Telepolis

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Telepolis
CategoriesScience, culture
FounderArmin Medosch
Florian Rötzer
Founded1996
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
Websitewww.telepolis.de

Telepolis is a German

Heinz Heise Verlag since the beginning of 1996.[1][2]

It was founded by journalists Armin Medosch and Florian Rötzer and deals with privacy, science, culture, internet-related and general politics and media. Other contributors include Mathias Bröckers, Gabriele Hooffacker or Burkhard Schröder.

Telepolis received the European prize for online journalism in the category "investigative reporting" in 2000 for its coverage of the Echelon project; in 2002, it received the Online Grimme prize.

It periodically releases special issues, the first printed edition (January 2005) being on "Aliens - how researchers and space travellers want to uncover their presence." One of the articles in this edition, perhaps the most daring, described the so-called

exobiology
.

Criticism

Telepolis presents contemporary historical topics differing from the so-called

In their 2017 essay "Lügenpresse - Eine Verschwörungstheorie?", Uwe Krüger and Jens Seiffert-Brockmann discuss counter-publics and alternative media that are anchored in various milieus and ideological orientations. During the Russo-Ukrainian War, they examined Telepolis, among others, and found that this medium emphasised information from a left-wing perspective that was negative towards the pro-Western actors and questioned the narrative of the democratic revolution. What such media have in common is "that they work on perforating the established media reality, questioning the established mass media definitions of reality, declaring reference frames and axioms of the mainstream invalid and exchanging them." The liberal, pluralistic democracy is portrayed as an opinion dictatorship based on a conspiracy between ruling elites and the established media.[5]

In 2019, the Americanist and conspiracy theory researcher Michael Butter placed Telepolis among the alternative media such as KenFM, NachDenkSeiten or Rubikon, all of which would form an alternative public sphere to the traditional mass media and public broadcasting. According to Butter, they serve conspiracy theorys such as that of the lying press and sell them as serious news.[6]

References

  1. ^ Heise.de
  2. ^ Heise-gruppe.de
  3. ^ Felix Huesmann (11 September 2021). "Myths surrounding 9/11: The gateway drug to the world of conspiracies". Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  4. ^ Wolfgang Wippermann: Agents of Evil. Conspiracy Theories from Luther to Today, be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, pp. 134-140.
  5. doi:10.1007/978-3-658-18099-7_4, p. 67-88, here p. 68 ff ([1], p. 68, at Google Books
    ).
  6. De Gruyter
    Online).

External links