Welcome to GroundTruth.
I will use this blog to highlight the work of GlobalPost’s far-flung team of 70 correspondents in some 50 countries around the world.
They are a stellar team of great reporters and skilled storytellers who every day are there on the ground reporting and writing about the places where they live.
They will offer you the kind of news, insight and knowledge you can only get from “being there.”

When GlobalPost.com launches on January 12, these correspondents will be our GroundTruth. And we hope they will become yours as well.
So what does “GroundTruth” mean?
It has a pretty obvious and intuitive meaning. You may have heard it in a military context. But its origin, as best we can tell, is a precise phrase used in digital technology that was coined by NASA. This is how they define it on their website:
“Ground truth (n) … one part of the calibration process. This is where a person on the ground makes a measurement of the same thing a satellite is trying to measure at the same time the satellite is measuring it. The two answers are then compared to help evaluate how well the satellite instrument is performing. Usually we believe the ground truth more than the satellite.”
In other words, Ground Truth is a scientific belief that the greatest calibration of what is happening in a far-off place is best achieved by being there on the ground to witness it and record it.
GroundTruth is all about being there.
At GlobalPost, there is nothing we hold in greater value.
The best international reporting is achieved by those who live and work in the places about which they report and write. Our team of correspondents will all be practicing GroundTruth. As a web-based news organization, we recognize that even in the digital age when we have access to information from all over the world at our fingertips and satellite transmissions that can focus on images thousands of miles away, the most trusted reading is still made by those human beings who are there witnessing the events and measuring history live.
It sounds like a simple idea. But it’s not so easy when the ground you are on is a shifting, complex story that requires knowledge of the local language and a deep background on the forces shaping the news. We have reporters who do this in the places where there is ongoing conflict like Iraq and Afghanistan; in places where there is a contradictory mix of poverty and opportunity like India and Brazil; where there are ancient cultures to understand in a modern context like China and Iran. Our correspondents will be there on the ground equipped with the knowledge that is needed to interpret the events in a way that allow you to truly see and understand what is happening, why it is happening, and what it means to you.
This is not a new idea by any means. It’s just good old fashioned reporting. But it is an idea we want to revitalize at a time when too many news organizations are cutting back on or abandoning their mission to cover the world.
We believe there is too much distant analysis — not only at news organizations but also at international businesses and even in military and national security organizations — by those who are too far removed from the ground.
Those who analyze from on high are only one part of the calibration process in understanding a complex world. They are like the satellite viewing the image from afar, and we are the guy on the ground telling you what it really looks like.
NASA states in its own definition, “we believe the ground truth more than the satellite.”
So do we.
GroundTruth is written by Charles Sennott, the Executive Editor and co-founder of GlobalPost. The blog is a way for GlobalPost to let you know what our correspondents all over the world are covering every day. It is a place where Sennott highlights the best work in the field by a stellar team of correspondents . 
2 Trackbacks