
The quality of news has declined: news should be reported in concise words in a general way with the most valuable facts happened nearby.
However, concerns have been raised within the media sector about the working conditions of journalists and the quality of the news they produce.
Journalists face high work pressure and imbalance between work and life, which leads to news job burnout.
According to studies in Belgium and the United States, young journalists who work for small newspapers are more likely to be bored.

With more tasks and less factual journalism, the autonomy of journalists’ careers is being affected. Professional reporters are not satisfied with salary, promotion prospects, workload and other aspects to a certain extent.
With the decline of professional autonomy, the quality of news provided by journalists is getting worse.
In the era of digitisation and commercialisation of media, the working pressure of journalists is increasing.
Some journalists may report stories that do not conform to the facts or that do not highlight important points for business reasons.
Although most of the news is true, some of it can affect people’s judgment of the facts.
Before, the media had the responsibility to show the truth to the public, but now many media reported the incident without investigating it clearly.
If one day, journalists cannot report high-quality news and information, then the public may be disappointed in the news media.