Facebook to Invest $300 Million in Struggling Local News

The investment will not tie news media companies to the social media giant.

PARIS, FRANCE - MAY 24:  Facebook's founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks to participants during the Viva Technologie show at Parc des Expositions Porte de Versailles on May 24, 2018 in Paris, France.  Viva Technology, the new international event brings together 5,000 startups with top investors, companies to grow businesses and all players in the digital transformation who shape the future of the internet.  (Photo by Chesnot/Getty Images)
PARIS, FRANCE - MAY 24: Facebook's founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks to participants during the Viva Technologie show at Parc des Expositions Porte de Versailles on May 24, 2018 in Paris, France. Viva Technology, the new international event brings together 5,000 startups with top investors, companies to grow businesses and all players in the digital transformation who shape the future of the internet. (Photo by Chesnot/Getty Images)
Getty Images

Facebook announced a plan to invest $300 million over three years into local news across the world in an effort to bolster both a struggling industry and its image.

The substantial investment is meant to help both U.S. and international newsrooms “create and sustain viable business models to survive,” the company said on Tuesday, according to Reuters.

Unlike Facebook’s previous investments into the news industry, this latest round is distinguished by how it is not tied to Facebook-related products. Earlier rounds of investment encouraged publishers to rely on delivering news over Facebook, which, eventually, hurt many organizations when Facebook’s strategies shifted, Reuters noted.

“We’re going to continue fighting fake news, misinformation, and low quality news on Facebook,” Campbell Brown, Facebook’s vice president of Global News Partnerships said in a statement. “But we also have an opportunity, and a responsibility, to help local news organizations grow and thrive.”

Facebook’s first round of investments in America will help outlets grow their local reporting resources, research how to use technology to improve news gathering, create new products, recruit “trainee community journalists” and place them in local newsrooms and also help fund a program modeled after the Peace Corp, which will place 1,000 journalists in local newsrooms over five years.

The recipients of the investments include the Pulitzer Center, Report for America, Knight-Lenfest Local News Transformation Fund, the Local Media Association and Local Media Consortium, the American Journalism Project and the Community News Project.

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