It struck me as I read the following
that the LDS Church already had a website with the same stated purpose. Wasn't there an entire section of the LDS Newsroom site dedicated to correcting mistakes in the news? Isn't that where I had read various chastisements of media outlets and journalists for not properly following the AP Style Guide, and for referring to polygamists as Mormon fundamentalists?The Mormon Defense League has been created to respond to false information put forward in the media.
The intent is to assist journalists, authors, bloggers, producers, and others in the media in getting their stories right, and to correct misinformation and distortions about Mormons, Mormonism, and other faith communities.
So I went to LDS Newsroom to track down that section, but I couldn't find it. Some of the articles I remember reading there appear in the site archive, but they are no longer grouped under the heading "Mistakes in the News" or anything similar. Furthermore, the most recent article I could find addressing such mistakes was from 2008.
I'm wondering if the church has since decided that such admonishments are too confrontational for its official home on the web, and has now farmed the work out to its apologists. Now, the church can take the high road and remain above the fray, while the apologetic site (all the while reminding us that they are not affiliated with the church in any official capacity) can carry on the noble work of correcting mistakes in the news. Furthermore, MDL is free to take the extra step of informing us that all of this inaccurate reporting is due to anti-Mormon bigotry, as well as implying via the name of the site that failure to describe the church in terms suitable for its own marketing materials amounts to persecution of Mormons.