Journalism & News Transmission sits at the beating heart of how our world understands itself. In an age when information races across continents in seconds, this sub-category explores the craft, technology, and evolving responsibilities behind every headline, alert, broadcast, and breaking update. Here, we dive into the storytellers who chase truth, the systems that deliver it, and the innovations reshaping how news reaches audiences on every device and in every corner of the globe. From classic field reporting to algorithm-powered distribution, from newsroom ethics to digital verification, this space unpacks the forces shaping modern communication. Whether you’re fascinated by investigative reporting, curious about real-time news networks, or exploring how AI transforms coverage, this hub reveals the behind-the-scenes world that keeps societies informed and connected. Communication Streets showcases Journalism & News Transmission as both an art and a critical public service—alive, urgent, and constantly adapting. Step inside to discover how information becomes impact, how stories take shape, and how today’s news pathways influence tomorrow’s conversations.
A: To gather, verify, and share information in the public interest as accurately and fairly as possible.
A: News aims to report facts and multiple perspectives; opinion pieces argue a point of view.
A: Anyone or anything that provides information—documents, experts, witnesses, data sets, and more.
A: Check the publisher, author, date, sources, spelling/formatting, and whether other outlets confirm it.
A: Information a source shares that reporters agree not to publish or attribute directly.
A: Corrections and updates show that new facts emerged or errors were fixed—part of responsible reporting.
A: Organizations that gather news and share it with many outlets (like a shared reporting backbone).
A: It’s a delivery channel; the real source is the original outlet or reporter behind the post.
A: Subscribe, share responsibly, attend events, send constructive feedback, and engage with local outlets.
A: Read beyond the headline—skim the full piece and look for who’s quoted, how, and what’s left out.
