Matthew Keys

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Matthew Keys
Residence Sacramento
Nationality American
Occupation former Social Media Editor for Reuters
Known for Journalism; former social media editor for Reuters

Matthew Keys is an American journalist and blogger formerly[1] employed as the deputy social media editor for Reuters. Keys is best known for using social media platforms to advance developing news stories.[citation needed]

At Reuters, Keys published news to the organization's various social media accounts. As a journalist for the organization, Keys also occasionally contributed to reports (namely those with a social media-specific focus or where information may be found on social media platforms). Keys reported to the company's lead social media editor Anthony De Rosa.

Early work

Keys attended American River College in Sacramento, California. While at American River College, Keys signed on as the first online news producer for local television station KTXL. In 2011, Keys joined KGO-TV as a weekend web producer.

Accolades

In 2012, Time Magazine named Keys one of the Top 140 people to follow on Twitter.[2] That same year, the Huffington Post named Keys one of the 50 people to subscribe to for news on Facebook.[3]

Controversies

Hacking incident

In March 2013, Keys was charged by federal prosecutors with providing unauthorized access to the Los Angeles Times website for members of the hacker group Anonymous in December 2010. The hackers published a false story on the website.[4] Keys pleaded not guilty in federal court in April 2013.[5]

On October 7, 2015 Keys was found guilty on all charges and is scheduled to be sentenced on January 20, 2016.[6]

On April 13, 2016, Keys was sentenced to two years in federal prison.[7]

Keys was represented throughout all legal proceedings by Jay Leiderman and Tor Ekeland.[8]

Dismissal from Reuters

On April 22, 2013, Reuters fired Keys over purported inaccuracies in reporting on his personal Twitter account while covering the Boston Marathon bombings.[1][9] The dismissal has been challenged by the union that represented him.[10]

References

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  7. http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-matthew-keys-sentencing-la-times-hacking-20160413-story.html
  8. http://motherboard.vice.com/read/why-the-government-went-after-matthew-keys
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External links