Not following editorial standards is worse than not exposing child abuse. Got it.
They kind of are.
Remember back when Alabama Representative Candidate Roy Moore was being exposed as hitting on teenaged girls?
Well, during the height of that, Project Veritas, the very folks who brought out this hot-mike tape, felt that since they didn't have journalistic standards, nobody else would either. So they thought they would pull a little sting and stop all the allegations about Roy Moore cold.
They had a woman contact the main source of the allegations, which was the Washington Post, and say that she, too, was a victim of Roy Moore's advances. The Post met with the woman, heard her story, and then set about checking her credentials and corroborating her story.
Her story fell apart almost immediately, mind you it was partly because the woman was trying to get the Post reporter to say something like "We've got Roy Moore for sure now!", but the reporter wasn't playing along. So the net was result was little more than a story about the Project Veritas sting.
But had they run with her fake story without any fact-checking it would have messed up everything. It would have slammed the door on the investigation of Moore's antics, it would have slammed the door on future investigations, along with a host of door slammings well into the future.
So, yeah, when you go crying with the "Won't somebody
please think of the children!!" routine keep in mind that publishing uncorroborated info could not only destroy a potential investigation, it could also destroy future ones.