How do you know they want to be taken seriously?
Don't they? I thought that would be a safe assumption considering the overall content on the website: reviews, databases, software development, etc.
And if TPU isn't/shouldn't be taken seriously, then what's left for most other "tech" websites out there, whose "reviews" are so haphazardly made that they are borderline unboxings. Not that this isn't also present here on TPU at times, but the most important reviews (CPU and GPU) are some of the best out there.
Tabloids outsell serious press. This is what people want. This is what makes money.
Yes, they do outsell the serious press, however I was under the impression TPU wasn't in that category. I was also under the impression that TPU was closer to a hobby project, and not made exclusively with profitability in mind. Of course, I could be wrong.
That's all based on your assumption that TPU should handle this like The Times, not The Sun.
That is based on my assumption that TPU should handle things in general in a professional and objective manner. As any respectable news outlet should.
If TPU wants "teh moneyz from clikz", then can go the BuzzFeed route, but I doubt that would go well with its core audience, which is TPU's core audience for a reason.
It's not about reporting truth. It's about reporting.
I cannot believe I actually read that. Is this some kind of a sick joke?
Of course it's about reporting the truth. Otherwise we move into gossip, and maybe even straight out lies territory.
You put a story about "greedy MSI" on the front page on Monday and a tiny correction on the 3rd page on Tuesday. That's how it's been done for generations. TPU isn't innovating in any way.
The point isn't that TPU reported something incorrectly and then issued an update/correction. The point is that this update/correction would not have been necessary at all and that this whole ordeal could have been avoided if the people responsible for the "news" publication kept their heads cool, exercised a bit of patience, and handled the issue a bit differently.
By your logic, TPU can just report every single rumor that appears on Twitter/Reddit/whatever, regardless how outlandish it might sound. They can always issue corrections later, right?
EDIT...
TPU is a decentralized amateur project: there is no office, there is no actual company behind it and there's hardly any liability for the content they post. It's slightly grey market, unofficial. It aims a particular niche of consumers. It's not very open for other stuff.
It has it's charm. It's just not for everyone.
Then let me put it this way. We who criticize how TPU handled this do it because we want to hold TPU to the high standards it has set for itself throughout its lifetime.