home.

Francisco Zea Bravo, a maths teacher active in a book club and rock band, and Antonio Morales Serrano, the owner of a popular cafe and ice-cream parlour, had gone to eat with friends in Málaga on Saturday 27 December. But as the pair drove back to Alhaurín el Grande that night, heavy rains turned the usually tranquil Fahala River into what the mayor would later call an “uncontrollable torrent”. Police found their van overturned the next day. Their bodies followed after an agonising search.

Continue reading...

From Courtroom to Capital Markets: Why US Tariff Instability Matters

The Supreme Court’s decision limiting presidential tariff authority should have reduced uncertainty. Instead, it introduced a new layer of it. The Court narrowed the use of one statute for imposing broad tariffs. The response from the administration was immediate. Tariffs would continue under other authorities, and tariffs already collected would ... [continued]

The post From Courtroom to Capital Markets: Why US Tariff Instability Matters appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Past the Inflection Point: Electric Now Clearly Dominates the City Bus Market

Proving heavy vehicles can electrify fast across Europe By Max Molliere, Principal Data Analyst, E-Mobility, T&E Six out of ten new EU city buses were zero-emission (ZE) in 2025, as battery-electric and fuel cell powertrains made up 56% and 4% of new sales respectively. This was unimaginable back in 2019 ... [continued]

The post Past the Inflection Point: Electric Now Clearly Dominates the City Bus Market appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Locked Out of Green Finance: What’s Holding Truckmakers Back?

European truckmakers pledge a zero-emission future, yet green finance remains marginal in funding the sector’s transition. The European truck industry faces growing competitive pressure. Chinese manufacturers are scaling up electric truck production rapidly and expanding in the global market. European truckmakers commit to battery-electric vehicles, but production expands too slowly to win ... [continued]

The post Locked Out of Green Finance: What’s Holding Truckmakers Back? appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Sierra Club Statement on Trump Administration Opening Millions of Acres of Protected Public Lands to Mining

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Department of the Interior announced today it would revoke two public land orders to open more than two million acres of public lands in Alaska to drilling and mining. In an announcement late Friday afternoon, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum issued an order rescinding two land withdrawals north of ... [continued]

The post Sierra Club Statement on Trump Administration Opening Millions of Acres of Protected Public Lands to Mining appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Advocates Call on California Attorney General, LA District Attorney to Investigate AI Astroturf Campaign

LOS ANGELES — Environmental and public health advocates are calling on California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Los Angeles District Attorney Nathan Hochman to investigate an AI-powered campaign that allegedly submitted public comments attributed to residents without their consent to oppose Southern California clean air standards. The extent of the AI ... [continued]

The post Advocates Call on California Attorney General, LA District Attorney to Investigate AI Astroturf Campaign appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Donald Trump Tears Down Another Key Public Health Safeguard

Washington, D.C. — Today, Donald Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency dismantled a bedrock environmental and public health standard that protects Americans from mercury and other dangerous toxic air pollutants, such as arsenic, lead, and chromium. Rolling back the new and more protective Mercury and Air Toxics Standards will allow coal- and oil-fired power ... [continued]

The post Donald Trump Tears Down Another Key Public Health Safeguard appeared first on CleanTechnica.

EPA’s Clean School Bus ‘Revamp’ Means Less Support for EVs

The Trump administration seeks to support a wider range of options, including natural gas buses, with the program’s remaining $2.3 billion. Critics see a lost chance to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

In the 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, Congress voted to invest $5 billion in accelerating a phase-out of diesel school buses across the country, a move meant to protect students from harmful pollution and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Bondi Bragged About Forcing Facebook To Censor Speech. Now FIRE Is Suing.

I seem to recall a years-long freakout among MAGA folks about the Biden administration pressuring social media companies to remove content. You may have heard about it.

Anyway. In unrelated news FIRE (the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression), has filed suit against Attorney General Pam Bondi and DHS Secretary Kristi Noem on behalf of Kassandra Rosado, who ran a 100,000-member Facebook group called “ICE Sightings – Chicagoland,” and Mark Hodges, who created the Eyes Up app for documenting and archiving videos of ICE enforcement activity.

The suit alleges that Bondi and Noem coerced Facebook into disabling the group and coerced Apple into pulling the app from its App Store, in direct violation of the First Amendment. Because, you know, government officials calling social media companies and demanding they remove content is… bad.

The legal theory is straightforward, the evidence is overwhelming, and perhaps most remarkably, the government handed FIRE much of its case on a silver platter. In other words, for all the talk of “censorship” during the Biden admin, which went nowhere due to the lack of any actual evidence, here there not only is evidence, it was eagerly and readily provided by Pam Bondi and Kristi Noem themselves. In public. Repeatedly. Proudly.

Let’s start with the basics of what actually happened, because the facts here are almost embarrassingly damning. Kassandra Rosado created her Facebook group in January 2025, initially as a small community resource for Chicago-area small business owners trying to understand how ICE raids were affecting foot traffic and community events. The group grew to nearly 100,000 members by October as ICE enforcement escalated under what the agency publicly branded “Operation Midway Blitz.” According to the complaint, Facebook’s own moderators reviewed thousands of posts and found exactly five that violated its guidelines. Just five. Which Facebook removed, telling Rosado that participants acting badly don’t impact the group themselves (a good policy!).

