Wednesday, 28 September 2022

How to spot fake news, clickbaits, whataboutery, and other dubious media practices

This post is a series of comments made on another post on LI. 

You know a news is fake when:
A. It has too much fortune telling with very little specifics. Look for words like - may, potentially, is expected to, allegedly, might, will, reduces risk, increases risk, dramatically increases risk, will be isolated, will give a boost to, estimated to.

B. It uses positive and negative adjectives in more than 40% of the content. "Greatest" "First Time ever" "The grandest" "Poor display of"

C. It presents "facts" that only reinforce one side of the story.

D. It appeals to the emotional. it can use words like "Cultural heritage", "Victimised", "Ancient origins", "Only ones to meet this treatment". OR it might just use adjectives or verbs that are emotional rather than factual. A factual news piece would read - "One study estimates that ocean trash in the Indian Ocean is 20% more than last year." Then go on to provide details of how this estimate was arrived at. A media story would go - "Dirt Reaches the Indian Ocean: Trash to Double Within Five Years" then go on to first present fortune telling, and make no effort to explain how the study was conducted.

E. Bold headline statements - "Scientists make ship out of plastic bottles" Reality? ONE pilot project has been submitted as a research paper at a peer reviewed journal. "This <something> holds the key to <that something>. " Reality - Some researcher has done some simulation and arrived at one estimate.
A factual news piece will give you a lot of facts - both supporting and negating a hypothesis, if a hypothesis is in order. It will state facts using neutral terms - Rajasthan Chief Minister quits. Not "Rajasthan Chief Minister quits amidst speculation of a rift in party." The latter is clickbait and sensationalism. Don't click on them, don't read those stories.

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