Difference between revisions of "Omidyar Network"
m (typo) |
m (Text replacement - "nonprofit" to "nonprofit") |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
}} | }} | ||
==Official narrative== | ==Official narrative== | ||
− | The ''Omidyar Network'' describes itself as "a philanthropic investment firm" established in 2004 by eBay founder [[Pierre Omidyar]] and his wife Pam. It claims to have "disseminated over $290 million to companies and nonprofit organizations that foster economic advancement," but is mostly a way to buy political influence. | + | The ''Omidyar Network'' describes itself as "a philanthropic investment firm" established in 2004 by eBay founder [[Pierre Omidyar]] and his wife Pam. It claims to have "disseminated over $290 million to companies and [[nonprofit]] organizations that foster economic advancement," but is mostly a way to buy political influence. |
It has spent significant resources on neutralizing threats to [[corporate media]] by buying the 'alternative' media landscape, including by '[[flooding the zone]]' with big donations to [[fact checkers]], [[Wikipedia]] and the Network's preferred type of bland 'independent' journalists. | It has spent significant resources on neutralizing threats to [[corporate media]] by buying the 'alternative' media landscape, including by '[[flooding the zone]]' with big donations to [[fact checkers]], [[Wikipedia]] and the Network's preferred type of bland 'independent' journalists. |
Latest revision as of 11:06, 17 November 2024
Official narrative
The Omidyar Network describes itself as "a philanthropic investment firm" established in 2004 by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar and his wife Pam. It claims to have "disseminated over $290 million to companies and nonprofit organizations that foster economic advancement," but is mostly a way to buy political influence.
It has spent significant resources on neutralizing threats to corporate media by buying the 'alternative' media landscape, including by 'flooding the zone' with big donations to fact checkers, Wikipedia and the Network's preferred type of bland 'independent' journalists.
It is managed by Matt Bannick (December 2013), the former general manager of eBay International.
Recipients
The list of 'partners' are gathered from the website [1], but is not a complete list of where the money has ended up. Quite a few recipients are not listed, but can be found on the 990 tax form[2] (like Full Fact), or $180,000 to the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy "to support survey research to understand misinformation and dangerous speech on encrypted peer-to-peer messaging services".[2]