Out of thousands of posts and tens of thousands of comments that members of the Chicagoland group created through October 2025, Facebook’s own moderators found and removed only five purportedly violating its guidelines.

Even as to these five posts, Facebook advised Rosado that they were “participant violations” that “don’t hurt your group.” Facebook further explained: “Groups aren’t penalized when members or visitors break the rules without admin approval.”

Then, on October 12, 2025, Laura Loomer tagged Noem and Bondi in a social media post flagging the group. Loomer’s role here deserves a moment of appreciation. This is a person who sued Facebook, claiming it was literally RICO to moderate her posts. Who sued all the major tech companies, arguing that content moderation violated her First Amendment rights. Her entire public identity has been built on the premise that private platforms moderating her speech is unconstitutional censorship.

And here she is, tagging federal officials to demand they force Facebook to suppress other people’s speech. The First Amendment, which constrains government action, apparently only matters when Loomer is the one being moderated. When she wants someone else silenced, she calls in the actual state.

The next day, a DOJ source confirmed to Loomer that DOJ had contacted Facebook to demand removal.

That same day, Facebook disabled the entire group. Then Bondi posted on social media claiming credit:

That’s the AG admitting to a pretty clear First Amendment violation. Not in a leaked email discovered through litigation. Not in a deposition. On X, taking credit. Proudly.

Today following outreach from @thejusticedept, Facebook removed a large group page that was being used to dox and target @ICEgov agents in Chicago.

…. The Department of Justice will continue engaging tech companies to eliminate platforms where radicals can incite imminent violence against federal law enforcement.

Noem piled on with her own post, crediting the DOJ for the takedown.

That’s the Secretary of Homeland Security saying:

Anti-ICE radicals are using social media apps to dox, threaten, and terrorize the brave men and women of ICE and their families.

Today, thanks to @POTUS Trump’s @TheJusticeDept under the leadership of @AGPamBondi, Facebook removed a large page being used to dox and threaten our ICE agents in Chicago.

These officers risk their lives every day arresting murderers, rapists, and gang members to protect our homeland. Platforms like Facebook must be PROACTIVE in stopping the doxxing of our @ICEgov law enforcement.

We will prosecute those who dox our agents to the fullest extent of the law.

The Eyes Up situation is even more instructive. Mark Hodges built Eyes Up specifically as a documentation and archiving tool for videos of ICE enforcement activity. The app uses manual moderation—meaning Hodges or other moderators personally review every video before it becomes publicly accessible.

The complaint specifically notes that:

Eyes Up is not useful for tracking ICE location or movement in real time. Because Hodges or other moderators manually review each video before it becomes publicly available, any ICE officers would be long gone by the time a video is posted.

Apple had independently reviewed and approved Eyes Up for the App Store in August 2025, raising no concerns about the content. On October 3, Apple removed it anyway—citing “information provided by law enforcement” that the app violated its guidelines on “Defamatory, discriminatory, or mean-spirited content.”

Bondi again made no effort to be subtle about DOJ’s role, gleefully telling Fox News:

“We reached out to Apple today demanding they remove the ICEBlock app from their App Store—and Apple did so.”

She later boasted at a roundtable that:

“We had Apple and Google take down the ICEBlock apps.”

For years, MAGA world has treated Murthy v. Missouri as a foundational text of government overreach—proof that the Biden administration ran a sophisticated censorship operation by pressuring social media companies to remove content. Jim Jordan convened hearings. The case went all the way to the Supreme Court, though MAGA folks love to ignore or downplay what the Supreme Court decision actually said about the case. The argument, reduced to its essence, was that White House officials sending emails asking platforms to review posts against their existing policies constituted unconstitutional “jawboning.”

The Supreme Court threw the case out because the plaintiffs couldn’t prove that the government’s communications actually caused the platforms to take action. The majority opinion by Justice Amy Coney Barrett found that the platforms were making their own independent decisions, often rejecting the government’s requests, and that the plaintiffs couldn’t trace any specific content removal directly to government coercion. The evidence, the Court concluded, just wasn’t there. Barrett’s opinion uses the phrase “no evidence” five times. And the little evidence plaintiffs did offer? She called it out as “unfortunately appear[ing] to be clearly erroneous.”

Bondi and Noem have now done something remarkable: they have provided, entirely on their own initiative and through public statements made to friendly media outlets, every single piece of evidence that was missing in Murthy.

Traceability? Bondi literally said “We reached out to Apple today demanding they remove the ICEBlock app—and Apple did so.” Coercion versus mere persuasion? The complaint details how Noem announced she was “working with the Department of Justice to see if we can prosecute” app developers, how Bondi told Fox News that ICEBlock’s creator “better watch out” because the speech was “not protected,” and how these explicit criminal threats preceded the removals.

