ChatterBank5 mins ago
Should We Be Worried By "fake News" On The Internet (And Elsewhere)
Or are we all much to clever to be taken in by it?
http:// mediama tters.o rg/blog /2016/1 2/14/go ogle-of ficials -promis ed-stop -making -fake-n ews-pro fitable -one-mo nth-lat er-they ve-fail ed/2148 12
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Answers
man tweets about Hillary Clinton's involvement in sex crimes with children; gets National Security Adviser job http:// edition. cnn. com/ 2016/ 12/ 14/ politics/ kfile- flynn- deleted- tweets/ Fake news can obviously be good for your career (if your career is with Trump, anyway)
13:20 Thu 15th Dec 2016
We've all been taken in by one or other fake story. The problem is that I don't think many people are all that good at retraction, embarrassed by their own gullibility or some such. That's the problem: fake news, even if it becomes known isn't properly retracted by those who shared it, allowing others to be taken in because they never noticed that it was fake.
We just have to be more careful, and I don't think anyone should go around pretending that they'd never fall for it themselves.
We just have to be more careful, and I don't think anyone should go around pretending that they'd never fall for it themselves.
There are different distinctions.
The Mail will report a story one sided, but a least it is based on an verifiable event.
Fake news sites make stuff up and peddle lies.
The main ones we see on AB are Brietbart and Gatestone Institute. People are taken in by them because they link to them.
When fake news becomes mainstream or viral, then it is dangerous. People can be manipulated if they are being spoonfed inaccurate information.
The Mail will report a story one sided, but a least it is based on an verifiable event.
Fake news sites make stuff up and peddle lies.
The main ones we see on AB are Brietbart and Gatestone Institute. People are taken in by them because they link to them.
When fake news becomes mainstream or viral, then it is dangerous. People can be manipulated if they are being spoonfed inaccurate information.
"Or are we all much to clever to be taken in by it?"
No - we are not.
Denzil Washington summed it up perfectly.
"If you want to be uninformed, don't read newspapers. If you want to be misinformed, read newspapers."
It's mostly our fault. There's a new trend online called 'confirmation bias'. There's a subsection of people who believe any story which supports their own particular world view. They will swallow a story whole without doing any fact-checking, or using common sense.
It's also the fault of the Internet. Rubbish news outlets have to fill their pages 24/7 and they do not check stories using professional journalists as they did in the past.
Coupled with that, we have social media sites that distribute fake news stories, which stupid people take for being validated.
It's the perfect storm.
No - we are not.
Denzil Washington summed it up perfectly.
"If you want to be uninformed, don't read newspapers. If you want to be misinformed, read newspapers."
It's mostly our fault. There's a new trend online called 'confirmation bias'. There's a subsection of people who believe any story which supports their own particular world view. They will swallow a story whole without doing any fact-checking, or using common sense.
It's also the fault of the Internet. Rubbish news outlets have to fill their pages 24/7 and they do not check stories using professional journalists as they did in the past.
Coupled with that, we have social media sites that distribute fake news stories, which stupid people take for being validated.
It's the perfect storm.
Came across this on Facebook, hope it works.
https:/ /www.fa cebook. com/sah ouraxo/ posts/3 5265581 1766138
Dave.
https:/
Dave.
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