It can be difficult to discern whether Twitter screen shots are real or fake. This BBC disinformation specialist gives several useful tips to know.
Author: Julie Bohman
No, that sign isn’t real
Just because a picture looks plausible doesn’t mean you should necessarily believe it. News Literacy Project reminds us of easy ways to check for authenticity.
Doctored Oz Photo and Fake Florida Banned Books List
Here is a link to the News Literacy Project’s page that explains how to question “photos” and other posts. Be careful about emotionally charged content without links and citations. Check into these before you believe them or share them. If there are no news articles or links to credible documents associated with them, you should […]
How to Know What to Trust
Here is a link to the News Literacy website. You will find a seven step process for filtering information for reliability and credibility. It has you reflect on your own emotions as well as analyze the source.
Why People Fall for Conspiracy Theories
This link takes you to the News Literacy Project page that includes this and other reports on how you can safeguard your media consumption.
Monkeypox Falsehoods
A viral graphic containing alarming falsehoods about monkeypox is analyzed by the News Literacy Project. Can you spot the disinformation?
Critical Thinking vs. Outrage
From The News Literacy Project: “Provoking outrage remains a common goal of misinformation purveyors. People are generally better at detecting misinformation when they slow down and engage their logical, critical faculties. But strong emotions quickly circumvent these higher-order abilities and cause people to like and share online content too quickly. Outrage is one of the […]
Pseudoscience
Be careful about the “facts” shared on the Internet that are not based on real science. Nutrition advice can drive sales for a “nutritionist” touting a diet or detox or supplements but waste your money or actually be unsafe. Many states don’t require formal training for nutritionists, so that title can be used freely. Always […]
A fact checker for the Atlantic describes the process
Here is the article that describes the fact checking process that The Atlantic magazine uses.
Can we trust fact checking services?
Reputable ones – yes. How do we know a fact checking service is reputable and trustworthy? The sites that have a good track record for doing their job very well and have a reputation to uphold are the ones you will want to use. Some of the best are listed on this website’s Resources page. […]