The NRA v. Vullo standard, which the Supreme Court articulated just before the Murthy ruling (on a case they heard the same day as Murthy), holds clearly that a government official cannot use “the power of the State to punish or suppress disfavored expression” through third-party intermediaries. The complaint quotes this directly. There is no ambiguity here about what happened or who caused it.

In Murthy, investigators spent years poring over internal communications trying to find proof that the government’s requests had actually caused the platforms to act. And found nothing concrete. Here, the government’s own press releases and Fox News appearances serve that function. You don’t need subpoenas or discovery depositions when the Attorney General is posting on X to take credit.

The complaint captures the legal significance:

Attorney General Pamela Bondi and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem want to control what the public can see, hear, or say about ICE operations. Wielding the power of federal criminal law, they coerced Facebook to disable Rosado’s Facebook group and coerced Apple to remove Kreisau Group’s Eyes Up app from its App Store. That’s unconstitutional. The First Amendment prohibits the government from coercing companies to censor protected speech. NRA v. Vullo, 602 U.S. 175, 190–91 (2024) (“[A] government official cannot do indirectly what she is barred from doing directly.”). Without this Court’s intervention, this unconstitutional coercion will continue.

That last line is important as well, because a key piece of Murthy was that to get an injunction, the plaintiffs had to show that these suppression efforts were likely to continue. That wasn’t there in Murthy. But here, we (again) have Noem and Bondi screaming to the heavens that they’re going to keep doing this.

The “officer safety” justification doesn’t survive contact with the actual facts. An app that archives manually reviewed videos of past ICE activity cannot be used to track officers in real time. The complaint notes that Apple had previously approved the app with full knowledge of what it did, then reversed course only after receiving “information from law enforcement”—which appears to mean a phone call from Bondi’s DOJ:

Apple cited its app review guideline 1.1.1, which prohibits “Defamatory, discriminatory, or mean-spirited content, including references or commentary about religion, race, sexual orientation, gender, national/ethnic origin, or other targeted groups.”

Apple had never previously stated that Eyes Up purportedly violated guideline 1.1.1 or included “Defamatory, discriminatory, or mean-spirited content.”

In fact, when Apple had independently reviewed Kreisau Group’s application to include Eyes Up in the App Store in August 2025, Apple did not conclude that Eyes Up violated guideline 1.1.1. During that review, Eyes Up was already available on its website, and Apple had full knowledge of the purpose of Eyes Up, of actual videos available on it, and of how it worked (including its location features). Apple flagged some unrelated issues, which Kreisau Group resolved before Apple approved the app. Apple raised no concern that Eyes Up contained “Defamatory, discriminatory, or mean-spirited” content in violation of guideline 1.1.1.

This appears to be the exact opposite of the situation in Murthy, where tech companies frequently rejected government requests if they didn’t violate policies. Here, it appears that, under pressure from Bondi, Apple changed its interpretation of the policies in a weak pretext to justify the government-led censorship.

And it was so clearly pretext:

Apple’s transparency reports show that from 2022 to 2024, it almost never removed apps for “Defamatory, discriminatory, or mean-spirited” content under guideline 1.1.1. Apple removed only three apps by US-based creators under guideline 1.1.1 in 2022, four apps in 2023, and none in 2024.

Eyes Up was not tracking anyone. It was creating an archive of documented government behavior in public spaces, exactly the kind of activity the First Amendment—and the Seventh Circuit’s precedent in ACLU v. Alvarez—exists to protect.

The viewpoint discrimination point in the complaint is also notable. The government targeted speech that was critical of ICE operations, while ICE itself actively posts on social media about its own enforcement activities, including specific locations and neighborhoods:

Bondi and Noem are not suppressing laudatory speech about ICE’s operations. ICE’s own social media accounts, for example, frequently share videos and photos of ICE arrests and other information indicating where enforcement operations occurred. Bondi and Noem only target such speech, like with Rosado’s Facebook group, that shares information about ICE operations in ways that are critical of those operations or that defendants perceive as such.

The same footage, in the government’s hands, becomes a success story, which make it textbook viewpoint discrimination.

Which brings us back to the political context that makes this so extraordinary to watch.

The people who spent years insisting that Biden’s White House committed the gravest sin against free speech in living memory by asking Twitter to look at some posts about COVID vaccines are, by and large, completely untroubled by Pam Bondi going on Fox News to brag about forcing Apple to remove an app.

The people who elevated Murthy v. Missouri into a constitutional crisis, who convened hearings and issued subpoenas and demanded that the “censorship industrial complex” be dismantled, have found absolutely nothing to say about a case where the Attorney General of the United States explicitly announced that she demanded a tech company remove an application and the company complied within hours.

Their position was, of course, never really about the principle. It was always about which direction the government’s thumb was pressing. When the Biden administration asked platforms to review COVID misinformation posts against their own existing policies—and platforms rejected the vast majority of those requests—that was tyranny.

When Bondi demands Apple remove an app and Apple does it the same day, that’s apparently just law enforcement doing its job.

The lawsuit asks for declaratory relief and injunctions preventing Bondi and Noem from continuing to coerce Apple and Facebook into suppressing this speech.

