‘Fake news’ site forced to downsize, blaming campaign by ‘political Zionists’
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‘Fake news’ site forced to downsize, blaming campaign by ‘political Zionists’

The Canary claims "accusations of antisemitism" from "political Zionists" forced advertisers to abandon the platform.

Screenshot from Twitter, showing the SFFN campaign urging Macmillan Cancer Care to remove its advert from the Canary.
Screenshot from Twitter, showing the SFFN campaign urging Macmillan Cancer Care to remove its advert from the Canary.

A hard-left news site has been forced to downsize after anti fake-news activists compelled advertisers to blacklist it.

The Canary informed users its existing system “no longer works”, forcing it to take a “long, hard look” at how it works.

It comes after activists from the group ‘Stop Funding Fake News’ (SFFN) wrote to brands advertising on the Canary, urging them to stop funding the site.

SFFN, which claims The Canary “regularly publish fake news… to justify antisemitism”, had success in March when Macmillan Cancer Care pulled advertising. Ted Baker, WWF and Moonpig followed suit.

The Canary said its former model meant “relying on social media to drive traffic which generates advertising revenue… Facebook and Google changed their algorithms, meaning fewer people now see our articles. And people who don’t like our politics have encouraged our advertisers to blacklist us”.

Claiming the campaign has “come at a cost”, the site claims it had been “smeared with accusations of antisemitism by those who’ve weaponised the term for political ends”, but that it is simply “against the actions” of Israel.

The Canary added: “In the current post-truth political landscape, accusations stick – despite the facts to the contrary. That means advertisers are susceptible to pressure from political Zionists, and our advertising revenue is under fire.”

The site’s newsroom will now be “much leaner and more focused”, adding that “due to financial restrictions” writers will have less opportunity  to pitch their own stories.

SFFN told Jewish News “We are delighted to play a part in forcing them to downsize and making them loss-making.”

It added: “This shows that people can change things. By simply letting advertisers know where their money is going, our Twitter followers helped make it far less profitable to spread hate online”.

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