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9 votes
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Denmark seeks to make spread of deepfake images illegal, citing misinformation concerns
32 votes -
Eight of the top ten online shows are spreading climate misinformation
33 votes -
Russia seeds chatbots with lies. Any bad actor could game AI the same way.
33 votes -
Is it wrong to use AI to fact check and combat the spread of misinformation?
I’ve been wondering about this lately. Recently, I made a post about Ukraine on another social media site, and someone jumped in with the usual "Ukraine isn't a democracy" right-wing talking...
I’ve been wondering about this lately.
Recently, I made a post about Ukraine on another social media site, and someone jumped in with the usual "Ukraine isn't a democracy" right-wing talking point. I wrote out a long, thoughtful reply, only to get the predictable one-liner propaganda responses back. You probably know the type, just regurgitated stuff with no real engagement.
After that, I didn’t really feel like spending my time and energy writing out detailed replies to every canned response. But I also didn’t want to just let it sit there and have people who might be reading the exchange assume there’s no pushback or correction.
So instead, I tried leveraging AI to help me write a fact-checking reply. Not for the person I was arguing with, really, but more as an FYI for anyone else following along. I made sure it stayed factual and based in reality, avoided name-calling, and kept the tone above the usual mudslinging. And of course, I double-checked what it wrote to make sure it matched my understanding and wasn’t just spitting out garbage or hallucinations.
But it got me thinking that there’s a lot of fear about AI being used to spread and create misinformation. But do you think there’s also an opportunity to use it as a tool to counter misinformation, without burning ourselves out in the process?
Curious how others see it.
16 votes -
The making of Community Notes
14 votes -
The editors protecting Wikipedia from AI hoaxes
18 votes -
Anti-Defamation League faces Wikipedia ban over reliability concerns on Israel, antisemitism
37 votes -
The Stanford Internet Observatory is being dismantled
15 votes -
Taiwan, on China’s doorstep, is dealing with TikTok its own way
11 votes -
How to tell if a conspiracy theory is probably false
37 votes -
Meta in Myanmar, Part II: The Crisis
8 votes -
David Dunning: discoverer of Dunning Kruger effect on overcoming overconfidence
6 votes -
Two popular Danish television presenters have reported Meta to the police after finding their images and words had been manipulated and misused in thousands of Facebook ads
29 votes -
The influencer who “reverses” Lupus with smoothies. Psychiatrist Brooke Goldner makes extraordinary claims about incurable diseases. It’s brought her a mansion, a Ferrari, and a huge social following.
18 votes -
Can a movie change the law? The 1961 film 'Victim' isn't just a tense thriller, it was crafted to serve as a stealthy challenge to a British law that criminalized the very existence of homosexuals.
12 votes -
Generative AI - We aren’t ready
27 votes -
Doing your own research is a good way to end up being wrong
23 votes -
Scientists explain why ‘doing your own research’ leads to believing conspiracies
42 votes -
Gaza and the future of information warfare
7 votes -
The truth behind all that cortisol talk. What exactly is high cortisol? A debunking guide.
11 votes -
How gender-affirming health care for kids works in Canada
23 votes -
Iceland volcano won't spew more carbon than humanity – social media is once again filling up with such claims, as it always does when volcanoes make news
15 votes -
Human microbiome myths and misconceptions
10 votes -
‘Verified’ OSINT accounts are destroying the Israel-Palestine information ecosystem
18 votes -
Reddit faces content quality concerns after its Great Mod Purge
161 votes -
A developer built a 'propaganda machine' using OpenAI tech to highlight the dangers of mass-produced AI disinformation
27 votes -
AI is ruining the Internet
88 votes -
Twitter threatens legal action against US nonprofit that tracks hate speech
113 votes -
A fact-checked debate about euthanasia
21 votes -
Hunting for the Lizard People: On the dangerous conspiracy theories that led to the Nashville bombing
10 votes -
I interviewed the researcher behind the Misinformation Susceptibility Test
https://youtu.be/vodNabH5qoM But some important context: Earlier this month I saw a post regarding a Misinformation Susceptibility Test and was curious how 20 binary questions could be an...
https://youtu.be/vodNabH5qoM
But some important context:Earlier this month I saw a post regarding a Misinformation Susceptibility Test and was curious how 20 binary questions could be an indicator of someones media biases.
I started digging into the related paper and while the methods and analysis was interesting, there was still a lot of questions. So I reached out to Dr Rakoen Maertens who headed the study and we agreed to a discussion on the assessment and his experiences in social psychology.
The video above is an unlisted, unedited cut of the interview and I'd love to get some feedback:
Firstly: I have offered the Dr a tildes invite and he may engage with any questions or discussion. Time was limited and there were a lot of topics that was only briefly touched on or overlooked. Here is the original paper and supplementary resources if you want to see some of the language model work and bigger 100 question tests.
Secondly: I am going to do a more through edit and posting this on a dedicated channel. Since cutting off reddit, twitter and tiktoc; I've sort of rediscovered a love learning and investigations. I'd like to know if people like this form of engagement and discussions. No fancy production, just simply engaging with the research and academics behind topical and interesting ideas.
I'm already reading into fandom psychology, UV reflective paint, children's TV and CO2 scrubbing technology.
72 votes -
Psychologists at the University of Cambridge developed a Misinformation Susceptibility Tests. What's your MIST score?
86 votes -
A one-of-a-kind bat research facility coming to Fort Collins has CSU scientists fighting misinformation
8 votes -
Solar storm risks and the threat of large-scale internet outage examined
12 votes -
Inside Big Beef’s climate messaging machine: Confuse, defend and downplay
8 votes -
How Finland is teaching a generation to spot misinformation
8 votes -
I lost my boyfriend to cancer conspiracy theories
15 votes -
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said the company does not have plans to stop selling the antisemitic film that gained notoriety recently after Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving tweeted out an Amazon link to it
8 votes -
The REAL reason ships go missing in the Bermuda Triangle!!!
9 votes -
Kanye West is buying ‘free speech platform’ Parler
24 votes -
TikTok is changing the way we talk about ADHD—for better and worse
2 votes -
‘Pre-bunking’ online misinformation
7 votes -
The weed influencer and the scientist feuding over why some stoners incessantly puke
10 votes -
How politics poisoned the Evangelical church
10 votes -
Pinterest bans climate change misinformation and conspiracy theories
9 votes -
Neil Young pulls his music from Spotify after his ultimatum regarding Joe Rogan and ‘fake information about vaccines’
32 votes -
Germany’s promising plan to bring conspiracy theorists back from the brink
7 votes -
How one man was wrongly accused in Kongsberg attack – many international media outlets picked up on speculative tweets
11 votes -
If you had to teach a class about information literacy, what would your key points be?
I'm in an online course right now that touches upon information literacy: the ability to access, sort through, and analyze information (particularly online). It is not a very in-depth course, and...
I'm in an online course right now that touches upon information literacy: the ability to access, sort through, and analyze information (particularly online). It is not a very in-depth course, and a lot of the recommendations it gives feel a little limited/dated, or just out of touch with current internet practices (e.g. trust .edu and .gov sites -- don't trust .com sites; use Britannica Online instead of Wikipedia). It also doesn't really account for things like memes, social media, or really much of the modern internet landscape.
I know we have a lot of very technically literate as well as informationally literate people here, and I'm curious: if you were tasked with creating a class to help people learn information literacy, including how to identify misinformation online, what would some of your key points or focuses be? How would you convey those to your students (whether those students are kids, adults, or both)?
17 votes