These irreparable harms will continue absent declaratory and prospective injunctive relief.

At no point have Bondi or Noem backtracked from their position that any involvement in ICE-tracking speech exposes an individual or business to criminal prosecution, nor from their demands that Apple and Facebook suppress such speech.

Accordingly, Bondi and Noem’s threats continue to hang over Apple and Facebook, who would risk adverse government action were they to reinstate Kreisau Group’s app or Rosado’s Facebook group

FIRE’s complaint frames the stakes with appropriate directness:

Our First Amendment right to speak “to oppose or challenge police action without thereby risking arrest is one of the principal characteristics by which we distinguish a free nation from a police state.” City of Houston v. Hill, 482 U.S. 451, 462–63 (1987). Plaintiffs bring this case to preserve our country’s fundamental character as a free nation, asking this Court to protect the basic First Amendment right to share information about our government and its activities.

The MAGA world spent four years constructing an elaborate theory of shadow-government censorship—one that required stretching reality to its breaking point, cherry-picked emails, and ultimately couldn’t survive Supreme Court scrutiny—when the actual government censorship they always claimed to fear was apparently just one phone call from the AG’s office away. They finally got the “coercive jawboning” they warned everyone about. Bondi and Noem are doing it out in the open, on television, and bragging about it in official social media posts.

And the free speech warriors have nothing to say.

Which tells you everything you need to know about what they actually believed all along. The principle was never “the government shouldn’t pressure platforms to remove speech.” The principle was “the government shouldn’t pressure platforms to remove our speech.” Now that the thumb is pressing in the direction they like, the constitutional crisis has mysteriously resolved itself.

RJI Student Innovation Fellows to spark innovation at four newsrooms around the country

Four international master’s students at the Missouri School of Journalism have been chosen for the 2026 class of Student Innovation Fellows at the School’s Reynolds Journalism Institute (RJI).

This summer, each Fellow will spend 12 weeks helping a news outlet create or expand upon innovative projects that address a particular need in community journalism. Through how-to articles they will publish along the way as part of RJI’s Innovation in Focus series, their work will also help local newsrooms around the country who are facing similar challenges.

“Community newsrooms are often bursting with ideas but don’t always see a path forward to execute them,” said Randy Picht, executive director of RJI. “The Fellows can bridge that gap and inject fresh, experimental energy into the newsroom while providing a roadmap for other organizations to follow in their footsteps.”

The Fellows will each receive a minimum $8,000 stipend and will be paired with a mentor at their news organization, whom they will meet with regularly until the Fellowship draws to a close in mid-August.

Previous projects have included a civic engagement guide, a translation and marketing initiative to boost an outlet’s Spanish-language audience and a strategy for maximizing impact by providing personalized replies to audience members in online comment sections.

“Each of these partnerships between the Fellows and the news organizations starts with an initial plan or idea for a project,” said Emily Lytle, Innovation in Focus editor. “But I always love to see how the Fellows surprise us — and sometimes themselves — with their unique ideas and the real impact they have on these newsrooms and communities they serve.”

Learn more about the Fellows below.

Meet the Fellows

Muhammad Osama Farooq

Brian Manzullo
Brian Manzullo
Muhammad Osama Farooq
Muhammad Osama Farooq

Farooq will head to the Detroit Free Press, one of Detroit’s major daily newspapers, to enhance its social media marketing and vertical storytelling. He also anticipates testing new ideas for collaboration between other news organizations in the area and the Free Press, which is part of USA Today Co.

The fellowship gives him an opportunity to practice a fusion of storytelling that combines his passions for visual journalism and strategic communication.

“I’m excited because even though I’m still covering news, it’s in a new, innovative way,” he said. “To get to do that professionally and get paid for it — that’s what I want to do.”

Farooq embraced the openness toward vertical video and other novel methods of effective storytelling practiced in an emerging technologies course taught by RJI Director of Innovation Kat Duncan, inspiring him to seek further ways to broaden his experience beyond the television production and script writing already under his belt from his time in his native Pakistan. He leapt at the opportunity to continue producing innovative storytelling through this fellowship.

“After this fellowship in whatever role I do, even if I go into the corporate sector and make ads for brands or if I’m working in a newsroom, I want to focus on new, effective storytelling techniques,” he said. “I don’t want to keep repeating the same process for each and every story — I want to do different things.”

Farooq’s mentor will be Brian Manzullo, Digital Director at the Detroit Free Press.

Mariia Novoselia

McKenzie Morgan
McKenzie Morgan
Mariia Novoselia
Mariia Novoselia

Novoselia will assist Technical.ly, a digital outlet covering entrepreneurship and innovation. Technical.ly’s startup tracker, which rates the potential success of startup companies across a wide range of industries and locales, is currently populated manually. Novoselia will be tasked with incorporating automation tools into the process to create a more streamlined workflow that allows for the inclusion of more startups in the tracker.

Since coming to Mizzou from Ukraine, Novoselia has gathered experience in environmental, investigative, health and higher education reporting as well as data analysis. For her, journalism is about more than putting together the skills she’s gained from that varied experience — it’s about creating something new that engages and informs audiences who are burned out or distrustful of news.

