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How do we resist the growing influence of Big Tech over our lives? Nobel Peace Prize winner, Maria Ressa and Australian ...
Maria Ressa in Manila on Feb. 14, 2019, after posting bail at a regional trial court following an overnight arrest by National Bureau of Investigation agents in a libel case. (Bullit Marquez/AP) ...
Journalist Maria Ressa arrives at a regional trial court in Manila to post bail Friday after being charged with cyber libel. (Noel Celis / AFP/Getty Images) By Ana P. Santos, David Pierson .
Journalist Maria Ressa, who has spent decades of her career exposing corruption and disinformation, is calling for "emergency intervention" to combat social media's influence on politics and society.
Maria Ressa, 2021 Nobel Peace Prize winner and Rappler CEO, gestures as she talks to reporters after being acquitted by the Pasig Regional Trial Court over a tax evasion case in Pasig city ...
Maria Ressa’s fate, and how the international community responds to it, will be an important predictor of the state of press freedom in the years ahead. On June 19, ...
Maria Ressa was packing her bags when she heard the sound of screaming protesters outside her Paris hotel room. Ressa covered war zones for years. Now the head of startup news website Rappler, she ...
Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Ressa (right) is interviewed by Phil Chetwynd, global news director for AFP news agency, during a keynote session at the GlobalFact 11 fact-checking conference in ...
Maria Ressa hasn’t eaten all day—but she hardly seems to need to, tiny as she is, smiling, full of talk, driven by some internal flywheel of restless, merry-warrior energy that never lets up.
Rappler Chief Executive and Executive Editor Maria Ressa reacts during an interview at a restaurant in Taguig, Philippines, on Oct. 9. The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Ressa, plus Dmitry ...
On Monday, a Philippine judge found Maria Ressa ’86 — a world-renowned journalist and founder of the independent news site Rappler — and her colleague, Reynaldo Santos, Jr., guilty on spurious charges ...
Maria Ressa, a prominent critic of Philippines President Rodrigo Duerte, says it’s easier to be on the frontline as a war correspondent than to fight for press freedom, because “you don’t ...