pull down to refresh

My biggest fear right now is the possibility that I’ve read a fake or forged article that manipulated me into believing it was true. That’s why I usually avoid sharing news until I’m sure it has some truth to it. This article from BBC Future by David Robson is wonderful. However, since Elon Musk introduced community notes with a strict application to posts even by large media platforms, I’ve started following those platforms on Twitter, and it works well for fact-checking—but still, many sources are left unchecked, and no one seems to care.
I notice a lot of people carelessly spreading false news, even when they suspect it might be untrue. Honestly, they just don’t care, but from a broader perspective, this can be dangerous—it can fill people with intense hate and fear. In short, be mindful when sharing anything online. And when someone shares false news for fun, don’t hesitate to confront them directly.
As ‘alternative facts’ fill our social media feeds, BBC Future examines a more rational approach to digesting information. From claims that The Simpsons predicted Trump’s presidency in the Year 2000 to the absurd story that the Queen has joked about assassinating Trump, our social media feeds are awash with lies and misunderstandings. Just consider the 29 January shootings in a Quebec mosque, by Alexandre Bissonnette. In just a few hours, conspiracy theories had begun to percolate, claiming a police cover-up to protect a Muslim accomplice. As David Mikkelson, the co-founder of myth-busting site Snopes, puts it: “The bilge is rising faster than you can pump.” Tellingly, Snopes’s own traffic almost doubled – to 13.6 million monthly visitors – in October last year, as readers struggled to make sense of the events leading up to the election.
this territory is moderated
It's almost impossible to avoid imbibing intentionally misleading information.
The two main things I try to do are
  1. Have a deeper philosophical understanding of the world to measure news stories against (Does this make sense?)
  2. Have a truly diverse set of news sources (not just several different outlets that live in the same bubble).
We just had our parents around during the holidays and it's astonishing how much nonsense they've imbibed. Most of it goes unchallenged by us, because we don't want to create awkward social situations.
reply
Your points make a lot of sense. After learning, reading, and having a basic understanding of things, we can become great at spotting false narratives. Your second point is especially accurate—most people who fall into the fake news trap do so because they’re feeding their brains only what they want to believe, which ends up trapping them inside a bubble they can’t escape. I also use multiple sources and read from them, even if they don’t align with my preferences. I keep an eye on fact checker websites as well. And yeah, old people share a lot of misinformation. Maybe they’re just too innocent when they see news on social media. But then I think about people my age sharing the same nonsense, and honestly, I feel like I need a psychology course to understand what thrill people get out of spreading misinformation. What’s so fun about it? It’s beyond me.
reply
It's tough, because there's a very natural (and not entirely wrong) drive to favor those who agree with us.
The other thing I should have included in the list is that I try to be very comfortable with uncertainty. Just because I hear something reported doesn't mean I have to believe anything about it. I can reserve judgement for after enough credible evidence has emerged.
reply
Just because I hear something reported doesn't mean I have to believe anything about it. I can reserve judgement for after enough credible evidence has emerged.
That’s the most accurate way of describing how to avoid being part of the dumb crowd. I also wait for a while to see updates and how things shared a few hours ago by the same media channels can completely change. I actually learned this from a Youtube video, and surprisingly, it works every time! Thanks.
reply
I try to be very comfortable with uncertainty.
💯
reply
It's all fake. May as well be the matrix.
Even stories that might be about something reasonably true at the topical level contain presuppositions for other things that are false in the content.
Any long-standing publication has at some point been co-opted through networks of intel agencies shell companies. Influencers or independent media can be bought off cheap, if they weren't operatives or ideologically aligned to begin with.
It's 5GW information warfare, and World War 3 has been hot for longer than we can know.
There is no objective truth, and the only way to not be fooled is to accept what you cannot know- because you're not important enough to be privileged to the information from the highest levels.
reply
Wow, this is a very interesting perspective! I never knew about 5G warfare; it actually makes a lot of sense.
There is no objective truth, and the only way to not be fooled is to accept what you cannot know- because you're not important enough to be privileged to the information from the highest levels.
That's fascinating! You're talking in a way that anyone might think you're part of the Illuminati 😂. I don’t understand things on that level but can only say the world is like chess, and we’re just pawns.
reply
I don't get this. You need to get confronted with fake news, in the same way that an immune system needs to be confronted with pathogens to get stronger.
reply
community notes were the only good thing coming from Musk Twitter acquisition.
i may be wrong, but i haven't seen any example of it being wrongly used(abused), even Musk gets community notes on his posts, i find it to be a positive feature
reply
Absolutely, no one can manipulate Community notes because they are designed that way. I have never seen any community notes that were false. They spare no one, regardless of who the person is.
reply