We introduced the changes from September 24 onwards. Legally registered media outlet Knack is a Flemish (Belgian) magazine with a website.Most articles in Factchecking are freely accessible, but not all.
We suggest applicant opens all material of Knack Factchecker to the public without any restrictions like registering or paywalls.Not all articles have a direct hyperlink to the source. We suggest that the 'rule of thumb' to provide 'all possible hyperlinks' is followed more strictly.Applicant claims a broad scope of themes. But 80% of a sample of articles was about just three topics.
Knack.be is ranked #318 for News and Media/Newspapers and #19565 Globally. De hele dag nieuws, analyses, opinies en diepgravende journalistiek. Standaard HetLaatste Nieuws 313.79684. 36.10258.000 225.2457 402.3480 Knack –430.89967. 67.68818.000 –596.9228 –264.8765 HetLaatste Nieuws.
We suggest applicant changes 'broad scope' into 'concentrate on health, work and gender related issues' on their public page about the project.The edit-policy is not transparent. There is most of the time no explanation why the update was necessary and what the update is.on 05-Jun-2019 (10 months ago). Knack Factchecker (has been a weekly section in our print and online publication for more than six years now. Knack Magazine (www.knack.be) is a publication of the media company Roularta Media Group, a Belgian listed multi-media group with over 1,500 employees and a total combined turnover of 400 million euros. The media company was established back in 1954. Some twenty years later the first issue of Knack Magazine appeared, in 1971.
The first Knack Factchecker appeared in 2012 (pdf attached).More details on the company and its foundation are stated in the 'about' on the website of Roularta Media Group (overview of all the media products of Roularta Media Group can be found on the 'our brands' section on the website of the company. For more details on Knack Magazine in particular: https://www.roulartamedia.be/en/brands/magazines/knack. Legally registered media outlet. Knack is a Flemish (Belgian) weekly magazine with a website that allows access to three articles per month for free but only after you open an account.
Access to Knack Factchecker is partly restricted. Some fact checks (f.e. About chocolate and ugly men) are not available to the general public. Visitors are asked to take a subscription or register. We suggest to be as transparent as possible and open all material of Knack Factchecker to the public.doneall 1a marked as Fully compliant by Henk van Ess. Applicant claims in 1A that Knack Factchecker has been a weekly section 'in our print and online publication for more than six years now'. In this section,1B, applicant claims the online archive is active since 2017 which seems to be correct.
Therefore we suggest to edit the text in 1A into' Knack Factchecker (has been a weekly section in our print since 2012 and online since 2017.On we found over 90 articles. The oldest article is from May 3 2017. The archive doesn't allow to handpick month, weeks or years.
Some visitors can scroll down for the next few postings and repeat this process till the last posting. But this (slow) navigation is not supported by all browsers which show only 20 articles. A suggested shortcut is not working.
Under each article it says 'Read all articles about Factchecker' (we suggest to change this text in 'Read all articles from Factchecker') the link doesn't show 'all articles'. Only 20 articles are shown, not 90+. We suggest to fix this.
Some other suggestions: use tags so people can browse on interests and be more transparent about your edits, see also 6A.doneall 1b marked as Fully compliant by Henk van Ess. Knack Factchecker works in accordance with the Code of Principles of the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN), which has been translated and published on our website in the 'about' section of Knack Factchecker. (a rule, the editor in chief decides which claim is being checked, on the basis of contextualized suggestions of the author of Knack Factchecker.In the claim selection we follow classic news selection criteria such as topicality, proximity, social relevance, interest and curiosity of the reader. We intend to present a broad variety of subjects, and steer clear from any bias as to the political affiliations of politicians discussed. In our claim selection the following conditions also apply:. The claim we verify must actually be verifiable.
Opinions - opinions about facts - are not verifiable, and therefore fall outside the scope of Knack Factchecker. The claim cannot be a prediction, because the future cannot be verified. Exceptions to this principle are claims that are based on scientific research and / or prognoses.
