Privacy settings

This website protects your privacy by adhering to the European Union General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). We will not use your data for any purpose that you do not consent to and only to the extent not exceeding data which is necessary in relation to a specific purpose(s) of processing. You can grant your consent(s) to use your data for specific purposes below or by clicking “Agree to all”.

i
Why Átlátszó tried to forecast, and not just visualise, COVID-19 cases in Hungary

Case study

Why Átlátszó tried to forecast, and not just visualise, COVID-19 cases in Hungary

This case study is part of Resilience Reports, a series from the European Journalism Centre about how news organisations across Europe are adjusting their daily operations and business strategies as a result of the COVID-19 crisis.


In a nutshell

A data visualisation landing page combining the best of Átlátszó’s data journalism and investigative stories not published elsewhere saw traffic more than double.

What is Átlátszó?

  • Átlátszó is Hungary’s first non-profit dedicated to investigative journalism and freedom of information; its name means ‘transparent’ in English. Established in 2011, it covers political corruption, campaign financing, financial abuse in public office and human rights violations through the means of investigative reports and freedom of information requests. In some cases, it embarks on freedom of information lawsuits where its requests are refused. The aim of Átlátszó is to shed light on scandalous misuse of political and economic power and influence in Hungary.
  • Based in Budapest, Átlátszó employs seven full-time staff members, five of which are journalists and two of whom are project managers. This core team is supported by 40 contractors including video and data journalists as well as legal and IT support. It also has a data journalism and visualisation unit — the first of its kind in Hungary — called ATLO to support its investigative and data journalism activities. Átlátszó operates a number of tools to further its mission including a Tor-based anonymous whistleblowing platform and a freedom of information request generator to make the process easier for the general public.
  • Átlátszó is a non-profit that relies on crowdfunding from readers (60%) and international charitable donors (40%). Some of its funders include the Open Society Foundations, Sigrid Rausing Trust, Global Anti-Corruption Consortium, Fritt Ord and Visegrad Fund. The organisation has zero commercial revenues and offers no advertising. All content is free for all readers.
  • Every year Hungarian taxpayers are eligible to donate 1% of their personal income tax to a charity of their choice, at no additional cost. Átlátszó encourages readers to donate their 1% to Átlátszó via the website and in its newsletters. Around 3000 people donate their tax to the organisation and a similar number make small monthly contributions of €3 per month. Donations are anonymous so it is unclear if there is any crossover between these groups.
  • Press freedom in Hungary has rapidly deteriorated over the past decade — some 90% of all media is government-controlled in some form. Hungary ranked 89 in the annual Reporters Without Borders 2020 World Press Freedom Index, down from 56 in 2013. On March 30, the Hungarian government passed new legislation that reporters say is being used to deny journalists access to information and could see them jailed for up to five years if convicted. This has led to fewer news outlets reporting critically about COVID-19 and more self-censorship. For Átlátszó, it has meant the team are extra careful with fact-checking and verification before publishing anything.
  • Átlátszó surveys its audience every year. According to its research, its core audience lives in the capital, are highly-educated and seek a more open public discourse in Hungary. In 2019, its websites reached a regular readership of 500,000–900,000 unique views per month. According to Medián Research — one of the country’s top research firms — this represents around 15% of Hungary’s daily internet users visiting at least once a month.
  • Átlátszó writes two weekly newsletters, one in Hungarian (2,500 subscribers, open rate of 15–25%) and one in English (1,500 subscribers, open rate of 30%). It also distributes stories via its Facebook page, which has over 100,000 followers.

How did Átlátszó handle the COVID-19 crisis?

