TBH while Springer's main outlets like BILD are shit, I found politico quite alright so far. I mean whatever news source you're consuming it's important to know where they're coming from anyway. I like politico cause there's no shit paywall and non-enshittified website and also a proper RSS feed, which is super rare these days.
I agree, but you'll have to watch it. They probably knew that a radical shift to the right would alienate their current readers, so they are taking it slowly
I think that we will keep having a mixup of "Buy European", "Boycott US" and "Privacy" because of the typical overlap of reasons why consumers change their behavior. I really like the visualisations that acknowledge this difference and indicate which alternatives satisfy which reasons for wanting to switch away from American providers.
Not sure if op edited the original question before or after your comment, but I say the question is definitely is about 'buying' European despite also being about not buying American. As of now this is what op asks: "I want to switch from those American for profit news outlets to Euro or non-profit news outlets, what are my options?"
On Oct. 11, a San Francisco judge gave preliminary approval to a settlement that would see Thomson Reuters cough up $27.5 million, mostly to state residents. The deal caps off a legal battle that began in 2020: Two Alameda County activists sued the media giant over its Clear product, accusing the company of compiling millions of people’s personal data and putting it up for sale on the searchable database.
I'm not from the UK and read them, they have an 'international edition' (although online and in the app it's just a filter I suppose). Skip most stuff about uk, but still.
They also have a two or three weekend magazines which are not free but it's not hard to find the pdf online.
AFP is independent by law. It can't be related to any ideology or government. It has mission of general interest with journalists all over the world and fact checkers.
I don't know which one is it a replacement for, but I like https://www.europeancorrespondent.com/ for their quick summaries about what is happening across Europe
They are mostly e-mail based (weekly or daily, split into north, central, eastern, western Europe that you cna opt in) but you can read it on their website also if you want.
The Register is a British tech news website. It's like if The Verge was even more techy, more sarcastic, and cared less about being trendy. I like it and read it sometimes.
The Register also has a few connected sites that cover different tech specialities. E.g. DevClass which focuses on news in the software development world.
Careful about Heise. Their tech news are probably alright but they also got Telepolis which is their super weird conspiracy nut pro-russian political branch and it's easy to end up reading that shit on their intermixed website.
My understanding is that the board is held in a trust format to ensure editorial independence. They often do advocate for policies that would be beneficisl for all, and not the 1%
Of late, both times they supported trumps opposition.
They are one of the few internationally respected organisations that actually have news outside Europe and America, that's not business news from Japan or china.
It may not be for you and every news source is biased in some way but I find it quite balanced.
On Oct. 11, a San Francisco judge gave preliminary approval to a settlement that would see Thomson Reuters cough up $27.5 million, mostly to state residents. The deal caps off a legal battle that began in 2020: Two Alameda County activists sued the media giant over its Clear product, accusing the company of compiling millions of people’s personal data and putting it up for sale on the searchable database.
Federation not always work the way we want and not all posts get propagated to every instance, in this thread I only see the top post of yours, which @ueeu@vivaldi.net whom I follow replied to — Fediverse moment 😅