We aim for a broad scope in themes (health, mobility, crime, environment, migration, taxes.) as well as political position (government / opposition) and nature of the woman or man who makes the statement (called 'sender'). Those senders must have public resonance and influence. In a non-exhaustive list, it concerns politicians, media, scientists, top civil servants, interest groups, pressure groups, pundits, business leaders, etc.
Sources for claim selection can be found in parliamentary debates, current affairs programs on radio, television and online, advertising, talk shows, social media, newspaper coverage, political campaign material, etc. The claim must be controversial. That means that some people have questions about its truthfulness. Those people can be political opponents, scientists, on topic experts, readers, or ourselves. The claim must be relevant. Whether it is correct or not, must make a difference in the public debate and / or in the everyday life of our readers. The entertainment value of a claim discussed in Knack Factchecker can be an argument when selecting claims that are less relevant for public debate.
Do we publish Knack Factchecker on claims that are correct? We focus on news and claims that seem too strong to be true, but we do publish when they indeed turn out to be so. To tell the story 'why'. The claim must be verifiable and its context should be clear. Where and when it was launched on the public forum, and by whom, must be exactly known and verifiable.
Readers can also make suggestions.Knack Factchecker checks claims from all different political parties, but also claims from other 'senders' such as other media outlets and/or influencers/experts who make claims concerning their field of expertise.In the following list we are happy to share ten fact checks to illustrate our scope and standard procedure (infra, criteria 3a/5a):1. 'Monthly costs asylum seeker: 2255 euro's' (sender: Vlaams Belang, populist right political party, election propaganda; topic: migration/asylum)2. '2 out of 3 employees feel too tired to enjoy free time' (sender: Groen, green political party, referring to reported research; topic: economy/wellbeing)3. '56 European cities offer free public transport' (sender: PvdA, extreme left political party, election propaganda; topic: mobility, public transport)4. 'Our number of nurses per hospital bed is at the level of Bulgaria and Greece' (sender: Maggie De Block, minister in office of Open VLD, right-wing liberal political party; topic: health care)5. 'The plastic bag is 20,000 times more environmentally friendly than the cotton ecobag' (sender: Doorbraak, Flemish conservative opinion website; topic: environment/climate)6. 'Cars are parked 95 percent of the time' (sender: Mikael Colville-Andersen, ceo Copenhagenize Design Company, expert who promotes bicycles; topic: mobility)7.
'Full bush is the healthiest pubic hair style' (sender: Metro, media outlet reporting on recent research; topic: health)8. 'Half of all job seekers live in poverty' (sender: Matthias Somers, expert at the leftist think tank Minerva; topic: poverty; author of this fact-check: Jef Van Baelen - different author, same standard procedure)9. '70 percent of Muslim women have no job' (sender: Hicham El Mzairh, politician, SP.A, socialist party; topic: integration / religion / economy)10. 'The slower you talk, the more confident you come across' (sender: Goedele Leyssen, health and yoga consultant; topic: psychology, personal growth/success)Knack Factchecker appears both in the paper magazine and online. The number of words of the piece is fixed, so that the text and the illustration do not exceed one page in Knack Magazine on paper (see example attached). The fact check is not an exhaustive and complete overview of what the journalistic research has brought to the fore, but a concise and manageable article that reflects the reasoning and the most important sources that lead to the conclusion.
Applicant uses the IFCN code and translated it into Dutch. Because applicant meets most of the criteria for 2A, we gave a 'Fully compliant'. But we do think there is room for improvement.Applicant claims in a broad scope in themes ('health, mobility, crime, environment, migration, taxes')We studied almost 50% of all published articles (=46 articles) and found that over 80% of the those articles were about three topics. The number 1 is health (23x), followed by 2. Work/economics (8) and 3. Gender or race related (7). We suggest applicant either changes 'broad scope' into 'concentrate on health, work and gender related issues' or starts to factcheck a broader range of topics.doneall 2a marked as Fully compliant by Henk van Ess.