  • During the two months of lockdown, Átlátszó continued to publish 3–5 short articles a day and 3–5 features a week. However, these articles now included investigations on how the pandemic was impacting Hungary. In March, one report showed how the Hungarian government gave more money to protect churches and invest in its Opera House than to curb the coronavirus. Another investigation revealed how a relative of a politician started to profit from medical supplies and disinfectants. The Átlátszó team was also the first news organisation to write about company layoffs in Hungary. In one such case, after publishing a story about a car part supplier laying off 100 workers, the supplier reported Átlátszó to the police for spreading fear during the pandemic. The company filed a criminal complaint, but no official proceedings were followed up.
  • In March, ATLO launched a landing page — dubbed the ‘koronamonitor’ — with daily statistical updates, graphs and maps about the state of the coronavirus outbreak in Hungary. When it was first published, pro-government media accused Átlátszó of distorting the numbers. The team responded by writing blog posts explaining that the visualisations were based on official government numbers. Átlátszó also produced a weekly coronavirus data feature article looking at trends with the official statistics. Since June, the landing page has been updated weekly, as Hungary’s COVID-19 case rate and death toll have dropped.
Overview of Átlátszó traffic
Overview of Átlátszó traffic
  • There was a huge demand for forecasts on COVID-19 and how the pandemic might proceed. The data journalism team also used a mathematical model produced by Dr Tamás Nepusz from Molde University in Norway to estimate how many may be infected in Hungary in May. Later Átlátszó introduced an interactive pandemic simulator where the audience was able to set different parameters and see how it would affect the virus forecasts.
Corona Simulator, https://atlo.team/koronaszimulator/
Corona Simulator, https://atlo.team/koronaszimulator/
  • Átlátszó operated in a difficult environment during COVID-19 as hospital staff were expressly banned from speaking to the press. This meant the team received anonymous leaks about topics including the shortage of masks and the unreliability of the rapid COVID-19 tests imported from China. Most recently they published an anonymous diary from a healthcare worker explaining what it was like to work in a hospital during the height of Hungary’s pandemic. To ensure safety, the team maintains a strict policy of not using a mobile phone and of communicating solely via secure email. It also advises sources to use Gmail or Protonmail as well as other encrypted chat and voice applications like Signal, Viber or WhatsApp.
Átlátszó Facebook post
Átlátszó Facebook post
  • Átlátszó’s website saw unique visitors more than doubled from 600,000 in February to 1.4 million in March. Traffic rose when the team published COVID-19 stories that the mainstream media weren’t reporting on. For example, its most popular piece during COVID-19 was about a relative of a politician from Fidesz, Viktor Orban’s right-wing party, profiteering on the shortage of medical supplies. The Hungarian version of the article reached 72,000 shares on Facebook. The team believes that publishing stories the Hungarian mainstream media weren’t covering — such as the reorganisation of hospitals — made the site a destination for concerned citizens. Traffic in April dropped to about 1.3 million unique visitors and then just over a million visitors in May (see chart below).
  • The organisation saw a handful of people cancelling their microdonations out of over 3000. This is likely due to the economic uncertainty as people may continue to fear being laid off. Átlátszó doesn’t yet know how donations have been impacted by the pandemic’s economic blowback as the government only releases information about the 1% tax donations in September.

How has COVID-19 changed the future of Átlátszó?

  • When Átlátszó started crowdfunding in 2011, no other Hungarian media was asking their readers for donations. Today, all independent media in Hungary does crowdfunding, making the market much more competitive and harder for Atlaszo to raise funds from readers. Pressure on international donors to help out independent Hungarian media has increased in recent years. This means Átlátszó expects more competition for crowdfunding and international donors as well.
  • Átlátszó will continue to work with the data journalism team. The success of the ‘koronamonitor’ has demonstrated the power of data journalism to stand on its own. While there are no extra resources to invest in the team, they want to find more data-led stories that can add to the depth of their coverage.
  • Átlátszó’s mission remains the same. It will continue to publish stories on COVID-19 and hold the government to account. The new fake news law in Hungary means the team has to continue to report very carefully and to focus on fact-checking. They continue to work with lawyers and fight attempts to silence their work.

What have they learned?

Investigative reporting on Covid-19 was in high demand since most of the Hungarian press did not cover the pressing issues during the lockdown. We have learned if you have enough courage to report on problems during a crisis your audience will reward you. The ‘koronamonitor’ was by far the most successful data journalism feature we ever did. This made us realise that data journalism can be very important to our work. Prior to this, we saw data journalism as a ‘nice to have’ add-on feature but not a necessity. This was the first case where data journalists played a central role in Átlátszó and were the most important element of our coronavirus content. This means we will look for news topics that can be visualised and explained in a similar way.

Tamas Bodoky, executive director, Átlátszó


Resilience Reports are published by the European Journalism Centre with support from Evens Foundation

Author

Related

Receive insights, knowledge and updates on funding opportunities.
Receive our monthly update, delivered straight to your inbox.