Trust and credibility of urban youth on online news media
When the Internet was introduced, there were comparatively few websites, especially news websites. Today, new media technology’s drastic developments in the communications field have had a big impact on society at large. The development and larger availability of information and activities seem to o...
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ukm-32532016-12-14T06:34:05Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/3253/ Trust and credibility of urban youth on online news media Sharon, Wilson Pauline, Leong Carmen, Nge Ngerng, Miang Hong When the Internet was introduced, there were comparatively few websites, especially news websites. Today, new media technology’s drastic developments in the communications field have had a big impact on society at large. The development and larger availability of information and activities seem to offer people the opportunity of quick access, and systematically providing, in seconds, what would have previously taken months of perusing newspaper stacks of microfilm rolls (Deacon, 2007). These features supersede the more traditional print medium in terms of delivering news with immediacy and impact, and act as a powerful lure that continually draws readers. This paper investigates online consumer behaviour with regards to student perceptions of the trust and credibility of online news. From a survey of 1,000 students of institutions of higher education in the Klang Valley, findings reveal that youth still rely on traditional media to obtain news. However, traditional media fails to provide sufficient information for youth so they resort to getting additional information from alternative news websites. Nevertheless, their level of trust in alternative news websites is based on how accurately these sites reflect the current scenario. Findings also reveal that students believe alternative news websites present different viewpoints, are more critical, have more in-depth analysis and are relatively free from interference.All these factors seemingly contribute to youth’s trust of the alternative news websites they read. What is interesting is the fact that the trust extends to alternative online news sources but excludes blogs and the findings clearly show that the youth are not weaned off of traditional media. Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2011 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/3253/1/V27_2_6.pdf Sharon, Wilson and Pauline, Leong and Carmen, Nge and Ngerng, Miang Hong (2011) Trust and credibility of urban youth on online news media. Jurnal Komunikasi ; Malaysian Journal of Communication, 27 (2). pp. 97-120. ISSN 0128-1496 http://www.ukm.my/jkom |
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Digital Repository |
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Local University |
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Universiti Kebangasaan Malaysia |
building |
UKM Institutional Repository |
collection |
Online Access |
language |
English |
description |
When the Internet was introduced, there were comparatively few websites, especially news websites. Today, new media technology’s drastic developments in the communications field have had a big impact on society at large. The development and larger availability of information and activities seem to offer people the opportunity of quick access, and systematically providing, in seconds, what
would have previously taken months of perusing newspaper stacks of microfilm rolls (Deacon, 2007). These features supersede the more traditional print medium in terms of delivering news with immediacy and impact, and act as a powerful lure that continually draws readers. This paper investigates online consumer behaviour with regards to student perceptions of the trust and credibility of
online news. From a survey of 1,000 students of institutions of higher education in the Klang Valley, findings reveal that youth still rely on traditional media to obtain news. However, traditional media fails to provide sufficient information for youth so they resort to getting additional information from alternative news websites. Nevertheless, their level of trust in alternative news
websites is based on how accurately these sites reflect the current scenario. Findings also reveal that students believe alternative news websites present different viewpoints, are more critical, have more in-depth analysis and are relatively free from interference.All these factors seemingly contribute to youth’s trust of the alternative news websites they read. What is interesting is the
fact that the trust extends to alternative online news sources but excludes blogs and the findings clearly show that the youth are not weaned off of traditional media. |
format |
Article |
author |
Sharon, Wilson Pauline, Leong Carmen, Nge Ngerng, Miang Hong |
spellingShingle |
Sharon, Wilson Pauline, Leong Carmen, Nge Ngerng, Miang Hong Trust and credibility of urban youth on online news media |
author_facet |
Sharon, Wilson Pauline, Leong Carmen, Nge Ngerng, Miang Hong |
author_sort |
Sharon, Wilson |
title |
Trust and credibility of urban youth on online news media |
title_short |
Trust and credibility of urban youth on online news media |
title_full |
Trust and credibility of urban youth on online news media |
title_fullStr |
Trust and credibility of urban youth on online news media |
title_full_unstemmed |
Trust and credibility of urban youth on online news media |
title_sort |
trust and credibility of urban youth on online news media |
publisher |
Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/3253/ http://journalarticle.ukm.my/3253/ http://journalarticle.ukm.my/3253/1/V27_2_6.pdf |
first_indexed |
2023-09-18T19:38:17Z |
last_indexed |
2023-09-18T19:38:17Z |
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1777405418858872832 |