As stated in the 'about' section, Knack Factchecker is an autonomous and independent form of journalism (ambition is to present truthful facts, without the influence of any ideological agenda or bias. To ensure unbiased and neutral treatment of allegations, the journalists behind Knack Factchecker are not politically active. They participate in the political process as voters because they have that responsibility as a citizen, but they avoid public expression of any political opinion whatsoever, and try to avoid any appearance of bias.We avoid and prohibit everything that might compromise the Knack Factchecker and our ability to work independently and honestly.' As pointed out in section 1 of this application form, Knack Factchecker is a section of Knack Magazine, 'the news magazine par excellence in Flanders' of the listed media company Roularta Media Group.Knack Factchecker is reimbursed per article on a freelance basis. The funding comes from the general editorial budget of Knack Magazine.The most recent annual and financial reports of the company are published on its website.
These reports have free access, and are to be found here (https://www.roularta.be/en/roularta-stock-market/financial/annual-reports). All fact checks carry the byline of authors.The list of all authors and key actors behind Knack Factchecker, together with their biographies, is published on the website of Knack Magazine in the 'about' section (example is given below. The main author of Knack Factchecker is Jan Jagers:'Jan Jagers (°1979), holder of a PhD in political and social sciences, is an independent freelance journalist. He writes for Knack since 2007 and has been our regular Factchecker since the beginning of the section in October 2012. In 2006 he obtained his PhD at the University of Antwerp with a doctorate on populism among Flemish political parties (De Stem van het Volk!, 2006; From 2001 to 2006 he worked at the University of Antwerp as a fellow of the Research Foundation - Flanders (www.fwo.be). He was part of the research group Media, Movements and Politics (M2P, Besides freelance journalist, currently Jagers is also assistant professor in journalism at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, where he supervises students with their master's thesis on investigative journalism.'
A step-by-step explanation of the methodology used by Knack Factchecker is given below.Each fact check is different and each claim requires a specific investigation. Yet we have and follow a standard procedure (supra, criterion 2a).As a first step in the research, we generally contact the sender of the claim and ask the sender which source(s) the claim is based on and what exactly is meant by it. We ask for the factual ground and documents or research on which the statement is based, with the request to view the evidence for ourselves. Does the claim follow from the proof that has been submitted? That is the first question.Next, we use various journalistic methods as transparently as possible to investigate the factual basis of the claim. We look for (official) figures, (scientific) research, reports.
And use inter alia expert interviews - for example with academics from the subject area - to find out the true facts. If the claim does not follow from the evidence provided, taking into account the context from which it comes, then why is that so?
And whether or not it follows from it, what do other research and domain experts say about the same subject? We continue to ask these questions until the saturation point is reached and a conclusion can be made with facts and insights according to our standards.In our assessment we distinguish four categories: true, rather true, rather untrue, and false:True: In both spirit and letter, the claim follows from the evidence and/or matches in its original context with the other factual knowledge and insights collected during the investigation. No exaggerations. No inaccuracies. No deception.
No omission of significant facts necessary to understand the claim correctly.Rather true: The claim follows sufficiently from the evidence and/or is, in its original context, sufficiently in line with the other factual knowledge and insights collected during the investigation. Significant facts or context to understand the claim correctly are missing. There may be some exaggeration.Rather untrue: The claim does not follow sufficiently from the evidence provided and/or is, in its original context, insufficiently in line with the other factual knowledge and insights collected during the investigation. Facts and/or context contradict the claim, are used incorrectly and/or present a clearly misleading message. However, the claim is not demonstrably wrong.False: The claim is demonstrably wrong. It follows insufficiently or not from the evidence and/or does not match, in its context, with the other factual knowledge and insights collected during the investigation.We use 'reasonableness' as standard in our conclusions.
Details are important. However, also an assertion that has not been proven 100 percent can be called 'true' if the arguments lead to this conclusion.The burden of proof of the accuracy of the claim lies with the sender.Knack Factchecker relies on information and facts as they were available at the time of the verification process. The fact check is therefore always time-bound. What was true yesterday, might that be less or no longer today. Just as we cannot control the future, we have to reckon with the fact that the future offers different answers than we have today.The experts cited as authoritative sources have, as a general rule, reviewed and approved the manner in which they are cited. In the 'about' section of Knack Factchecker we unfold our policy to address corrections.