“I really like that this fellowship allows you to practice journalism in non-traditional ways,” she said. “That’s very important because we see that some people are turning away from news, and I’m very happy to be part of something that can help.”

Novoselia hopes to become a data journalist after earning her master’s degree from the School of Journalism.

“I love working with data and code, which is why this internship is perfect,” she said.

Her mentor will be McKenzie Morgan, project manager for Technical.ly Media.

Elizaveta Orlova

Amanda Kingsbury
Amanda Kingsbury
Elizaveta Orlova
Elizaveta Orlova

Orlova will work for Mirror Indy, which provides community-driven coverage of Indianapolis. She will assist with a project amplifying youth voices and featuring children interviewing their peers about life in the city.

Orlova sees the project as an opportunity to infuse humor into the reporting process, engaging audiences in a new way while lightening the tone of journalism and potentially reducing news avoidance among audiences who feel the news is too grim.

“Content creators are talking about serious stuff but from the lens of humor and satire,” Orlova said. “I want to share important things with people from this light state of being, and when I saw there was a project connected with kids, I thought, wow, this is perfect for me.”

Coming to Mizzou from Russia, Orlova understands all too well the importance of balancing the tone of reporting to avoid overwhelming audiences. She hopes to make a career out of that approach to journalism after earning her degree.

“People are so tired of politics and all the bad things that are happening everywhere — sometimes they want something simple,” she said. “When they consume content about serious stuff from the humor perspective, it can be easier for them to process the trouble they have in their lives and in their countries.”

Orlova’s mentor will be Amanda Kingsbury, managing editor of innovation at Mirror Indy.

Laiba Khan Zai

Erica Smith
Erica Smith
Laiba Khan Zai
Laiba Khan Zai

Zai will be working at the Times Union, a daily newspaper serving New York’s Capital Region. There, she will help promote informed civic engagement by building a state legislative tracker that will allow audiences to easily access past and present legislation.

Hailing from Pakistan, Zai seized on the opportunity to continue feeding a passion for the intersection of accessibility, technology and journalism that she first discovered in her home country.

“In Pakistan, I was working in this organization that was adapting to newer techniques in journalism to make it more accessible for the public and using all new kinds of tools,” Zai said. “That was something that I saw being implemented at RJI, and that drew me to this new opportunity.”

Her focus on accessibility is part of a larger interest in investigative and data-driven journalism, a preference that meshes neatly with the legislative tracker project’s goal of providing user-friendly information and context to audiences.

“Sometimes there are a lot of numbers involved in stories that people don’t fully understand,” she added. “There are more stories to be discovered in those numbers.”

Zai’s mentor will be Erica Smith, managing editor for digital at the Times Union.


Cite this article

Fitzgerald, Austin  (2026, Feb. 20). RJI Student Innovation Fellows to spark innovation at four newsrooms around the country. Reynolds Journalism Institute. Retrieved from: https://rjionline.org/news/rji-student-innovation-fellows-to-spark-innovation-at-four-newsrooms-around-the-country/

Newsmax Didn’t Like Its NewsGuard Rating, So The FTC Attacked NewsGuard, And Now NewsGuard Is Suing

We’ve written a few times now about how the GOP’s “free speech warriors” have been waging an absolutely absurd campaign against NewsGuard, a company whose entire business model is… expressing opinions about the reliability of news sources. You know, speech. The kind of thing that’s supposed to be protected by that First Amendment thing the GOP pretends to care so much about.

As we noted back in 2024, the entire complaint about NewsGuard boils down to: some conservative news sites got poor ratings, and that made people who relied on those ratings less likely to advertise on those sites. It’s funny how MAGA seems to get so upset about the “marketplace of ideas” when their own ideas get rejected. NewsGuard says “we think this source is unreliable,” advertisers say “okay, we’d rather not be associated with unreliable sources,” and the rated sites get mad about it.

But now the Trump administration’s FTC, led by Chairman Andrew Ferguson, has decided to transform that complaint into an actual government censorship campaign. And NewsGuard, represented by FIRE’s lawyers, is suing to stop it, as first reported in the Washington Post.

The complaint lays out a fairly astonishing abuse of government power. Let’s start with the Civil Investigative Demand (fancy term for a subpoena) the FTC sent to NewsGuard last May. It’s basically a demand for every document the company has ever created or received since its founding in 2018:

The CID requires production of “all documents relating to NewsGuard’s News Reliability Ratings and any other rating[s];” identification of all NewsGuard customers; and essentially all communications from or to NewsGuard.

And it gets worse:

The Specifications go further, demanding all materials about NewsGuard’s work product and methodology, including data sets; all documents about websites and news sources rated; all ratings and reviews issued; all communications regarding ratings; any and all analyses of the effects of NewsGuard’s ratings on advertisers and publishers; and any studies relating to social media or digital advertising

Among its all-inclusive document demands, the CID also requires production of information, materials, and communications relating to NewsGuard’s journalism and reporting, including reporters’ notes and sources.

