I think a distinction can be made between the sort of news article that’s putting a qualifier in a statement because they actually mean it, and are trying to make sure the typical reader notices the qualifier, and the sort putting “anonymous sources told us” in front of a claim that they’re 99% sure is made up, and then doing whatever they can within the rules to sell it as true anyway, because they want their audience of rubes to believe it. The first guy isn’t being technically truthist, they’re being honest about a somewhat complicated claim. The second guy is no better than a journalist who’d outright lie to you in terms of whether it’s useful to read what they write.
I think a distinction can be made between the sort of news article that’s putting a qualifier in a statement because they actually mean it, and are trying to make sure the typical reader notices the qualifier, and the sort putting “anonymous sources told us” in front of a claim that they’re 99% sure is made up, and then doing whatever they can within the rules to sell it as true anyway, because they want their audience of rubes to believe it. The first guy isn’t being technically truthist, they’re being honest about a somewhat complicated claim. The second guy is no better than a journalist who’d outright lie to you in terms of whether it’s useful to read what they write.