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Online comments: Headache or key link to readers? Help our research

Participate in our online research on the management of online comments and help find creative ways to host civil conversations and build engaged communities.

by WAN-IFRA Staff executivenews@wan-ifra.org | July 6, 2016

Join our research: online questionnaire (10/15 min)

News about user comments tends to be negative: publishers closing down or restricting comments because of online hate speech and abuse or because the cost of keeping conversations civil, through active moderation, is just too great for resource-scarce newsrooms.

There are however encouraging examples where the link between users and the newsroom is strong, healthy and of value.

Read: Five lessons from managing online comments

The World Editors Forum wants to tap your experience in a global study of how newsrooms are managing online comments.

The online questionnaire, which can be accessed here, and takes 10-15 minutes to complete, probes the difficulties editors have in balancing free expression with the type of conversations taking place around their content. Editors who participate will receive preview copies of the research.

It will explore creative solutions being used by organisations that are determined to retain comments as a link to their audience. It builds on research Online Comment Moderation: Towards Best Practice, conducted by the World Editors Forum in 2013.

Read: Online comments prove value in wake of Brexit

This study comes at a critical time when inflammatory issues around race, religion, politics and immigration are testing the limits of free speech. Many publishers have opted to move the conversation to social media platforms, limiting their liability but increasing the risk for reputational damage.

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