The FTC is demanding reporters’ notes. From a journalism organization. Because it doesn’t like the opinions that organization expresses. That should be a First Amendment five-alarm fire. I mean, imagine the years of screaming we’d all be subjected to if the Biden admin had demanded reporters’ notes from Fox News.

Oh, and what was the stated basis for this investigation? According to NewsGuard’s complaint, the FTC wouldn’t even tell them, despite it being required by law.

Under the FTC Act, the agency was required to state the specific conduct constituting an alleged violation that is the subject of investigation and the provision of law applicable to such violation. 15 U.S.C. § 57b-1(c)(2). The FTC did not do that in the NewsGuard CID, leaving the company to guess about what the agency alleged was at issue or how it could have anything to do with legitimate enforcement of antitrust or competition laws.

In other words: “we’re investigating you, but we won’t tell you why or what law you allegedly violated.”

Right about here I’ll remind you that when FTC chair Andrew Ferguson applied for the job he promised to “protect freedom of speech” and “end… politically motivated investigations.” Of course, the full quote was “end Lina Khan’s politically motivated investigations”—leaving his own politically motivated investigations as fair game.

NewsGuard tried to work with the FTC for seven months, participating in ten meet-and-confer discussions and producing over 40,000 pages of documents. And what did the FTC do? Kept demanding more, including those customer lists and communications, while refusing to explain what any of this had to do with antitrust law.

Remember, NewsGuard’s share of the “brand safety” market is, according to the complaint, less than 0.1%. The idea that this tiny company is somehow engaged in anticompetitive behavior that requires the FTC to demand every document it’s ever created is absurd on its face.

Then, while NewsGuard was trying to cooperate with the investigation, the FTC was also using its merger review authority to create what amounts to a government blacklist of NewsGuard.

When advertising giants Omnicom and IPG wanted to merge, the FTC conditioned approval on the companies agreeing not to use any service that “reflects viewpoints as to the veracity of news reporting and adherence to journalistic standards or ethics.”

That’s not particularly subtle. That’s a condition specifically designed to prevent Omnicom from doing business with NewsGuard. The complaint notes that the original draft order didn’t quite capture NewsGuard, so Newsmax—yes, the same Newsmax that’s been mad about its poor NewsGuard rating—filed comments urging the FTC to expand the language. And the FTC did exactly that.

Newsmax was not subtle about its aim. Its fourteen-page letter mentioned NewsGuard more than a dozen times. Newsmax echoed Chairman Ferguson’s repeated statements that NewsGuard’s reviews and ratings of news sources based on journalistic standards were “biased” because some conservativeleaning websites and publications scored poorly.

Not content to rely on the official FTC comment process, Newsmax took to the internet to lobby Chairman Ferguson, members of Congress, and the President. In posts on X directed to Chairman Ferguson, Newsmax asserted the FTC’s proposed order was inadequate because it “makes no mention of ‘censorship’ or ‘targeting conservatives’ and ‘[f]ully allows Omnicom to use left-wing NewsGuard.” Newsmax admitted its comments and advocacy to the FTC were specifically targeted at NewsGuard.

[….]

The FTC subsequently issued a revised order removing terms about using third-party services with “political or ideological bias.” Instead, the FTC revised the Consent Order to prohibit the merged Omnicom entity or its ad agencies from using third-party services that evaluate “viewpoints as to the veracity of news reporting” and “adherence to journalistic standards or ethics.”

In its press release announcing the final Consent Order, the FTC stated that it revised the order “in response to public comments.” But the only public comments advocating such censure came from Newsmax and groups it funds…

The complaint notes, somewhat dryly, that First Amendment scholars and free speech organizations had also submitted comments pointing out how the proposed order was unconstitutional. But somehow, Ferguson and the FTC ignored those. The only change they made seemed to be the one Newsmax and friends demanded: the punishment of NewsGuard for its First Amendment-protected speech.

So let’s be clear about what happened here: A news organization that gives ratings to other news organizations gave a bad rating to Newsmax based on its own criteria. (Shocking, I know, given Newsmax’s sterling commitment to journalistic standards.) Newsmax complained to the government. The government then used its regulatory power to (1) launch a burdensome fishing expedition designed to bleed NewsGuard financially, and (2) literally prohibit a major potential customer from doing business with NewsGuard.

This is textbook First Amendment retaliation. The government is using its regulatory power to punish a private company for expressing opinions it disagrees with.

And Chairman Ferguson hasn’t exactly been coy about his intentions. Even before becoming FTC chair, he was publicly stating that the FTC should use its “tremendous array of investigative tools” and “coercive power” to get companies to “Do what we say.” As the complaint notes:

In an April 2025 interview, Chairman Ferguson explained how the FTC could use its “tremendous array of investigative tools” and “coercive power—formal and informal” to demand compliance to its views about supposed online “censorship.” Ferguson laid out a roadmap of the tactics his FTC would ultimately use against NewsGuard: “The regulators can show up, they can audit, they can investigate, they can cost you a lot of money, and the path of least resistance is: ‘Do what we say’.”

