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27 votes
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Donald Trump didn't win on the US economy. He won on the perception of it.
40 votes -
Local Canadian news loses 58% of online engagement, thanks to the Online News Act
33 votes -
Queensland neighbours show how Voice to Parliament is splitting Australia
2 votes -
FiveThirtyEight has been integrated into ABC News with the original website redirecting to the new vertical
18 votes -
Truth
5 votes -
Inside Finland's war preparations on NATO's new frontline with Russia
7 votes -
Fox settles Dominion defamation lawsuit for $787.5 million, avoiding US trial
15 votes -
New Jersey requiring students to learn 'media literacy' to fight 'disinformation'
15 votes -
As the midterm elections approach in the US, does Finland have the answer to fake news?
6 votes -
Ebrahim Raisi cancels CNN interview after Christiane Amanpour refuses to wear hijab
14 votes -
CNN, spilled milk, and why any of this matters
8 votes -
“Hacker X”—the American who built a pro-Trump fake news empire—unmasks himself
21 votes -
South Africa’s descent into chaos
4 votes -
How some Americans are breaking out of political echo chambers
14 votes -
Inside the battle for Jerusalem
5 votes -
Jon Stewart - It's Class Warfare - The Poor (and the rest of us) Have Lost (2010)
18 votes -
Hundreds of hyperpartisan sites are masquerading as local news. This map shows if there’s one near you.
11 votes -
The Trump-Fox & Friends feedback loop explained
3 votes -
How asymmetrical polarization has changed American politics
9 votes -
Rupert Murdoch actually tried to stop Donald Trump, and he won't try to again
7 votes -
Jon Stewart rips Rand Paul's 'virtue signaling' in blocking 9/11 victim fund
10 votes -
Pizzagate: A slice of fake news
7 votes -
Did a former minister in Cameroon really burn embezzled money?
5 votes -
The making of the Fox News White House
19 votes -
PSA: Disinformation and the over-representation of false flag events on social media.
I've noticed lately that on certain social media websites, particularly Reddit and Facebook, there has been an uptick in articles about fake hate crimes and false rape reports. The comments on...
I've noticed lately that on certain social media websites, particularly Reddit and Facebook, there has been an uptick in articles about fake hate crimes and false rape reports. The comments on these articles especially fan the flames on the subjects of homophobia, racism, and sexism. While the articles themselves are still noteworthy and deserving of attention, the amount of attention that they've been receiving has been disproportionately high (especially when considering how fairly unknown the individuals involved are) and the discourse on those articles particularly divisive.
On top of that, there are clear disinformation campaigns going on to attack current Democratic presidential candidates in the U.S. It seems pretty clear that we're having a repeat of the last presidential election, with outside parties stoking the flames of discrimination and disinformation on social media in order to further ideological divisions, and the consumers of that media readily falling for it.
I would caution readers to be mindful of the shifting representation of historically controversial or contentious topics moving forward. Even if the articles themselves are solidly factual, take note of how frequently you're seeing these articles, whether or not they're known to be contentious topics, and how they're affecting online discourse.
In short: make sure that you can still smell bullshit even when it's dressed up in pretty little facts.
30 votes -
How fake news was weaponized in Nigeria's elections
5 votes -
Macedonia's former ruling party organized a trolling apparatus for spreading hate speech, threats
8 votes -
How Cambodia’s prime minister rigged an election
3 votes -
Russian influence campaign sought to exploit Americans' trust in local news
16 votes