(also make mistakes. Knack applies the principle that any errors are acknowledged equitably and corrected as quickly as possible in all due transparency.As stated above in this application form, complaints and comments can be sent by e-mail to the editors of Knack Factchecker via [email protected] will always be read and handled by the author of the fact check after consulting with the editor in chief.If the supplied argument and/or the additional information is such that the fact check has to be revised and corrected, we immediately revise the text online. In case of major errors, this revision is mentioned explicitly, so that it is clear to readers what went wrong. In the paper magazine, we publish a correction in the appropriate section in the next issue.If the argument provided and/or the additional information is not crucial to the evaluation in the fact check, but nonetheless relevant or useful, we will provide this information as an update at the bottom of the article.In both cases - both the crucial and the other corrections and adjustments, the message 'updated on' appears at the top of the article with the hour and the date of the update. The edit-policy is not transparent. For example, in it says the article is from and updated December 28, 2018 - but there is no explanation why the update was necessary and what the update is. It could be a automatic date stamp of the CMS of Knack - but that is unclear to the reader.
The readers should not only what the update date is, but why. See also 6B.Applicant uses wrong e-mail address, not [email protected] but [email protected] 6a marked as Partially compliant by Henk van Ess. In the past year we have received exactly two correction requests.
Both of them from 'senders', requests to change our conclusion on the rating scale.The first request came from Klaas Slootmans, press officer of the right-wing Flemish party Vlaams Belang. It concerned the fact check on the cost of asylum seekers which has already been mentioned (procedures, the author of the fact check discussed the request - the e-mail and its content - with the editor in chief. As a result of that discussion, we explicitly added the fact that we received an e-mail from Klaas Slootmans after publication at the bottom of the article. We cited an argument that Mr Slootmans had given us before and that we had taken into account when drawing our conclusion, but the argument had not made it into the article due to the fact that the argument was not relevant for the conclusion and the limitations in terms of length of the paper version of the Knack Factchecker section.
We answered the e-mail (see e-mails attached). We did not receive any further reaction from Vlaams Belang.The second request for revision came from Kristoff De Winne on behalf of Matexi.
It concerned the fact check on the claim that ‘Renovated homes consume twice as much (energy) than new homes’ (Like Slootmans, De Winne asked us to revise our conclusion. However, he did not provide us with any new information or arguments that would lead to a different evaluation. Essentially, De Winne repeated what he had told and written us before.Following procedures, the author of the fact check discussed the matter internally with the editor in chief. Since no new information was given, the complaint was judged to be irrelevant.
We replied to Kristoff De Winne’s letter and asked Matexi to write a letter of complaint, which would be published in our next issue.They chose not to do that (‘to avoid coming into a polemic, where both parties are right’) (see e-mails attached). Applicant lists feedback on the Factcheck page, but we like to raise the question if there is a clear distinction between factchecking of Knack and reader feedback.Mr Klaas Slootmans, a Flemish politician, is allowed to have the last word in the article in a prominent grey box straight after the verdict of Knack, cHe is allowed to claim that Knack's factcheck result rather not true' 'is even a conservative calculation'. This leaves the reader puzzled: they just read a dissection of facts by Knack making clear the claim is not true. But the politician can say the opposite.Applicant claims that 'we explicitly added the fact that we received an e-mail from Klaas Slootmans'. There is no mention of an e-mail in the article, just that he responded.The edit-date seems to be wrong. According to the e-mail, mr Slootmans complained on Aug 22 2018 17:34 - within an hour of publication moment. The update on doesn't say Aug 22 or Aug 23, but Dec 28 - which is months later.doneall 6b marked as Fully compliant by Henk van Ess.
Criterion 5.5The applicant seeks where possible to contact those who made the claim to seek supporting evidence, noting that (i) this is often not possible with online claims, (ii) if the person who makes the claim fails to reply in a timely way this should not impede the fact check, (iii) if a speaker adds caveats to the claim, the fact-checker should be free to continue with checking the original claim, (iv) fact-checkers may not wish to contact the person who made the claim for safety or other legitimate reasons.