And:

Ferguson’s comments are similar to not-so-veiled threats by FCC Chairman Carr about Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night comedy monologue mentioning Charlie Kirk, which the administration found objectionable. Carr stated that ABC and its affiliates had to “find ways to change conduct and take action … on Kimmel or there’s going to be additional work for the FCC ahead,” and “we can do this the easy way or the hard way.”

This is the “free speech” party. This is what they mean by free speech: the freedom to agree with them, or face the consequences, brought to you mob-style.

The legal case here seems pretty straightforward. The DC Circuit already ruled last year, in the somewhat similar Media Matters case, that the FTC’s similar investigation of that organization was “a government campaign of retaliation” that was “infringing exercise of their First Amendment rights.” The district court in DC has already granted a preliminary injunction halting the FTC’s investigation of Media Matters.

NewsGuard’s case involves basically the same playbook. Government officials publicly expressed hostility to NewsGuard’s speech. Then they launched an investigation with demands far beyond any legitimate regulatory purpose. Then they used their merger review authority to directly prohibit companies from doing business with NewsGuard.

The Supreme Court was unanimous in the Vullo case in 2024 that government officials can’t “coerce a private party to punish or suppress disfavored speech on her behalf.” Using merger conditions to blacklist a company because you don’t like its journalism is exactly that.

It’s genuinely good to see NewsGuard fight back here. I’ve been somewhat critical of NewsGuard’s methodology in the past, but their right to express their opinions about news sources is protected speech, full stop. The government doesn’t get to punish them because some of those opinions hurt the feelings of conservative media outlets. (Also, as I always point out, NewsGuard was founded by the former publisher of the Wall Street Journal, the idea that he’s some “woke leftist” trying to suppress “conservative” news orgs is silly on its face).

And, honestly, this case reveals just how absurd the whole “censorship industrial complex” narrative has always been. The actual censorship happening here isn’t NewsGuard expressing opinions about news quality. It’s the government using its regulatory power to punish NewsGuard for expressing those opinions.

As the complaint aptly notes:

By accusing NewsGuard of providing “biased” evaluations of news sites, Chairman Ferguson has inverted the relationship between the government and the First Amendment. NewsGuard is a private business that offers assessments of the quality of news sites based on disclosed journalistic criteria. As a matter of law, NewsGuard cannot be a censor. But by asserting FTC control over the market for NewsGuard’s services, Chairman Ferguson has embraced the censor’s role

That’s exactly right. The government using its power to punish private companies for expressing opinions is censorship. Private companies expressing opinions is not.

The questions every journalist should ask funders (but usually don’t)

And what journalists are getting wrong in the application process

Over the last several months of my fellowship on journalism grants, I’ve talked (and listened to) lots of funding officers at conferences and summits, on private calls, and before and after grant application cycles. I also spoke with a lot of successful grantees. Like many seeking funding, I wanted to know: What makes a good application? (SPOILER ALERT: It’s creative, but not too much.) But I also asked them about changes in the funding landscape, the use of artificial intelligence in applications and what journalists are getting wrong when applying. 

Their answers are condensed below.

What is the difference between a fellowship and a grant?

Fellowships are usually 9-12 months long and are focused on developing the talent and expertise of independent reporters or reporters and editors at news organizations. They include training, mentoring and coaching, a cohort experience, data and research support, over a specified time. Grants are usually geared more to cover the hard costs of a specific program or reporting project. They can be short term or over multiple years. Deadlines for grant applications can be rolling.

What’s the most important thing you look for when approving grants?

Passion.

What else do you look for from applicants?

How precisely the applicant answers the questions. Review the application questions carefully and answer them thoroughly. Don’t deviate from the question. Also, funders consider why this person or organization applying is interested in this grant: Is this something the applicant can do with a bit of support? Did they address in the application how this organization can specifically help them?

“What do you know that others do not know about how to serve the communities in really interesting ways?” Duc Luu of the Knight Foundation told journalists interested in funding at the Independent News Sustainability Summit in St. Louis in September. 

 Can I cut and paste from another funding application and send you the same information?

Yes, but be careful. Make sure you address all of the questions. When you apply for a job, you tailor each resume and cover letter to the job, said Sundra Hominik, the former director of partnerships at the Chronicle of Philanthropy. Personalize your grant application in the same way, she recommended.

Sundra Hominik recommends  journalists stick to the facts when answering questions on a grant application. Photo courtesy Sundra Hominik.
Sundra Hominik recommends  journalists stick to the facts when answering questions on a grant application. Photo courtesy Sundra Hominik.

How much do relationships matter in funding awards?

Relationships can matter a lot when getting a grant, but how much depends on the type of grant and the funder. Many private foundations don’t accept unsolicited proposals, fund organizations they already know and prefer introductions through trusted networks. That said, relationships matter for understanding what the funder really wants and determining whether your organization is a good fit.

How do I get my foot in the door if I don’t know you and the application is by invitation only?

Funders are always happy to receive emails and start new engagements but applicants often don’t reach out. However, when you get on the phone with one, don’t start with “the ask” for money. The grantor-grantee relationship is like any other relationship. Start with an email or coffee. 

