Wednesday, 12 April 2017

There’s a hunger for the truth in news reporting



Credit: Mediaite

Three days ago, I posted this:

Google fights fake news with “Fact Check” tag

Result, more page views than the previous 3 posts together, & the post with the fourth highest number of page views in 6 years. There really is a hunger for the truth.

In the face of recent world events, that's the best news this year.

Since you've read this far, it probably includes you – & you'll probably be interested in this:

FactCheck.org – “How to Spot Fake News”
https://www.factcheck.org/2016/11/how-to-spot-fake-news/
/ How to Spot Fake News fake news nothing new bogus stories can reach more people more quickly via social media viral emails Facebook Google crack down fake news sites restricting their ability garner ad revenue dissipate malarkey online news consumers best defense defence spread of misinformation passed along online complete fiction Snopes.com exposing false viral claims fabricated messages distortions containing bits of truth founder David Mikkelson fake news category fictions fabrications comprise fake news subset larger bad news phenomenon shoddy unresearched error-filled error filled deliberately misleading reporting disservice to everyone viral claims aren’t news fiction satire efforts to fool readers encouraged readers skeptical of viral claims delete chain email Ask FactCheck feature answer readers’ questions viral emails social media memes made-up email windfall tax malicious fabrication fake news in today’s parlance rid inboxes garbage red flags Key Characteristics of Bogusness clear tip-offs chain email wasn’t legitimate anonymous author excessive exclamation points capital letters misspellings entreaties This is NOT a hoax links sourcing does not support completely contradicts claims being made fake stories completely made-up news grown more sophisticated site designed to look like legitimate news organization organisation easy to figure out what’s real and what’s imaginary armed with some critical thinking fact-checking tools of the trade how to spot a fake consider the source fact-checked fake news not the actual URL fantasy news website a gmail address debunked claim site most of what it publishes is fiction fantasy news satire warning bogus headline Donald Trump for President information on its mission staff members physical location legitimate news organization organisation site debunked by fact-checking organizations organisations Snopes.com viral claims online rumors maintains list known fake news websites read beyond the headline provocative headline pass along the shocking information legitimate news stories headline doesn’t always tell the whole story fake news particularly efforts to be satirical several revealing signs in the text viral rumor rumour read the full story check the author tell-tale sign of a fake story byline Peabody award Pulitzer Prize bio bogus story byline Darius Rubics bogus stories official sources source doesn’t back up the claim viral claim crime statistics murder statistics retweeted tweet Twitter from sources that are very credible FBI crime data is publicly available supposed source data fake news story satirical site surprise announcement surprise announcement garner media coverage website Google Snopes.com article fake news check the date false stories completely fake distortions of real events mendacious claims legitimate news story twist what it says claim that something that happened long ago is related to current events many inquiries from readers Trump’s election blog items that quoted from evidence check the support for claims deceptive website credit CNN bogus headline deception involves copyright infringement article distorted Trump took credit deserved no credit some kind of joke satire clearly labeled as such satirical news column Borowitz Report not everyone gets the jokes satirical columns suspected the details were far-fetched more debatable forms of satire online hoaxer Paul Horner fact a fake piece after the election hoaxes helped the campaign satire fake news designed to encourage clicks generate money ad revenue makes a living off his posts nobody fact-checks anything anymore check your biases confirmation bias confirms their beliefs take a moment to check it out express doubt in the outrageous skepticism is justified debunked claims resurgence of a fake quote since the election viral image circulated archives public relations representative quote interview fake meme Instagram quote is fake consult the experts debunking takes time FactCheck.org Snopes.com Washington Post Fact Checker PolitiFact.com fact-checked fact checked viral claim pop up in your news feed FactCheck.org fact-checkers Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg principles underpin more accurate news ecosystem News Feed readers remain the first line of defense against fake news Viral Spiral page Ask FactChecks claim investigate factcheck.org /

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