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The indictment against Keys, which came out in mid-March, alleged that he'dwhile employed by a TV station in California. Those charges, which could result in up to 25 years in prison, prompted Reuters towhile the issue was resolved. That leave ended today.
Just got off the phone. Reuters has fired me, effective today. Our union will be filing a grievance. More soon.
— Matthew Keys (@TheMatthewKeys)Keys's leave and the charges that prompted them only briefly interfered with his prodigious social media use. The consistent drama of last week's events in Boston prompted Keys to tweet thousands of times — 383 times on Friday alone. And those tweets prompted critics to call him out.
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The Awl's Choire Sicha, in a story titledbroadly criticized the tendency of social media addicts to urgently share incorrect information. But he reserved special critique for Keys.
And then there was Matthew Keys, Deputy Social Media Editor at Reuters, once "considered a wunderkind of new media." His livestream today of any word, rumor, idea, anything: just absurd!Showing one minute of tweets from Keys, Sicha concluded, "The sheer amount of useless, misleading and random noise put out by this account is unreal."
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In her recap of the week's media blunders by various outlets, Hilary Sargent (who runs the blog ) used the example of Keys' misinformation — calling him the Reuters' "sort-of-former" social media editor — to lead her critique of the company at large.
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In a brief conversation earlier today, a representative of Reuters confirmed to The Atlantic Wire that Keys' tweets last week were solely his own and not on behalf of the company. Indeed, the company'sdoesn't include tweets from Keys.
Keys defended one component of his actions — his reliance on using information from police scanners — inwith the title, "Dear Every Writer Or Editor Who Has Used My Name In A Critical Piece About The Boston Marathon And Scanner Traffic These Past Few Days." But he also offered another tacit defense of his efforts on Twitter.
...perhaps if I was in a real newsroom with access to my work email, instead of shut out a month ago, I wouldn't be working out of a bedroom
— Matthew Keys (@TheMatthewKeys)In other words: If Reuters hadn't suspended him, he'd have been better able to share information.
It was the second time during the week that Keys criticized his former employer. On Wednesday, he , his boss at Reuters, was stealing his tweets.
.@ please don't copy/paste from my tweets -
— Matthew Keys (@TheMatthewKeys)Sara Morrison of Columbia Journalism Review (and a contributing writer for The Atlantic Wire) . Michael Rusch of BuzzFeed summarized the sentiment:
This can't be good for Reuters: RT @: .@ please don't copy/paste from my tweets -
— Michael Rusch (@weeddude)When asked, the Reuters representative we spoke with didn't offer any rationale for Keys' firing, merely confirming that he is no longer a Reuters employee. Keys has not yet replied to a request for comment, but he did explain his understanding of that rationale on Twitter:
Reuters said the basis of my termination was because I violated my final written warning. You can read it here -
— Matthew Keys (@TheMatthewKeys)That letter, which apparently served as Key's final written warning as part of his termination process, alleges that he created a parody Twitter account. That account, mocking the CEO of Google, suggested that Keys wasn't "guided 24 hours a day by the ethics" of Thomson Reuters. Perhaps more to the point:
… the fake account embarrassed our News reporting team and has possibly damaged our relationship with a company that we have covered agressively. …We must see immediate improvement in your communications with managers and more discretion in your social media practices.
Shortly before Keys announced that he had been terminated, DeRosa, his former boss, tweeted this:
Last I checked, Twitter is an opt-in medium. If you're getting bad information, blame yourself for choosing to trust the wrong people.
— Anthony De Rosa (@AntDeRosa)Whether or not the two tweets are related is left as an exercise for the reader.
Top image from a video by .
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