As one successful grantee said, “Funders are like dating. You don’t go on a first date and say, ‘So are we gonna get married?’ If you go up to a funder and the very first thing you say to them is, ‘How do we get to be in a partnership and when will you give me money?’ That doesn’t work.”

Does where I live matter or influence whether I receive a grant?

It can. Certain foundations invest only in certain communities. Research the outlets getting funded. Also, research the foundations that provide money and their board members. Where are they from? “Everybody wants to see their community represented in the list of grants,” says Ruth Kaleniecki, former executive director of a community foundation.

Take a look at a foundation’s website and its 990s and examine the geographic location of its grantees. You can find those on ProPublica or via a free account on Candid, says Kaleniecki, whose firm provides consulting services to nonprofit and mission-driven organizations.

Hominik, who helped launch the Chronicle of Philanthropy fellowships program, agrees. She said the CoP, to a small degree, used a rubric in its fellows selection process. The selection committee’s “system” awarded extra points to newsroom applicants who were outside of New York, DC or the West Coast, where most of their applications originated. “We didn’t get many people from the middle or the south.”

If I’m applying for a grant, should I ask for more money or less?

Again, do some research. Take a look at the average size of previous grants awarded to inform your decision. If you’re looking for $500,000, you might discover that they’re really not awarding more than $150,000.

As an independent journalist, can I send a proposal without a publishing commitment from a media outlet?

It’s not recommended and in many cases is prohibited. Whether you are sending your proposal as a freelancer or as a staff member, get a letter of endorsement or support from the media organization that employs you or has agreed to publish your work during your fellowship.

Can I use artificial intelligence in my application?

You can, but think twice. These days, most applications ask for disclosures on how artificial intelligence was used. However, if you’re going to use it, use it sparingly.

Katherine Reynolds Lewis reviewed more than 1,334 grants applications and said she could tell which ones used AI. Photo courtesy Katherine Reynolds Lewis.
Katherine Reynolds Lewis reviewed more than 1,334 grants applications and said she could tell which ones used AI. Photo courtesy Katherine Reynolds Lewis.

Start with the grant guidelines because the use of AI can be disqualifying, said Katherine Reynolds Lewis, founder of the Institute for Independent Journalists. There are varying types of AI so it’s a judgement call on which are aides and which are substitutes for human brains.

As special projects editor for the Greater Good Science Center, Reynolds Lewis steered the review process for the organization’s recent media grant application cycle. She said she could tell which of the 1,334 applications she reviewed were written with the use of AI because they didn’t seem to have intention. “They were soulless. A great application jumps off the page with humanity.”

More applications are asking for video answers. Seems like a way to invite race, gender, and other biases among judges. It’s also stressful and applicants say it’s one of the most challenging parts of an application. Why are you and others now asking for this? 

Journalists are increasingly using AI in their applications. A video has the additional benefit of adding humanity. Some funders have conducted reviews of the demographics of those with speaking roles in the videos to assess whether there was any evidence of bias, and say they found no evidence of bias against people of color. As far as the video, you don’t need fancy equipment, in fact, most applicants don’t have a high-production video or a CNN-type persona. Judges are just trying to get more of an idea about who you are. 

Is editorial independence guaranteed?

With a grant, there isn’t oversight, but make sure you’re meeting the terms of the agreement. “We don’t talk about stories before they’re published,” said Teresa Gorman of the Democracy Fund. As early as possible, have a conversation to make sure you’re on the same page, she said.  “We can listen to ideas but don’t direct coverage,” she said. 

Gorman also recommended consulting commentary from organizations such as the American Press Institute, which has published articles about the concept of an editorial firewall — meaning separation between news content and funding/donor influence — as part of ethical discussions about nonprofit newsrooms.

With fellowships, it’s a bit trickier, but negotiation is possible. Expect at least one edit. There may be some give and take but fellowship funders often want to talk stories through just so they know how and where to provide coaching and assistance.

Do you help grantees transition to other funding sources?

Funders do talk to each other and watch each other’s moves. But organizations have their own mission, so nothing is ever 100 percent guaranteed. “Keep an open dialogue about opportunities for future funding,” Gorman says.  It helps to share wins but also challenges. 

What are journalists getting wrong in the application process?

Getting too creative. In applications, you want to think creatively, while answering the questions and sticking to the facts.  Don’t color too far outside the lines. Be thorough but be precise. Unfortunately, many journalists are submitting applications but don’t meet the requirements of the grant or fellowship.  

“Sometimes [previous applicants] would tell their life story as opposed to answering the questions,” Hominik said.

Many funders say a common mistake is that applicants don’t check the website to see which projects have already been done, or which projects the organization might already be funding. Migration crises in Europe and the United States are hot topics for applicants. They’ve also been covered a lot. How will your stories be different from what’s already been covered or funded?

Surprisingly, one of the biggest challenges for journalists is the deadline. You have to meet the deadline.


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Cite this article

Williams, Monica  (2026, Feb. 20). The questions every journalist should ask funders (but usually don’t). Reynolds Journalism Institute. Retrieved from: https://rjionline.org/news/the-questions-every-journalist-should-ask-funders-but-usually-dont/

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